Image Alt

The Great Mystery

The Great Mystery

It is impossible to imagine what our child will be like coming from parents so starkly contrasted in both personality and looks. I’ll go so far as to squint at my husband — attempting to transplant his square shoulders and mountain-man scruffies onto a baby girl with my coloring and pointed chin — and I get stuck.

“What?” he asks. “Got something on my face?”

Then I try to figure out the amalgam between Randy’s introverted personality and my own, which at times has been compared to a hyperactive golden retriever, and the same thing happens. What kind of child can be created from one parent who rates meeting new people right up there with the Apocalypse and one parent who considers the checkout girl at Wal-Mart to be a potential best friend?

Even the way my husband and I cook is polar opposite. I believe recipes are mere suggestions whereas Randy adheres to every teaspoon and pinch as if his culinary soul depends upon it. He always keeps a damp cloth handy so he can wipe down the stovetop if a speck of food dare leap from the pan to mar its shiny black surface, and every item is immediately returned to the cupboard as soon as my husband finishes uses it. The first five seconds I cook are as organized and calm as a Martha Stewart production. But when dinner hits the table fifteen minutes later, I am wearing an apron made from whatever mystery ingredients were involved and the walls around the oven resemble a Jackson Pollock canvas.

I am also slightly disheveled when it comes to home repairs. Eight years ago I traveled with my husband’s family to Bogota, Colombia, where we painted an entire floor of an orphanage. By the time we left two weeks later, my skin was coated with more sea-foam green than the walls. My husband seems to be scarred from this memory. I don’t know if he doesn’t want his wife looking like a knockoff version of the Wicked Witch of the West or if he fears for our home, but he always plugs his ears and hums whenever I bring up a project involving paint, glitter, hammers, or caulk.

I would love for Baby Girl to adore the arts like I do — to play the cello, read Shakespeare by candlelight, and wear long prairie skirts and feathered earrings — but as far as business smarts are concerned, I hope she takes after Daddy.

This week we drove to Knoxville to look at a new vehicle since my Jeep has been on its last tire for the past decade. As my husband pulled into the used car parking lot, I said, “You offered below the asking price, right?”

Randy nodded.

“What did he say?”

“He’d take it.”

“I knew it!” I swatted the dashboard. “We shoulda offered less. He’s obviously chomping at the bit to sell.”

Randy shook his head. “We’re already offering a thousand below the asking price, we certainly can’t ask lower now.”

I agreed, but if my husband hadn’t been there, I still would’ve tried dickering with the salesman even after coming to an agreement over the phone. As it was, that salesman just didn’t feel like giving me any more of his time when I finished looking at the car we had traveled an hour and a half to see and wanted to test drive another just for fun. I think it had something to do with how I’d pointed out every minute imperfection on the first car’s body and said — so that the higher ups in the offices could hear — that the vehicle looked like it had hail damage.

Hopefully, Baby Girl will take after Daddy when it comes to keeping her mouth shut, too.

Comments

  • This is the most fun and biggest mysteries of life, I have to agree Jolina! And the best fun is that it keeps changing every day, every year–so just when you think you've figure it out, a new personality surprise comes along. I can't wait to read all about Baby Girl, and who she takes after in what — I'll be very surprised if she's not way creative, by the way!! (p.s. I want to take you car shopping with us — no seriously — or your husband as second choice because BOTH of us are far worse then either of you at bargaining.)

    December 5, 2011
  • Great post, Jolina. It's fascinating to watch the personality of your child as she grows. Both my husband and I are on the introverted side. We do great meeting people. But given the choice, we'd rather stay home and read books. And we don't go out of our way to engage the person in line next to us in stores. Sophie, however, is the complete opposite. She always wants to do things and loves talking to new people. In fact, on the Fourth of July, she made friends with the kid/family next to us and hung out with them. Bryan and I stayed in the car and were perfectly content.

    December 6, 2011
  • I love to haggle too much, Julia; it drives the seller crazy. I think you would be better off with my husband as your go-to guy. He remains cool and calm and can wheel and deal until the person selling doesn't even know he is lowering the price. Do not know how he does it–I get worked up and sweated just trying to save 50 cents at a yard sale! 😉

    December 6, 2011
  • That is so cute that Sophie is an extrovert while her parents tend toward the opposite! From that one video Randy and I watched, The Miracle of Giving Birth (or something like that), we learned that a lot of those characteristics are formed in the womb. I just find that fascinating! From the way Baby Girl keeps kicking and thrashing around in my stomach, I saw we've spawned ourselves a wild child, but we shall see. Maybe she will come out docile and calm…just like mommy. NOT! 😉

    December 6, 2011
  • It is a joy to watch your baby transform into a little person. My baby is a smiley, talkative, singing, determined, lover of the a.m. It is amazing to watch him give a facial expression and feel like I am looking in the mirror. Babies are the perfect combination of their parents. I remember laying on the delivery table and the doctor said, “Well, he looks just like his daddy!” This is true, and yet it is not. That is the amazing thing about children, they are ever changing. I imagined what my baby would look like and he is nothing like what I imagined. He is so much better in beauty and in spirit. God is so good, and a child is his greatest blessing. Get ready to be transformed. :)-Bonnie

    December 6, 2011
  • Oh, Bonnie, your words are so beautiful; they bring tears to my eyes. I cannot wait to be transformed, although I am slightly terrified of the process. I just know that I must take each day at a time and seeing that little face who is a combination of myself and my husband will be the greatest gift in the world.

    Your baby is absolutely beautiful, by the way. The perfect blend of you both.

    December 6, 2011
  • What a great post. I think Baby Girl will get the best of both worlds (but can I borrow your husband in the kitchen? Mine – WHEN he cooks – dirties every pan imaginable and waits for ME to clean up behind him). I think this speaks a lot to the “opposites attract” theory. I married a man who has only read one full-length novel in his life, who loves math, and is probably the most patient thing around. Yes, we complement one another. His strengths are my faults, my strengths are his. But it works. And I'm sure it will work for Baby Girl, coming from such good parents. By the way – re: the picture. You even know how to make a pregnant belly look stylish.

    December 6, 2011
  • I completely believe in the theory that opposites attract, Melissa. Like you and your husband, my husband and I differ in everything from temperature (I am always bundled up and freezing while his forearms are sheened in sweat)to abilities (he has a wonderful business mind while I couldn't sell snow cones on the Fourth of July). But wouldn't it be boring if we were all the same? Randy and I would have nothing to laugh about. And thank you for the compliment about my baby belly. I just realized today that I have just eleven weeks to go! It actually makes me sad; I have loved being pregnant.

    December 6, 2011
  • This big mystery will fun, exciting and sometimes trying as you unravel each layer. All worth it. I have never regretted being a mom, even when I was challenged with the mystery of why an intelligent child would make some very unintelligent choices.

    December 7, 2011
  • I am looking forward to unraveling this great mystery, Cecilia. I am sure I won't regret it; I just hope the child isn't frustrate when her mother is the one making the unintelligent choices. I'm sure there will be many–especially in the beginning! 🙂

    December 7, 2011
  • Whatever traits she inherits, she will be perfect. 🙂 From the moment she comes into the world, your heart will be worn on the outside of your chest. Life is good. 🙂

    December 8, 2011
  • I think my heart is already on the outside of my chest, Hallie; this little girl captured it the moment I heard her heart beat at twelve weeks along! I just sobbed and sobbed. It was one of the most beautiful experiences of my life (so far).

    December 8, 2011
  • It's interesting to look at this from any perspective. Sometimes I try to figure out which parts of my personality came from which parent and which parts are uniquely me. Those parts that I can't trace to anyone else, where did they come from? Like you say, it is the great mystery.

    December 8, 2011
  • I agree, Stories and Sweet Potatoes–it's all about nature versus nurture! 🙂

    December 9, 2011
  • Jolina, what a wonderful post. Oh, I so remember doing the very same. And the mystery will continue to unfold after she is born. My husband and I still can't help but try to unravel the puzzle of who they take after–or when it's a precious trait that resembles neither of us (and like you and your hubby, mine and myself are polar opposites too!) and then the mystery deepens. Oh, so many layers of joy await you all.

    Sending you warm holiday wishes, dear!

    December 10, 2011
  • I cannot wait to unravel our little mystery, Erika, and to try to pinpoint the traits that are ours and the ones that are uniquely her own. I completely agree that many layers of joy await us–along with many many diapers and sleepless nights, but oh, it will be so worth it!

    Merry Christmas to you, too, dear Erika!

    December 12, 2011

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.