In July, Esmé will turn four years old. An
adorable towhead with hair as blond as straw, she believes that this
next year will be a milestone. “I plan to stop sucking my thumb
then,” she says, pulling her hand away from her mouth.
“And,” she adds, in a sentence as mushy as oatmeal, “when
I get four, I’ll learn how to backward somersault.” Right now,
Esmé’s life is about Halloween, funky shoes and her dog, Emma. Even
though it’s springtime, with cherry blossoms outside her bedroom window,
Esmé still talks about Halloween. “I was a bunny rabbit,” she
explains in her distinctly high-pitched voicea blend of excited
shrieking and falsetto singing. In nearly every conversation with Esmé
she will explain that she was a bunnyat least twice.
Around October, Esmé entered the stage of
development when children begin to comprehend a temporal sense of the
world. It’s when the cement begins to set. Her dad, Rob, also points
out, “all of a sudden, she is very aware of her surroundings.”
With a resigned sigh, he adds, “I can’t make promises and not come
through any more.”
Named after J.D. Salinger’s short story, For
Esmé, With Love and Squalor, Esmé is the daughter of Rob and
Michelle, two urban bohemians. They were never married. They both play
ultimate frisbee. Last year, they separated when Michelle left to start
a relationship with a woman on her ultimate team.
Rob is the publisher for the Portland Mercury,
an alternative weekly in Oregon. Owned by the guys who launched the
Onion, the Mercury is a sardonic and never-too-serious newspaper.
Likewise, Rob is hardly an orthodox, stuffy publisher. When a local city
councilmember refused to answer questions about his vote on a
controversial resolution, Rob put out a $200 bounty for any reader who
could elicit answers from the reticent politician. He also awarded an
honorary bottle of whiskey to the winnerjust like real news
reporters use, he explained.
His parenting style has a similar flaira
mixture of New Age philosophy, purely juvenile fun and extremely earnest
concerns about Esmé’s intellectual development. “No Disney,”
he explains. Rob goes on to talk about how TV distracts from real
interaction and about the integrity of the original Winnie-the-Pooh
books. “Now they’ve been dumbed downit’s all image, no
text.” Esmé’s favorite toy is a black doll.
For the past year, Esmé has attended Heart &
Hand. Connected to the Waldorf Schools, Heart & Hand emphasizes arts,
creative play and cooperation. All the toys are made from wood. Every
day the kids bake fresh bread.
In a year, Esmé will be old enough for
kindergarten. Michelle hopes to home-school Esmé, but Rob thinks that
the International Schoola highly challenging, but more
traditional programmay be best.
But Esmé isn’t interested in talk of her
education. She stands on her feet and slips off her colorful
sandalsleft half pastel green, right half pink. “These are
my friend’s,” she says. “But they don’t fit her.”
Esmé’s best friend, Shane, is more like a sister.
They both attend Heart & Hand and constantly swap clothes and copy each
other. Shane also dressed as a bunny rabbit this past Halloween.
Just then, an older skinny black dog wanders into
the room. On the dog’s butt is a sticker advertising the Portland
Mercury.
When asked whether she put the bumper sticker on
the dog, Esmé vehemently shakes her head. “Emma did that
herself,” she says. Dropping to all fours, she squirms and twists
her feet around like an epileptic yoga instructor. “With her
foot,” she explains, presumably displaying how this is possible. To
add credibility to her claim about her dog’s wondrous talents, Esmé
adds, “but that’s all that she can do.”
Phil Busse