So school's out, and all the relatives bring their bacteria and viruses to the kids' homes from far and wide, and then school resumes and within the week, sure enough, begins the sick season. Alas, it hit D1 and Joey's house like a tsunami.
Sunday we had a lovely day planned -- Jonathan dropped off D2 here and went back to the Shores to work -- the plan was for D1 and family to visit, order in Anthony's (Little Man calls it Anfony's) and then drop Tia D2 and Betsy back home. All was fine -- the boys went about their usual busy Sunday am activities, but then Little Man took a nap. He rarely naps. Sure enough, he woke up with fever and a headache, and his adorable Spanish description of "pain behind his eyes."
I kind of knew that something that came on so fast was flu, and an at home test confirmed it. His Baby brother was ok -- for the time being -- until D1 got a call from his Temple pre school to fetch him Monday -- he was under the weather, too. So this week D1 and Joey have been dealing with the worst part of being a loving parent -- watching your kids sick. Hey -- it's part of the plan.
You truly have to be a parent to understand this. I recall years ago having a talk with Diana, to use the now politically incorrect term favored by Barry's UF Med School mentor, a "spinster-type woman." She was telling me how she adored her nephew. But the rest of us around the table knew that if you learned a nephew needed a transplant, and you loved him, you would PROBABLY donate a kidney. If a doc told you your kid needed one, you grab the scalpel out of his hand and slice it out yourself before he finishes the request.
And so, when they're sick, it's the worst. The recently passed great Miamian Sam Moore sang it well, though he was singing about his lady: "When something is wrong with my baby...something is wrong with me."
When the Ds were probably 3 and 6, Wifey was down hard with the flu. I was in the middle of an expert deposition and simply couldn't get home, and it was after dark, and so her parents couldn't make the trip to Kendall from Pembroke Pines. I still recall opening the door -- Wifey had a pillow and blanket in the middle of the family room, and the Ds were climbing over, essentially, a corpse -- she was keeping an eye on them, but they ate what they wanted, and opened what they wanted.
D1 has it easier -- Joey came home -- and Little Man perked up -- he ADORES his Daddy. D1 has a nanny to help, too. Hopefully the viruses pass soon -- they have a Disney trip with another family set for Friday.
Yesterday, Wifey went to D2's house, and would typically go by for a boys' dinner -- usually with me. But we knew flu and people of a certain age ( I remain steadfastly prohibited from mentioning Wifey's age, or the fact that she was born during the Eisenhower Administration while I was born under Kennedy) are a witches' brew -- so instead she just fetched the D1 family dog, Lemon, the skittish Spaniel. He loves it here -- no little boys bothering him -- and hopped around all evening as the aging, special needs Spaniel, Bo, napped on the couch.
So hopefully the trip to Orlando is a go. We had a Disney cruise planned for last year, but Covid put the kibbosh on that one -- so my grandsons remain Disney naive.
Meanwhile, I have a friends' dinner tonight at Christy's -- one of my favorites -- and a couples' dinner tomorrow night at Salvatore D -- another favorite. Friday we have shabbat with Patricia and Paul, and Sunday we're touring the old NIKE missile site in the Everglades with Joelle and Kenny. Who ARE these socialites?
But most importantly -- here's to a quick recovery for our grandsons -- and their first Disney trip!