Yes, I know he
Mostly I didn't even care about random stranger at the zoo, so excited was I that my son, who went into catatonic-anxiety-shut-down mode the last time we visited the zoo, was in my arms and eager to feed the lorikeets. "Waddis nectar? Juice? Why? Paul drink 'em? Why no?"
Look, Mom! No hands! Riding a lion! |
The tadpole-into-frog transformation is fun to watch. It's not like, say, a panda which starts as a very, very small panda then grows into a very, very big panda. Tadpoles start as fish-looking creatures and utterly transform into frog-looking creatures. First their gill structure begins to change; then they grow back legs; then sometime later they grow front legs; then their tail, well, I'm still not sure what happens to their tail exactly, disappears? shrinks?; then they hop onto dry land and start croaking at 3 a.m.
They have these hilarious moments of utter awkwardness, when they aren't really one thing or the other, with tiny back legs and a super long tail and a weird wobbly head. (A bit like middle school students.)
Sam chose a scripture verse for the project. (This was a science fair project for a Christian school. Which one would THINK would eliminate the Daddy-made-this-alternative-fuel-cell-in-his-university-laboratory-for-me-so-I-can-win science fair project. One would think.) Her scripture was 2 Corinthians 5:17 - Therefore if anyone is in Christ he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come. The judge stated that this scripture didn't entirely fit the project. He argued (not that I was arguing back. Sheesh. It wasn't MY science fair project. It's just that he was clearly WRONG and needed enlightening) that when a person decides to follow Christ, he changes completely and immediately, while the tadpoles transformed into frogs over time.
Okay, ya'll, I've been a Christian counselor for a LONG time. And I've seen, up close and personal, that while turning one's life over to Christ immediately imparts the power of the Holy Spirit to effect change, the actual transformation into Christ-likeness can be long and awkward and cause one to feel like he has the wrong gill structure and too-tiny-legs and a too-long-tail. Transformation takes time.
I've thought about those tadpoles this summer with Paul. When we first met him he was so scared - he didn't know us, he didn't trust us, this new world in which he found himself was completely baffling and foreign. His first trip to the zoo we left after ten minutes because he was so overwhelmed. His first venture into a classroom of kids he literally climbed my head in terror to escape.
But it seems his gill structure is starting to change. He's starting to breath in those feelings of trust in our love and security that we'll be there for him. Last week he walked happily into YMCA daycamp every morning and stayed all day. Saturday he explored every inch of the zoo, sometimes in my arms, and sometimes skipping happily by my side.
And then came Monday. Back-to-school day did not go well, which was
Because random stranger at the zoo and clearly wrong science fair judge and mommy who
Channeling his inner tiger. |
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