While in Richmond for some family medical appointments, I talked my son into getting up and going for a run along a trail close to where we were staying.
We negotiated an 8 a.m. departure. It was still drizzling when we parked the car and walked over to the trailhead.
“You want to run together or do our own thing?” he asked.
I appreciate that he always asks, even though we both know the answer.
Much faster than me, he typically targets a pace when he runs.
Anymore I pray in soft distances.
“Do our own thing,” I replied as always, never wanting to hold him back.
Over the next couple minutes, I watched the back of his shirt get smaller and smaller until it disappeared into the trail’s twisting curves.
So I was surprised when, about 10 minutes later, I came upon him again — stopped and holding his phone in front of him.
“What’s up?” I asked, pausing the podcast in my ears.
“It’s my favorite bird,” he said.
I didn’t know he had a favorite bird, let alone …
“Wood thrush,” he answered, before I could ask.
I realized he was recording, not taking photos.
“Listen ….”
His one-word invitation disappeared the static of the world … letting its pure signal reach my parched ears.
And for a good half minute, we stood rapt and enraptured.
Alive in our tracks.
By a small invisible thrush in a vast forest.
Singing its natural anthem … over a whispering drizzle as cool and coaxing as brushes on a snare drum.
“He’s going through all his tunes,” Peter said, just as I caught the crispest “Ee-oh-lay” — the trilling, thrilling middle and most recognizable of the three-part hymn ‘common’ (in name only) to the male of the species.
The whole time I was mindful that we were simultaneously inconsequential to the proceedings and possibly the most grateful audience he’ll ever perform for.
After his last note, I held my breath a couple extra seconds — the same greedy and hopeful feeling I always feel after the last firework — just in case he felt like taking another chorus.
Exhaling broke the spell.
And we gathered ourselves … as if after a benediction.
Peter put his phone away.
I put my podcast back in my ears.
He took off in front of me.
And I watched the back of his shirt get smaller in the distance before disappearing once again in the twists of the trail.
As I followed him at a soft distance, I was still warm from having received something significant … the gift of standing next to my son while listening to his favorite bird singing arias in the rain.
And I prayed the futile and selfish prayer I used to pray after a good sermon — that I will remember this … and cling to it … when the world comes hard for my heart.