
It has been a year since we traveled to Arizona, a birthday wish of mine. I said “mine”. My family wanted to go. They were super excited about doing something we have never done before. But truth and reality certainly out way my romanticized view of this beautiful place. A photographer and artist at heart, even a naturalist, I have lived through an artist’s perspective of this place. However, I want to talk about my son’s experience.

He did have a good time but chose to focus on the hard parts for him to digest. I did the little sketch. That is his handwriting.
May, 2019.
This week, when I asked Adoni to remember our trip and some of his favorite parts he said he didn’t have any good memories. His most profound memory was about the pain he felt. We were told by the tour guide about the number of people who died in the previous of months. It was shocking. This statement put the fear of God in all of us but mostly my husband. I will not throw my husband under the bus right now and blame him. However, I will say his love and desire to keep our wildest child safe hindered Adoni’s experience in Adoni’s mind. Adoni still can’t formulate a full intellectual response, but he said “you guys wouldn’t let me see anything, you embarrassed me”. He can detail the exact moment and movements that lead up to Luis’ fight or flight response to Adoni’s actions.

As I am the one homeschooling the kids and Luis is out bringing in the income, I am the one who is adventurous, leading the kids out in nature. What I don’t get about Luis’ fears and concerns with Adoni is that Luis grew up a free and wild child himself. My guess is that he had the village always looking out. We don’t have the village. Either way I have allowed Adoni to explore in a way that pushed me, heightening my own fears. This gave him freedom to grow emotionally and physically, to learn boundaries. That trust was missing while we were in Arizona. Factor in the fact that we haven’t traveled as a family to unknown places. This was a huge learning experience for Luis- HUGE.
I shared his notes with him. He smiled and thought about these moments. He had forgotten and he said so. He admitted that his best memories were being with his cousins.


























