Monday, July 19, 2010

Dizzy Izzy

Isabella never met her grandmother. Still, those who knew them both commented on how much she resembled her. Hillary, Izzy's gramma, had died many years before her birth. Izzy's mother, Kaylanne was raised by Nashelle and Tom, Kaylanne's grandparents. There's a story in itself, but right now we're talking about Izzy and her grandmother.
It turns out that when Kaylanne put Izzy's hair into little pig-tails for the first time, Izzy just couldn't help but shake her head back and forth making those little tufts of hair whizz around her head like little propellors. The more she whipped her head back and forth, the lighter her head felt. Now I'm sure you're thinking I meant to say she got 'light-headed', but that is not what I mean at all. Izzy's head actually started to feel lighter. Izzy had no idea that her own grandmother had been known as Hillary Helicopter and that one day people would start calling her Dizzy Izzy.
Hillary got her name when she asked her mom (Nashelle) to please put her hair into three pig-tails, one on each side of her head just above the ears and another third pigtail in the center of the back of her head. Nashelle was happy to oblige, familiar with Hillary's free spirited nature and taste for the unusual, so five minutes later after a tug of war with Hillary's thick and unruly hair, Hillary ran off, shaking her head and making the pig-tails fly around until they started to make a whirring sound. So delighted with her new hair-do, Hillary ran through the house jumping and laughing as she whipped her head from side to side. Much to Nashelle's amazement, Hillary began to lift off the ground. Just an inch at first, hardly perceptible with all of her hopping and jumping, but just the same, Nashelle noticed that Hillary wasn't quite touching the ground when she was 'landing' from her leaps and bounds. Pretty soon, Hillary was buzzing through the air around the livingroom and flying from sofa to ottoman to chair and back to the sofa again, all the while laughing and squealling with delight. Nashelle stood by, eyes bugging out and feet planted in disbelief as her little girl took flight through the house. Before she knew it, Hillary had flown out the kitchen door into the back yard and was fluttering around, dancing above the dog, zooming past the woodpile, and circling the shade trees. Nashelle sprung into action and caught her little darling by the hand just as she started to shoot high into the air and head for the fence that separated their yard from the neighbors. The added weight of her mommy brought Hillary back down to the earth, safely in one piece. "Wow!" Nashelle hollered. "That was really something! You kind of scared me a little bit there. I think maybe we ought to take those pig-tails out for a while until you learn to control yourself a little." Hillary's dancing eyes and quick grin filled her upturned face to greet her mother's concerned look. "It's OK Mommy, I be careful" she exclaimed. "Well, alright then, my little helicopter. Just slow down a little and stay in the yard. Maybe you should try riding your tricycle around or play with the doggies and give your little neck a rest. You don't want to wreck yourself, now do you?" Nashelle suggested. "Hm uhm, no ma'm. But you don't have to take my hair down, I'll stay here. I promise."
Hillary's little brother Moses was just waking from his nap and Nashelle had to go back into the house to get him, but left the kitchen door open so she could at least hear her daughter, if not see her. Reassured by the sounds of her giggles and animated conversation with Rajah the Australian Shepherd, Nashelle took a moment to change little Moses' diapers before heading back to the shady yard where Hillary played with her favorite dog. Big old Ramses, the black Mastiff-Dane lay in the cool dampness next to the wood pile, watching the goings on of the back yard. Moses quickly squirmed his way out of his mom's grasp and toddled his way over to the big black dog where he promptly snuggled up to the old mutt and started examining the dog's mouth and teeth. Ramses was the ever patient and mellow baby toy, never even making a rumble except for the occasional sigh or "umph" when one of the kids dove onto him like a great stuffed cushion. After that first day, Hillary would often ask her mom for her 'helicopter hair' which she soon designed into four tails, equally spaced about the crown of her head, one in front, one in back and one on each side. Nashelle adjusted to the idea that her little girl could fly, and quite well I might add, and watched her with a combination of joy, pride and fear as her daughter darted about the sky, always staying within the boundaries of their generous lot. Hillary didn't fly much indoors, unless it was raining. Occasionally when they were at the grocery store and her mom was busy shopping with Moses in the baby seat of the shopping cart, Hillary would dash off for a quick flight up and down the aisles. She loved the blur of colors from the stuff on the shelves, but once she lost herself for a moment and flew into a display of boxes of cold cereal that someone had built in the middle of her runway and she was embarrassed by the commotion it caused. Her mom suggested, not all that gently, that perhaps she should refrain from flying in the stores, that maybe it was a little dangerous. Hillary only flew for a few months, maybe even a year, when she was about three or four years old.
Now Izzy, that's another story! Izzy was only nine months old when she first started flying. She hadn't even started walking yet. Even though her first flight was only a few seconds and it surprised her mom and great-grandmother (who was holding her at the time), she flew. It was then that they both knew she had the "helicopter gene" and had inherited it from her granny, even though she had never met her. Nashelle was quick to caution Kaylanne about letting her fly too early and to maybe just keep her hair in only two or three pig-tails to start, saving the four propellors for later, when Izzy was old enough to control her flights. Kaylanne had heard the stories of her mother's ability to fly around with her 'helicopter-do' but never quite believed them. She had worn her own hair in the four-propellors trying to simulate flight, but never really got off the ground, so she had always thought the story was myth. And yet, here was her own little baby, shaking her head with her little piggies-tails and actually lifting away from her arms. By the time Izzy could walk, she had mastered her ability to fly. It drove her mom crazy, crazy from worry and crazy from the constant "Mommy, do my hair!". Kaylanne resorted to buying elastic bands for Izzy's hair by the bagsfull. She had every color made, and depending upon what she was wearing, her hair bands matched perfectly. Izzy, however, just couldn't stop at three pig-tails, or four pig-tails...no! She had to have six pig-tails, all evenly spaced around the crown of her head. Now let me give you an idea of Izzy's hair. When she was born, her hair was black as a raven's wing, and thick. Everone commented on her thick black hair and how they had never seen so much hair on a baby. As Izzy grew, her hair started to turn blonde, but the ends stayed black as the ace of spades. By the time Izzy started getting her hair put in pig-tails, it was an explosion of curls. Nashelle said she looked like Albert Einstein. Kaylanne started with the pig-tails to try to control the cloud of hair that floated above Izzy's head. That's when it started. The flying I mean. Izzy's hair was so spectacular it would have been a shame to cut it, but to just let it do it's own thing was really asking for trouble. I'm not sure, but I bet if left to it's own natural self, Izzy's hair would have started drifting around on its own anyway, and probably would have just taken flight in every which way. At least with the propellers, there was a little hope for Izzy to be able to regulate her escapes from gravity and at least choose her direction.
I remember one day, while Kaylanne and Isabella were visiting and we were out by the pool, it was warm and we were paddling around in the cool crystal clear water when Izzy started shaking her head as she sat on the steps in the shallow end of the pool. She couldn't have been ten months old yet and she was naked as a jay bird, splashing and laughing while watching the bubbles. She must have gotten a little water on her face which made her shake her head. Her mom was still only putting two pig-tails in her hair in those days. I was sitting right next to her, making sure she didn't slip off the step into deeper water, and before I knew it, she was out of the water and floating about three inches above my shoulder height, in mid air, kicking her chubby little legs and laughing with that helium-ducky laugh of hers. Not wanting to frighten her, I simply reached out and gently pulled her back into the water and wiped her little face with my hand. It was then I knew for sure that Kaylanne was going to have her hands full with that baby! Izzy has always been a happy baby and easy to deal with. She loves to eat and is happy to take a nap. Other than being a little wiggley when you're trying to put a diaper on her, she's just about perfect. But this flying thing...that was going to be a slightly bigger problem than getting her to lie still. My suggestion was to keep a string tied to her toe so that if she started to float away, her mom could always pull her back down. Pretty soon Izzy also had ribbons to match her hair bands to match her outfits. Kaylanne just tied the ribbons to Izzy's fat little hand and then to the handle of her stroller or shopping cart or whatever and then Izzy would just fly in little circles and kind of float about when her momma was shopping or at the mall. Before long, people would gather around and watch "Dizzy Izzy" as she buzzed around the crowd's heads zooming through the mall and diving in and out of the shops. She like the blur of colors, too, just like her gramma. Even better, she loved the racks of clothes and the lovely smells of the cosmetic counters, as well as the sparkle of the pretty gems in the glass cases of the jewelry stores. Izzy really like zipping through the air and seeing the faces of those watching her smile up at her.
By the time Izzy was four, she had given up flying. She wanted to dance instead, and wear her hair in braids or a neat little bun like a ballerina. Before she turned five and started school, Izzy had even forgotten that she used to fly and never asked to have her hair in her 'helicopter-do' anymore. Once she saw a picture of herself with her hair in the mega six propeller hair do and she asked her mom why she had made her look so funny. She didn't remember her days of flying, at all. Oh well.

5 comments:

  1. I enjoyed reading this story..I have falling in love with the child in me too. Like grandmother like grand daughter..sometimes the family traits skip a generation...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Really genetics are an amazing thing. Miss Yo but love to hear her genes have been passed on. SO strange how her laughter comes out even in my children. She is the lucky one getting to be home so early, but we all sure do miss her.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Crap that was my comment right up there!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh and sorry it took me so long to get here, but at least you now have several comments :)

    ReplyDelete
  5. This was absolutely enchanting, Nashelle!

    ReplyDelete