enough.
As with last time with Kiyomi, it has been great to have this period
of time to get to know Ren a little, and to spend some time seeing the
home country of our kids. However, we are both very tired of trying
to entertain a couple of high-energy kids in a 300 sqft space, of
pulling out every trick we know to keep those kids quiet and well-
behaved in restaurants, and of struggling to keep them from getting
run over by bikes, scooters, cars, buses and trucks every time we step
out the door. We long for the normalness of home, of familiar beds,
of predictability, of controllable environments, of greenspace, of
playgrounds, and of potable water.
Today was a difficult day, and especially for Tamara. Ren still needs
Tamara. Since we got him, there has been only a single meal (out of
34, but who's counting) where Tamara has been able to eat without a
messy, wriggling toddler on her lap. There have been precious few
instances where she has been able to shower or go to the bathroom
without a wimpering toddler coming to look for her. There has not
been a single hug that Tamara has been able to give to Kiyomi without
a panicked Ren coming running. Every struggle to get Ren to fall
asleep has been made by Tamara. We're grateful that Ren finds comfort
in Tamara. However, it is not overstating things to say that he is
sapping her.
For the most part, my role has been logistics, and Kiyomi-minder. As
a new big sister, Kiyomi has been fantastic. There have been little
tussles but by and large, Kiyomi has stood tall, helping when she can,
and handling the threat to her supremacy in this family with suprising
and impressive maturity. In truth, we wish we have been able to
handle the challenges as well as she has. There has been more than
one instance where we have snapped at her for some trivial and
understanding action on her part, or some misbehaviour which is
clearly an attention-seeking effort, because we are harried from doing
something for Ren, or because our patience had run unfairly thin.
I have only been able to ease the load on Tamara occasionally, usually
by engaging in some entertainment involving trucks and buses. You
never know what feature of a hotel is going to come in handy. With
this hotel, it has been the elevator bay on our floor that looks out
on to a major street. Ren can be entertained for very long periods of
time by watching out for buses, motorcycles, trucks, and bicycles, and
there is great excitement when a policecar with its flashing lights
passes, or a cement truck rumbles by. We survived yesterday's
unexpected 3-hr sit in traffic on the way home from the Wall by having
Ren spend 2 hours of it watching out for passing interesting
vehicles. The only book that entertains him is one that has all sorts
of different vehicles in it. However, this book may be the most
challenging one that I've ever read. It's not easy coming up with
different sounds for policecars, ambulances and fire engines, not to
mention trucks, buses, bulldozers and cement mixers. What's even more
challenging is trying to remember what sound you used for each the
next time you read the book.
Lest the above shed Ren in an unfair light, there is no doubt that Ren
is an overwhelmingly happy kid. He spends much of his time smiling,
and there is great excitement in everything he does. He is friendly,
is outgoing, and is quite affectionate. His silliness will one day
rival Kiyomi's, and there is no doubt that the fun these two have
together will only grow.
Today was a fairly uneventful day. A little shopping in the morning
to pick up some snacks and toys for the flight home, a swim in the
afternoon following Ren's nap, and then a dinner at the buffet
downstairs. We had an opportunity to go see the Summer Palace, but we
opted to keep things low key. Tomorrow, we kill time until our 2pm
departure from the hotel for our 6pm flight. 13 hours or so later, we
touch down in Toronto, go through immigration, go through customs,
hopefully say hi to Miyo, and then off for our final one-hour leg back
to Ottawa and home.
Thank you China, for having us, for welcoming back Kiyomi, and for
gracing us with a son. We leave you tired, and more than a little
homesick, but we will most certainly be back.
For the last time for now, goodnight from Beijing.