I
am a nerd. I readily admit it. I am a dweeb and a geek and—yes—I
am a nerd. I am also raising a nerd. My son Lucas, though he might
not yet wear it as a badge of honor the way his mother
does, is a complete nerd. Historically, I have thoroughly enjoyed
Lucas’ nerdiness.
When
my son was completely
obsessed with dinosaurs, I happily watched every single documentary
we could find on dinosaurs with him. I learned to correctly pronounce
all those complicated names that simply do not come naturally to the
English-speaking tongue. Like Micropachycephalosaurus
("tiny, thick-headed lizard"). And Titanophoneus ("giant
murderer") And
then there’s Ornitholestes
(“bird robber”) and
Quetzacoatlus ("like
Quetzalcoatl"). Yes, I learned to say them all. I happily
endured hours upon hours of dinner-time “pop quizzes” on dino
trivia. I painstakingly assembled a two-foot long T-Rex model—one
little rib at a time. For his birthday that year, I even created a
pin-the-bloody-prey-in-the-T-Rex’s-mouth game. Who needs donkeys
and their pedestrian tails when you can have bloody herbivore
carcasses? Right?
When
Lucas’ obsession
shifted to creatures of a more mythical nature, I read book after
book with him on dragon legends. I learned the difference between
Chimeras and Griffins and Manticores and Hydras. I discovered the
story of the Lambton Worm. I stood by proudly as I watched my young
son recruit his toddler brother and sister to play “Beowulf
and Grendel.” I
watched You-Tube video after You-Tube video of “real, true, actual”
footage of the Loch Ness Monster. I even watched an entire hour-long
special on Big Foot. A bunch of toothless rednecks running around in
the woods spitting and scratching while on the hunt for the elusive
Big Foot. Lucas was enamored with it all. Anything at all mythical
and monstrous and macabre.
When
Lucas grew bored of mythical creatures, he developed an interest in
human societal evolution. Yea…he’s nine years old. We read about
the Greeks and their numerous contributions to our modern society. We
read about the Romans and the Aztecs. We studied Aztec masks. We
watched monotonous PBS specials about dusty old archeologists
crouched in dusty old ruins digging up dusty old scraps of dusty old
Aztec pottery. Hours upon hours of such stimulating entertainment.
This was not my favorite of Lucas’ obsessions, but I feigned
interest.
Despite
years of reveling in my son’s nerdiness, I am finding it hard to
get on board with his newest obsession. It is not that I do not find
it interesting. Rather, the problem is that I think my eldest son has
finally gone over my head. He is venturing into territory that is
really just beyond the grasp of my feeble little mind. He is going
where no man has gone before. That’s right…it’s space.
He
talks about nothing these days except black holes. And the level of
gravity present in black holes. And event horizons. And stellar
masses. And electromagnetic radiation. And singularities. What the
hell is a singularity, by the way? It’s all very deep. And a couple
hundred miles over my head—to say the very least. He’s even been
walking around the house spouting off about Einstein’s Theory of
Relativity. Ummm…there’s an E in there somewhere, right? I
remember something is squared. Or maybe cubed? I don’t know…I
simply cannot wrap my mind around the infinite complexities
of space. Nor do I really have all
that much interest in trying. I have enough trouble wrapping my mind
around the infinite complexities of America’s
Got Talent.
It
kind of saddens me a bit though.
I’ve thoroughly enjoyed being a full participant in my son’s
nerdiness. I knew the day would come when his intellect outpaced my
own. I didn’t know we would get to this point a mere nine years
into his life on this Earth, but I suppose I should be proud. He will
probably be a great scientist one day. He may discover the cure for
cancer. Or be the first person to
set foot on Mars. Or he may just prove the existence of the Loch Ness
Monster, after all. If anyone can do it, he can. Regardless of what
he ends up doing, some of the most precious moments of my life were
afternoons spent lounging on the couch debating the existence of
dragons with my son. Just me and Lucas. Two nerds cuddling under a
blankie. Lucas with one sock on and one sock off. Hair sticking up in
the air. His glasses sliding down his nose as he excitedly
pontificates on why Beowulf was the greatest dragon-slayer ever.
God,
I love that little nerd.
2 comments:
Loved this story. I c an so see Lucas with these energy for space. Best guy on the planet to answer any questions Lucas can imagine-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_deGrasse_Tyson
You should know..as a fellow blogger--I sat with my 8 year old son (who is also a nerd) last night and watched a 45 minute documentary on black holes. My first viewing. His fifteenth. Lucas is not alone! nor are you. I'm a huge nerd too.
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