This week, Matt Cavanaugh is pivoting from Peak Perspectives to Peak Past.
“Daddy,” my daughter commanded, “hold my hand.”
She was on a tree stump at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, behind the new penguin and hippo exhibit. Her toes were over the edge of a two-foot-high tree stump she was on, and she clearly wanted me to hold her hand as she jumped to the next stump.
This is parenting in a nutshell: deciding and learning when to intervene in the next stump-jump.
It keeps popping up. In school, it’s constant. Your kid needs a hand with homework, but how much of a hand do you give? Or learning to ride her bike—when do you just let go?
Life’s an endless string of uncertain leaps. You never know if you’ll land safely or crash hard. And each choice impacts the next.
In the end, I hedged. I didn’t hold her hand, but encouraged her to go for it, though I stayed close by.
She put one foot in the air, pushed off, and…stuck the landing. This time.
******
Now, same day, same hippo enclosure at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, we walked past a boulder bigger than a tiny house. It had a simple plaque on it with a date: “July 24, 1965.” When I looked into it, that boulder was one of a landslide that mangled the previous hippo house and pushed rocks as far out as Fort Carson.
How many other boulders are there with stories like this one? That we just walk by every day?
With so many backstories like this, we’re pivoting from Peak Perspectives to Peak Past, a new series that’ll peek past our headlines and hardships to the stories that got us to now. With the help of our talented historians from across our Pikes Peak region, we’ll find what’s truly precious about our Peak’s past.
And, as always, until next week, no matter what, climb on.
Peak Perspectives, now Peak Past, is a weekly segment written and voiced by Matt Cavanaugh, a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army and a resident of Manitou Springs, where he lives with his wife and two young children. Through his writing, Cavanaugh explores life in the Pikes Peak region, including the gradients and subtleties of our lives in the shadow of America's Mountain.
You can find more work by Cavanaugh here.
KRCC's Abigail Beckman manages the "Peak Perspectives" series. The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the author. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of KRCC or Colorado Public Radio.
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Peak Past: All Parenting Is A Stump-Jump - Colorado Public Radio
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