October 12, 2020

Read Andersen’s “Under the Willow Tree” for Maomao last night before bedtime. He felt asleep towards the end but it lingered with me for a while after I finished it.


This story goes with me everywhere all these years because of Dad. Back when I was applying for college, shooting for PKU, Dad was largely reticent in the whole process. I thought he didn’t particularly care one way or another, which, at that time, was strangely calming for me. A few weeks before I was set to leave home he said to me one afternoon, pretty much out of blue, that somehow he always thought it would play out so that I’d end up in a local college, ideally a medical school, and stay in Chengdu afterwards. And he made a vague reference to this story called “Dream under the Willow Tree” before he hurried off, maybe he suddenly thought of something more important or just felt a tad embarrassed, I had no way to tell. I didn’t know that story, and there was no way for me to find out (it being early 1990’s). Three or four years later I came upon that story in the PKU library, I stood there and read the whole thing and I remember couldn’t move for a long time afterwards. I read the letter Knud’s Dad wrote him over and over again, just that One sentence, I somehow always remember it afterwards along the line that “You are not really Danish at heart, we Danes like to stay at home but you always crave adventures in foreign lands.” And I always picture a forlornness on his dad’s face (or mine, in that afternoon) when he wrote (said) it.


But this particular line was inexplicably missing in the Delphi version I read to Maomao. I searched it online (this being early 2010’s) and found a version that has it. The exactly translation is “You are not really Danish as we here at home. We love our country, but you love only a strange country.” Not quite how I remembered it.


Same thing happened a few weeks ago when Maomao and I walked Argos for the first time. I told Maomao where Argos’ name came from, and by extension the story of Odyssey in a nutshell. I mentioned that the part that impressed me most was Chapter XI where Odyssey went to Hade, lit a great bonfire by Styx and saw the ghost of his dead mother. I mused, out loud, that Dante must have read Homer and was likewise impressed by the scenes where Odyssey saw the pale shadows of ghosts emerging from total darkness and converging towards the fire, and how he received stark visions of his future from a dead prophet. As I turned around and looked at him I thought, did I just reminisce fondly of hell to a 7-years old, bright and early and before breakfast. But he took it in stride and said “Read it to me when we get home.”


The scene I wanted to read him most was where Odyssey tried to hug his mother three times and each time came up empty. As I was reading them out loud I hesitated a bit and remembered thinking “hmm… this is not how I remembered it.” I remembered it to be… more. Or rather, less. The bitter sweetness, the Resignation, the farewell a mom said to her son, again, in One line. Maybe it’s because this is Fagels? I did write a 3000-word blog post extrapolating why I prefer Lattimore to Fagels. So I spent some time to dig out Lattimore as well — at this point it’s not about Maomao anymore. And looking at Lattimore’s version it felt equally unsatisfactory. I just remembered it to be, maybe I just wanted it to be, more, succinct but impactful than these. I remembered it to be along the line that “Son, this is the way we are now.” Without the graphic reference to sinews and all. For a moment I replayed in my mind a time-lapse movie of how these lines took roots in their original form in the memory, but were gradually trimmed away, by contemplation and circumstance, by wishful thinking and forgetfulness, into the line now I vaguely remembered with exaggerated expectations. Speaking of which, I looked up and Maomao was reading Captain Underpants while picking his nose, blissful and content.

September 26, 2020

On his second walk Argos is still very much trying to take everything in and adapt to the environment. He’s particularly scared of the two-deck buses, tenses up and assumes the attacking position if one swoops by too closely. Whenever Maomao feels Argos trembling through the leash, he will stoop down and hold him, press his cheek on Argo’s head and pat him on the leg until he stops shaking. Then he will stand up and resume walking like nothing happened.

After seeing that happening a couple of times I took out the phone and took a few pictures. In that moment it occurred to me that for a kid it’s really one of the same thing when he acts out of kindness of heart and out of mischief, like when he chases Argos around the living room with a stick. Just a tiny little soul knowing nothing yet but innocence.

September 18, 2020

At 8:30pm Maomao again wants to go downstairs to play. I lost my patience, scolding him for not wanting to spend more time reading or playing piano, but I eventually had to relent and let him go seeing that he’s at the brink of tears. Nowadays he plays at leat 3 or 4 hours downstairs everyday and it becomes a constant source of tension between me and him.

After he went out I sit in bed reading W. H. Auden’s Dyer’s Hand with a random symphony piece on Spotify in the background. My mind wondered to my first few years in Boston while reading the essay on the evolution of a young poet, and suddenly I was struck and weighted down by a deep sense of frustration and fulity. Not over my own laugable attempts to become a poet in my 20’s, I’ve made peace with that a long time ago. I again pondered on how Maomao is a total different person than me. This year I spent more time with him at home than ever, but instead of help us bond it only makes our relationship more and more contentious. This afternoon he was playing a song by Imagine Dragon in his room while drawing. I asked where did he learn about this song and, must have sensed the displeasure in my tone, he said, “I like Rock Music. Different people can like different things right?” I didn’t say anything and left the room. And the other day he put a song called Dancing Monkey on a loop at dinner table. He’s rather quick at picking up these random bits from kids he played with. Last week for a few days he was obsessed with Minecraft, cause kids downstairs talked about it. And before that it was Fortnite. I’m rather concerned by such indiscriminatory exposure to pop culture but I feel powerless to curb it. Conversely I’m inching ever colser to give up on trying to get him to take an interest in Classical music, a lost cause I have been devoting to from the day he was born.

I mean I know all this is me being unfair and harsh on him out of pure selfishness more than anything else. When I’m not losing my temper I put on aggresive displays of disappointment towards him just because he’s lying on the sofa daydreaming. I hate it when I’m like that but it only seems to get worse. I don’t know how to internallize this vague guilty feelings that I’m failing him in his education, so it comes out as negativity and aggression against him. Ever since he was born a recurring thoughts when I’m reading is “I wonder what Maomao will think of this when he sees it in 20 or 30 years”, as I drag a yellow highlighter across a line I like. But now sitting here it seems to me yet again that this may never happen. He’ll probably grow up not caring about books or music at all. All these thoughts I thought that I have meticulously perpetuated with ink and paper, a sort of metaphysical fist pump with him across a vast span of time and space even after I’m gone that I secretly buried between these pages, will actually all vanish with me. As that subsconscious expectation of legancy and continuity was constantly shattered and yanked away from me I suffered these bouts of futility attack.

貓貓語錄

“爸爸,時間過得很快嘛對不對?”
“Carpe diem, son.”
“It’s like when I was a baby, you went to get milk and heard me talking, you came back and I’m already grown up.”
“Aww…”
“And it’s like I sharpened my pencil and it’s already dinner time.”
“Is that why you didn’t do homework at all today? Is it what this is all about?!”