Faster Legs
Monday, December 1st, 20081. Walking pace
2. Normal Walking
3. Nearly Walking
Getting to Nursery On Time was a Good Thing. I was out of the door at exactly the right time to jump in the car and go, and get to Nursery avoiding the glacially-paced Monday traffic. “Where’s the car?” I called to The Man, who’d parked it on Saturday. “Outside XXX and YYYs,” he said. XXX and YYY are friends who live 10 minutes’ walk away. Oh dear. I wasn’t a very good Example For The Children. However. The conclusion is that the longer, rural route to the Big Town is faster than the normal way, despite the mile-long crawl near the Industrial Estate. Son 1 aged 4y 2m got there in time for the Hellos.
I had to pick him up again at 1.30pm because he had an appointment with a paediatric physio. I think his right foot flays out when he runs. She asked me lots of questions, watched him sit, walk and run, and then moved his legs up and down while he was lying on a couch. She says both feet flay out, but when he’s walking both feet are turned in. His hip joints in the sockets turn in, so his thighs turn in when he’s tired, so his lower legs flay out. Stop him sitting in a “W” - which he’s done since he was a baby; he need to be cross-legged. And get him to stand on one leg, and hop, when he can (he can’t yet.) In the range of normal, but he’s never going to be an athlete. Dang, and there’s us with athletes on both sides of the family. Was it because he was breech? I asked. She didn’t think so, it’s hereditary. Somewhere on either side there is another “W” sitter. It’s just how he is.
Back home and Son 2 aged 14m is almost ready to lift off. He can comfortably walk eight or ten paces… and managed to slalom through a doorway this evening to get to me when I went upstairs. He can walk many steps, several times in a row before he pretends to lose interest, plops down on his bottom and goes crawling off to change the subject. He gives himself a clap before he starts, and then steps out confidently until he lets himself fall into the arms of whoever’s in goal. And when he totters over to Son 1’s outstretched arms and plops on top of him at the end Mummy’s heart turns to mush.

