Sunday, September 17, 2017

Street Crossing Buddies


Crossing the street in China is a fluid dance, more than a structured set of rules.  The dancers are people, cars, bikes, motorcycles, and sometimes animals, weaving patterns of continuous motion.  Lights and lines are gentle suggestions, hints of potential boundaries. 


When I first moved to Nanchang, a southeastern province capital with five million people, I was terrified to cross the street.  I will never skydive because my God-given instincts tell me “Jumping out of the plane = death”.  Similarly, my feet would freeze to the sidewalk, my gut insisting, “Walking in front of moving cars and buses = getting run over”.  It seems wrong to override these messages.


A couple of months later, when my street crossing anxiety was starting to hinder my ability to explore and do life in Nanchang, a friend gave me a valuable tip.  “Find a buddy,” she said.  Not a real buddy, although that would work too, but look for someone else who is also crossing the street.  When they move, you move.  When they stop in the middle, you stop in the middle.  Relax, let the traffic flow around you, and learn the rhythms that the local buddy knows. 


Her idea was just what I needed.  There was definitely still a gamble involved in choosing a stranger buddy to lead me to safety, but I learned a lot.  For instance, old ladies were the riskiest.  They crossed like they owned the street and the cars were insignificant soap bubbles that would dissolve on contact.  It only took a few trials to realize that students and middle aged business people crossed more my style.  


Once, I ventured to a store across town that sold foreign food items.  I knew I’d have to cross a very wide and busy street to get there from the bus stop, but I was confident in this buddy system.  Plus, they sold chocolate chips.  Enough said, right?  There was only one woman around at the time, so she was my street crossing buddy by default.  The street was faster and busier than I’d planned for and my old fears resurfaced.  Halfway across, we paused and a bus came too close for comfort.  I closed my eyes, shrieked, and instinctively reached out and clasped her hand tightly.  With my low level Chinese, I said, “Fear!  Don’t like this!”  She smiled and looped her arm through mine to guide me the rest of the way.  We made it.  The chocolate chip cookies I made later were amazing.



I don’t live in China anymore, but this buddy system has proved just as valuable now as it was then.  Parenting is a new system for which I have not felt adequately prepared.  I don’t understand how little ones work most of the time.  My son says, “Cracker,” so I give him a cracker, only to have him melt into fierce tears, rejecting the offered cracker.  Minutes later, he’s fine, eats the cracker and we move on with our lives.  Or, we’re in the parking lot, so he has to hold my hand.  Except he wants nothing to do with me.  He wants to run.  Hours later, when I’m making dinner, all independence is gone and the only acceptable action is to hold him in my arms.  Then, there are the bigger, more impactful decisions involved.  Like, what to do when he’s sick, what to teach him and when, and what influences to allow or reject.  It can be scary.



So, once again, I’ve found some street crossing buddies.  God has put parents of different backgrounds, styles, and experience in my life and I’m watching them.  It ranges from just watching my friends’ parenting methods to directly asking for help.  Earlier this summer, a friend was over at my house when a major tantrum erupted.  I asked her to watch me discipline my little guy right then and coach me where I was missing the mark.  She’s been through the toddler phase three times and I trusted her input.  


In China, I eventually stopped needing a buddy and had my own way of navigating the streets.  As I grow in experience and in being okay with mistakes, I am more confident to make parenting choices too.  You never know – maybe someday, someone will hold my hand in the middle of their scary street and I can help them across.