Thursday, March 14, 2013

And Baby Goes to Battle

Yom chamishi, 3 Nisan 5773.

Saying a temporary goodbye to an old friend?
I have a remarkable ability to live outside moments that are particularly HUGE until I'm in them.  This means that I don't suffer from anxiety for weeks and weeks before an event.  It also means I crack my husband up in the days or hours before an event, as I go into hyper-accelerated meltdown.

My youngest baby -- all 183 centimeters of him -- is being inducted into the Israeli Defense Forces on Sunday.

And my face isn't exactly melting.  But my heart is beating more rapidly than it usually does.

You might ask why this has my attention, when all of that brutal activity on the gridiron just has my awe and pride, rather than my fear.  (See the short video at the end of this post, and watch for Number 20.  How does he do that????)  Many mothers have pointed out to me, in the most loving possible terms, that there is something wrong with a mother who doesn't freak out about her kid playing American football.  But it's just who Sports Guy has always been.  Taking the essence of my children away from them in order to keep them safe has never been my style.  So I just don't think about the danger.  Except for those isolated moments, late at night, when the prayer and the bargaining with G-d sneak in...

All of Sports Guy's brothers are or have been soldiers.  I spend a lot of time not thinking about this, focusing instead on my gratitude and pride in them for their service to our country, and on the fascination of watching their adult selves emerging from the boys I'd raised with their excellent father.

Suddenly, the baby of the brothers is changing uniforms.  From the orange and green of the Judean Rebels to the olive drab of the army.  He's not more special to me than his brothers.  I have been blessed to have such extraordinarily different sons that Soldier Boy is my favorite.  And Yeshiva Bochur is my favorite.  And Stunt Man is my favorite.  And Sports Guy is my favorite.  And SamJam is my favorite.  It's just the end of an era... and it's always hardest to say farewell to the last guy out the door.

While the Dearly Beloved and I have already discovered that we like the empty nest (as long as the chicks fly home every once in a while), today through Sunday and a while after will feel a little odd.  And then will be the day he comes back home in uniform...









We'll just keep cheering you on, Brothers.
Thank you for this wonderful video, Pavel Archavsky.  I'll probably be watching it a lot over the next few months...

8 comments:

Miriam said...

Ruti, May the Hand of Hashem always guide and protect your son and all our other brave Chayalim.

Miriam

Ye'he Sh'mey Raba Mevorach said...

G-d bless and keep them all. The football players and the soldiers.

Bat Aliyah said...

I so get this. I didn't send mine off to don green, but this is also the year we became Empty Nesters. Much harder than I ever expected. Thanks for documenting the milestones for all of us.

Anonymous said...

hmm...kheil ha'avir?...haYam? I haven't known any olim whose children were. How does that work?
Noah

rutimizrachi said...

Miriam and YSRM: Thank you for your prayers. They have more power than we know!

Bat Aliyah: It sneaks up on us, doesn't it? Your documentation seems to take care of some of my milestones that I missed. :-) Teamwork!

Noah: At least one of the Taylor boys went Air Force. Navy wanted Sports Guy, but it looks like he's going into tanks.

Risa Tzohar said...

Hashem be with you and your sons.

Batya said...

May Hashem protect them all.
PS the opposing IFL players are relieved that he won't be on the field for a few years.
PPS My baby did tackle him last game at least once. It wasn't easy.

Shalomis said...

Maybe because he's the baby...I'm feeling particularly protective. Can't they just have him on the playing field instead? May Hashem charge His angels to protect him and his brothers in every way. And may He hear and answer the prayers of a proud aunt.