Sisters

In Washington DC for a short family trip

When Rosie came home from dance on Tuesday, she put her book bag down, and walked right past me. Instead of stopping to share how her day was, she sat on the ground beside Mercy, and Rosie asked Mercy how her day was. These kinds of things happen all the time.

This post is to highlight the special relationship between Mercy and Rosie.

This picture is not very recent, but Rosie loves spending time with Mercy. Mercy gets a bath about every other day. Yes, we do miss a bath every now and then, but we aim to not have Mercy be the stinky kid in class. When we start talking about putting her in the bath, Rosie will come in at the last minute and say “I want to take a bath with Mercy.” Rosie is too big to bathe with her now, but I don’t want to be the one to tell her she is too big. They just chit-chat in the bath: Rosie was asking Mercy what she was going to do when her friend came over this weekend. Rosie is just so kind the way she asks, treating her much younger sister as an equal.

Any one of these baths could be their last one together, but they are special moments that will be gone soon.

This past Saturday, Mercy was the first one up (per usual). She runs out, so excited that the automated light (to tell her when to come out of her room in the morning) turned green. Her first words for the day? “I want to sit here and watch a show and wait for sissy.”

When they are getting ready for school in the morning, Rosie pops out of bed and by the time she is eating her bowl of fruit loops, she has 1,000 things to say. So much so, that often the cereal gets soggy and she has to rush out the door. However, during that moment of talking a million miles an hour to Taylor about what happened on the playground yesterday, Mercy will pipe up and just talk jibber jabber (seriously, words and phrases that don’t make sense). I am guess it is because she wants to be like sissy and share about her day, but can’t get a word in edgewise, so she will just add to the noise in the house in the meantime.

Mercy wants Rosie to site beside her
Mercy wants Rosie to site beside her

Rosies school is closer to our house than Mercy’s daycare. I like to mix it up on the days I pick them up: sometimes get Mercy first, sometimes get Rosie first. And sometimes, not all the time, Mercy will want Rosie to sit next to her. Meaning, unbuckle yourself, and instead of sitting in the back seat near the window, sit in the middle seat. And hold my hand while you are at it (I am paraphrasing for Mercy on this one). So, I look in my rearview mirror, and will just see them, sitting in silence, holding hands in the backseat.

Hugs. It is hard to say who is the bigger “hugger” of the two. But often it will play out like this: Rosie will try and hug Mercy, and Mercy will be grumpy and ignore her or push her away (It is a game to her, Mercy loves the attention). Then, Rosie is old enough to pretend to be sad, and Mercy will then jump onto Rosie with open arms. OR, Mercy will go in for a hug, and Rosie will be busy watching one of her tween shows or doing some beads on a bracelet, and just ignore Mercy while she is trying to give her a hug.

Usually this plays out at night time. Mercy will give everyone a hug before bed. Sometimes she will insist on going out into the living room and hugging everyone a couple of times. Or, right when she is settled in bed, Mercy will say “I want to give sissy one more hug.” My impulse to be strict, but my heart melts: I can’t say no to that request. So my “no” turns into a “Absolutely. You go out there and give that sister a hug.” These moments will be gone soon.

Taylors mom says that when they stay at her house, Mercy will cuddle up close to Rosie on the couch, “like she is a security blanket.” Zippy went on to say that “Rosie makes Mercy feel safe.”

Rosie is into her outfits. Always has been (something she gets from Taylor’s side of the family- the fashionable side). So, she wants to share that joy with Mercy too by dressing the same. Rosie gets so, so excited about. It wasn’t until the past couple of months that Mercy would even smile for a picture, but somehow Rosie can bring that joy out of her.

Whatever Mercy is into, whether it is at the children’s museum, playground, or taking a picture, Rosie will come along side and join her right where she is without time to blink. She won’t let mercy have a good time alone. Rosie wants to be there for every second of it.

The bottom left picture is from last Christmas, when Mercy got a play house. Mercy wasn’t sure about it, but Rosie wanted to make sure that her sister saw how cool this playhouse (That Rosie was far too big for), was an exciting gift.

Or the happy meal toys in the picture in the upper right. Mercy probably wouldn’t care about the thing. But Rosie wanted to make sure Mercy knew how to get all of the joy and happiness out of the twenty-five cent piece of plastic.

The picture on the bottom right is the same thing: from the children’s museum, Mercy wasn’t too keen on some of the things there, but Rosie was going to prove that it was fun. And Rosie doesn’t need prompting on this. Rosie has always done this.

Rosie trying to bond with her newborn sister
Rosie trying to bond with her newborn sister

Rosie is not, for one second, gonna let the age difference stop her from trying to bond with Mercy.

I don’t know if all sisters are like this. I like to think it is because it took us a long time to have Mercy. During that time, Rosie was old enough, and prayed nightly for a baby sister, so Rosie’s heart was just wired a little different to even meet her little sister. There was so much built up joy and expectation from day 1 that is still visible on a daily basis.

Ok now don’t get me wrong, it isn’t all sunshine and lollipops. They do scream. They don’t scream at each other. Mercy used to pull hair. Mercy will try and go in Rosies room when Rosie has a friend over. Ultimately, whatever Rosie has, Mercy will want the same. Mercy will take things of Rosies because she is too young to know better. Rosie will take them back to teach her a lesson. Rosie will call her sister “Annoying” sometimes. And often, as a family, we have to slow down to Mercy’s pace, which keeps Rosie from doing some of the things she wants to do. But for the most part, Rosie doesn’t seem to mind.

All of this will change over the next few years. But for today, I wanted to pause, and just think about all of these sweet little moments between them.

At night when Taylor and I put them to bed, something inside of me just says that this is the most important moment of the day. And we pray. Each night. Often times, the prayer includes “Please protect the special relationship between them, that they will always love each other.”

Things will always change, but for now they are really sweet. Looking up pictures for this post, there is a trend: Rosie is smiling, ear to ear, in almost all of them. Even the first couple weeks Mercy was alive, the smile has had the same energy.


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