On
August 2nd, 2017, my nephew, Tomás Del Pino Coffey, came to live with me and my
husband in Huntsville, Alabama, for the 2017-2018 school year. He was 13 at the
time; his 14th birthday was October 2nd, 2017. (That was a “cheat day,” when he
allowed himself to go off his strict-but-plentiful diet). As a CrossFit
devotee, he was into protein and carbohydrates, but not fat or sugar. On “cheat
day,” however, he and Russell had breakfast at IHOP (International House of
Pancakes), we all had burgers and fries for lunch, followed by donuts.
That
evening we went out to a pizza restaurant, where Tomás consumed an entire large
pizza and glimpsed his first American football being played on the television
there.
He found it boring compared with soccer (which he’d played at school in
Spain).
By
his birthday, then, we had adjusted to his being here. His bedroom was my
former office space. I was attuned to his needs, fixing his breakfast (three
eggs, two waffles, fresh fruit, ice water) every weekday morning at 7 am. He was
picked up for school (freshman class at New Century Technology High) at about
8:00 am by a friend whose daughter went to the same school. I was responsible
for picking both of them up three days a week in the late afternoon. At first I
would get to the school very early to get a parking spot and wait in the car,
listening to the news. As the year went on, I pushed my arrival at the school
later and later, but I was always there before “the bell rang.” Tomás was bored
with school, for the most part. He turned out to be slightly rebellious in his
approach to his “studies.
Having access to YouTube to learn anything he wished to learn, he didn’t appreciate having to listen to things that weren’t interesting to him. It turned out that English literature and history were two of those things.
This was shocking to me at first; as a high-schooler, I had initially respected the “authority” of my teachers, and even admired some of them. I wasn’t sure if I should scold or push him or leave him alone about it. It took me a while to remember that I, too, had rebelled, in a worse fashion. I had skipped classes, wandered off, and finally dropped out. Tomás wound up with A’s and B’s anyway, for final grades. He’s a smart kid, math-oriented, but not a reader. This meant that the enthusiasms and recommendations I had to offer were not needed. Instead, Tomás introduced us to newer, contemporary amusements via his cell phone.
Having access to YouTube to learn anything he wished to learn, he didn’t appreciate having to listen to things that weren’t interesting to him. It turned out that English literature and history were two of those things.
This was shocking to me at first; as a high-schooler, I had initially respected the “authority” of my teachers, and even admired some of them. I wasn’t sure if I should scold or push him or leave him alone about it. It took me a while to remember that I, too, had rebelled, in a worse fashion. I had skipped classes, wandered off, and finally dropped out. Tomás wound up with A’s and B’s anyway, for final grades. He’s a smart kid, math-oriented, but not a reader. This meant that the enthusiasms and recommendations I had to offer were not needed. Instead, Tomás introduced us to newer, contemporary amusements via his cell phone.
Most evenings, I’d drive Tomás to the CrossFit “box,” a ten-minute drive. The class was an hour long, which meant I had to drive back to pick him up an hour later. Sometimes I’d grocery shop during this time; sometimes I’d take the dog to the dog park. My life became a series of car trips. Grocery shopping had to be done at least every two days. The kid ate a lot. I was making meals on the 1950s plan: a meat, a vegetable, a “starch.” My sister had given me access to some money in an account, which paid for his food. He’d eat twice as much meat as I did, or even Russell did, and would often follow dinner with a huge bowl of cereal and milk. Gallons of milk per week were also mixed with the protein powder he needed before and after workouts. He started indulging in a self-created workout at 6 am in addition to his evening WOD (CrossFit-approved Workout of the Day), doing “double-unders” (jumping rope) on the deck, swinging a 50-pound kettlebell, pumping 50-pound dumbbells. Of course, we’d hear his thumping as we lay in bed, not quite ready to get up ourselves. Tomás’s body shape was spectacularly muscular, and he was enamored of this aspect of himself. I (the contrarian) tried to ignore that aspect and pay more attention to his mind.
He was a funny guy. He and Russell had a rapport, part of which involved speaking in Maggie the dog’s voice, a rough, gangster-style persona that Russell invented before Tomás came, but to which Tomás added an incredible backstory that kept growing and growing. Maggie was more than a hundred years old, it seems, and had been everywhere and done everything, and been responsible for almost every important technological development of the last fifty years. She was a braggart and sometimes a liar; not to mention a narcissist, violent enforcer of her likes and dislikes, and a cattle baron (because she liked steak). Maggie, through Tomás, would berate me for not giving her enough steak.
In
March came the workouts for the CrossFit Open. Five consecutive weekends of
brief, but strenuous workouts that were scored by his coach, Nathaniel. Tomás
wanted to do each workout twice, once on Friday and again on Sunday, to see if
he could improve his score. He always did improve his score, and ended up
70-something in his age group in the world, out of nearly 2,000 contestants. A
few weeks later he was officially invited to do the Online Qualifier workouts,
which were to be filmed. I think he had hopes of jumping up to the top 20 with
these four workouts. This was unlikely, but he was very angry with me for
messing up one of the films (I was not used to using my phone for filming, and
ended up switching to my video camera). With these workouts, he rose to 62nd in
the world in his age group, a fantastic achievement, but only the top 20 would
go to the annual games in August.
Before I witnessed Tomás doing this competition, I had no idea of his capacities. I was blown away, watching him. He was a real athlete, possibly even “gifted.” The first hug he ever gave me was after completing the very first competitive workout in March.
I was as supportive as it was possible to be, and would become as nervous as he was before one of these competitive workouts, the first series of which were done in groups, with a judge for each contestant, and a big digital clock ticking away on one end of the gym. The more “reps” and rounds of activities that were completed within the allotted time, the better the score. Usually the weight to be lifted was prescribed, but there were two workouts that involved increasing the weight. The kid dead-lifted 235 pounds, if I remember correctly. Some of the other activities were pull-ups, ring-muscle-ups, “burpees,” and handstand pushups. He was impressive at all of these. I was his CrossFit mom.
Before I witnessed Tomás doing this competition, I had no idea of his capacities. I was blown away, watching him. He was a real athlete, possibly even “gifted.” The first hug he ever gave me was after completing the very first competitive workout in March.
I was as supportive as it was possible to be, and would become as nervous as he was before one of these competitive workouts, the first series of which were done in groups, with a judge for each contestant, and a big digital clock ticking away on one end of the gym. The more “reps” and rounds of activities that were completed within the allotted time, the better the score. Usually the weight to be lifted was prescribed, but there were two workouts that involved increasing the weight. The kid dead-lifted 235 pounds, if I remember correctly. Some of the other activities were pull-ups, ring-muscle-ups, “burpees,” and handstand pushups. He was impressive at all of these. I was his CrossFit mom.
I
don’t think Tomás and I started to become “close” until later in the spring,
after the competition was over and he had resigned himself to not being in the
top 20 this year. His achievement was amazing, but he had had an unrealistic,
ideal goal. It took him a while to accept that, and to move his hopes toward
next year’s games (2019). We would talk (or argue/discuss) while I drove him
here and there. We would talk at breakfast and at the dinner table. For a while
he was learning the guitar at school, and I shared some musical knowledge with
him; I feel I could have done more of that, but I didn’t. It was difficult to
get him to watch an entire movie unless it was an action picture. We did manage
to expose him to “2001” and “The Wizard of Oz.” I took him to a shooting range
because he wanted to try that. And, while he was here he found a girlfriend,
Karla. She was 15, a bit older. They saw each other at school, but would
occasionally meet other friends at the movies (more driving for me). After
school ended, Tomás had ten days before his scheduled return to Spain. During
this time he wanted to get together with Karla frequently (even more driving for
me). By the time it came to say goodbye, the scene was a bit heartbreaking. Tomás
had attended Karla’s sister’s wedding all afternoon at a house in Decatur. I
went to pick him up at 6 pm, and waited for more than half an hour while they
said goodbye, trying to give them privacy in the carport (I don't think they saw me take that picture). Karla
cried. Tomás wanted to cry, but didn’t until later. The next morning, we all
got up at 5 am to leave for the Nashville airport at 6:15 am.
So, this
was my year to attempt to be a mother, since I don’t have kids myself. What I
discovered was that it’s mostly a lot of hard work, none of which I minded, because it
kept me busy and kept me from thinking about things I hadn’t done for myself,
or in my own life. I felt a vicarious thrill when Tomás did so well in the
competition; I was very proud of him. I adjusted to his not being an
“intellectual” in the style of his mother and my father. He has a very healthy
ego. He is not “troubled,” as I was at his age. I am sure he will endure some
more disappointments in the next few years that may be even worse than not
making the top 20 CrossFit kids’ list (in the damn world). He will grow and
learn. He may or may not keep in touch with Karla, although at this point, he
wants to come back to visit at Christmas. We don’t know yet if that will
happen; flights are expensive.
What else I discovered was that it’s not possible to see into a teenager’s mind or soul; I could only surmise, suspect, project, and express caring, and laugh at his jokes (not difficult). When here, he did not have a problem with confidence; he indulged in over-confidence (it seemed to me) a lot of the time, but that is part of being a 14-year-old, good-looking male with physical energy and a future ahead.
As many young men do, Tomás fantasizes about being an “entrepreneur,” and not having to go to college or pay workplace dues or be under the thumb of a boss. He thinks he will invent, implement a thing or a process, and become rich and powerful. Some other ideas that he toyed with were becoming a CrossFit trainer, a policeman, or joining the U.S. Army (he has dual citizenship).
What else I discovered was that it’s not possible to see into a teenager’s mind or soul; I could only surmise, suspect, project, and express caring, and laugh at his jokes (not difficult). When here, he did not have a problem with confidence; he indulged in over-confidence (it seemed to me) a lot of the time, but that is part of being a 14-year-old, good-looking male with physical energy and a future ahead.
As many young men do, Tomás fantasizes about being an “entrepreneur,” and not having to go to college or pay workplace dues or be under the thumb of a boss. He thinks he will invent, implement a thing or a process, and become rich and powerful. Some other ideas that he toyed with were becoming a CrossFit trainer, a policeman, or joining the U.S. Army (he has dual citizenship).
But now Tomás is back
home with his mother, my beloved sister Felicia, who has lived in Spain for
almost 30 years. She’s recently divorced from Tomás’s (and his older brother
Gabriel’s) father, so it’s a bit tough for her to do all that chauffeuring and
cooking, since she’s also working, teaching English at the University of
Seville. Gabriel (18) now works as a steward for Ryanair, based in Frankfurt,
Germany.
He comes home to Seville once a month. Tomás is having a summer of leisure at the moment, except for CrossFit. I saw him on Skype the other day, wearing the gray hairband I gave him to hold back his fashionable top-of-the-head long dark hair. We miss him, but it’s not that yearning kind of missing a person. It’s more like, “Wow! A teenager lived with us for a year, and it was pretty cool!” Should it be a yearning? Did I grow to love Tomás? I already loved him by default; he is family. I acquired more intimate knowledge of him, and that is part of love, I think. I care about Gabriel, too. We chat sometimes on WhatsApp, during which short moments I try to persuade Gabriel to give up being a fan of Donald Trump. Tomás does not share Gabriel’s political taste, fortunately, and I think Gabriel adopted his attitude partly to counter his mother’s very liberal influence; to be different, to have his own identity. They are so young, these nephews.
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He comes home to Seville once a month. Tomás is having a summer of leisure at the moment, except for CrossFit. I saw him on Skype the other day, wearing the gray hairband I gave him to hold back his fashionable top-of-the-head long dark hair. We miss him, but it’s not that yearning kind of missing a person. It’s more like, “Wow! A teenager lived with us for a year, and it was pretty cool!” Should it be a yearning? Did I grow to love Tomás? I already loved him by default; he is family. I acquired more intimate knowledge of him, and that is part of love, I think. I care about Gabriel, too. We chat sometimes on WhatsApp, during which short moments I try to persuade Gabriel to give up being a fan of Donald Trump. Tomás does not share Gabriel’s political taste, fortunately, and I think Gabriel adopted his attitude partly to counter his mother’s very liberal influence; to be different, to have his own identity. They are so young, these nephews.