gifts from the wild goose
by
cheryl dietrich
Today
I am wearing jade. From a necklace of braided silk, dangles a sage-colored
lioness, crouching in the stillness of the hunt. On my wrist, woven
into a bracelet of beads and seagreen strands, sits a stone chrysanthemum
the color of a winter cabbage encased in the first frost, a jaunty
carnelian ball rising from its center. I wear a ring with a white
jade heart that looks like it’s
been carved from a glacier.
Yan gave me the jewelry this morning. When I opened my English book
and said, “Let’s start with...,” she interrupted
me.
“No, please. May I start?” She blushed at her presumption,
then set the jewelry on the table in front of me. “This is
for you. From China. To say ‘thank you.’” Her
pale cheeks glowed pink as I exclaimed at the delicacy of the jade
carvings and the spectrum of green beads tied into the cords. Her
pride in my pleasure was obvious and seemed to fuel her confidence.
She excelled in her English lesson today.
Jade
jewelry is not the only thing Yan has given me. For my birthday
she gave me a bakery cake decorated with thick sugary frosting
of a kind she personally thinks too sweet to eat. She’s also given
me chocolate chip cookies and Fig Newtons—she has great faith
in the American sweet tooth. She’s given me Chinese delicacies,
to include a nut neither of us can name in English and cakes made
of bitter green paste. During lessons she gives me pale hot tea in
a round handleless cup that fits in the palm of my hand.
She’s
given me the use of her personal name, the name selected especially
for her at her birth. Yan. At first, she didn’t
know what it meant in English, just that it was the name of a big
bird that flies. I looked it up in my Chinese-English lexicon. Yan
means wild goose. I gave her these words for her name.
English
words are what I mostly give Yan. I give her lists of new vocabulary
to learn. I give her the present progressive tense, the possessive
case, comparative and superlative adjectives. I give her expressions:
play it by ear; a childproof bottle. I give her American customs
and holidays, Halloween candy too sweet for her, a Christmas stocking
with pencils and notebook, birthday and Valentine’s
Day cards. I give her lessons I draw up, tailored to her level and
needs. I give her time. She says I give her English.
In return
Yan gives me respect, gratitude, and hard work. She repeats after
me. She answers questions. She reads assignments. She hands in
homework. She writes essays about her family in China, about the
dog she had there, about the friend she worked with in Shanghai,
about her dreams and her longings. She gives me a window into her
world.
Yan
is not my only student. Since I began volunteering as an English
-as-a-Second-Language tutor with the Literacy Council of Buncombe
County, I have had ten students (some have come and gone in a small
class I teach). The gifts they’ve given me include
longevity soup with noodles and a boiled egg for good health. A wreath
of herbs. A miniature Colombian house for storing keys. Doughnuts
straight from the oven at one of my students’ jobs (they all
spot that sweet tooth). Baskets of perfumed lotions, exotic foods,
gift certificates. The Chinese word for phoenix. The Spanish words
for good luck.
They
give me smiles that grow in length as we get to know one another.
They give me awkward handshakes and graceful bows and impulsive hugs.
They give me the laughter that comes the first time they hear a joke
in English and get it and think it’s funny. They give me their
tears of frustration and exhaustion, when they feel like they’re
not making progress. They tell me their stories, welcome me into
their homes, show me pictures of their families, tuck their babies
into my arms.
I give
them cursive signatures, spelling games, field trips to the library,
to the drugstore, to waterfalls. I give them the sounds for “th” and for “r” and “l” and
teach them to hear the difference between “very” and “berry.” I
give them understanding when a child is ill or their work schedule
has changed, and they can’t do their homework or come to a
lesson.
I give
them patience, and they respond with perseverance. I give them
hope, and they respond with achievement. I give them encouragement, “Keep
working. You can do it.” They come back to me with tales of
their successes: the boss who moved them to the customer service
counter; the prospective employer who called to schedule a second
interview; the meeting with their child’s teacher. They tell
me about going to new places, shopping at new stores, meeting new
people.
For
them, learning English means they have options, independence, and
power. I believe the words I provide are like the bricks needed
to build a sturdy home. I picture myself one ladder’s rung
beneath the mason, handing the bricks up to her one by one. As the
edifice rises, I’m thrilled that I get to play a small part
in its construction. This is the gift that keeps me in my students’ debt.
Yan
gave me a new experience recently. She asked if we could stop by
the flea market up the street. I’d never been there before.
I scampered to keep up with her as she led me through tables laden
with vegetables and old record albums and other peoples’ pasts.
She headed directly for the fruit vendor she wanted. I watched impressed,
as she inspected papayas with an expert’s eye, her fingers
thumping along the skin. After purchasing her papaya and a cluster
of grapes, Yan led me to a seafood booth. There she helped a blond
boy pluck live blue crabs out of a cooler and fling them into a plastic
bag I held open at arm’s length. They were active and hostile,
fighting with claws that were free, unpegged and unbanded. One of
the crabs flying out of the cooler missed the bag and landed at my
sandaled feet. I squealed and jumped backward. Yan rescued my toes
by grabbing the menacing monster and pitching it back into the cooler.
Shopping
completed, we walked back to the car. I thanked Yan for showing me
the market. I praised her fearlessness in plunging her hand right
into the mass of snapping pincers to pull out the crabs she wanted.
“I do this in China,” she said. “Is
easy but when they--.” She stopped for a moment, frowning in
concentration, then shrugged. “When they touch me, I hurt.”
I gave
her the verb “pinch.” She gave me the bunch of
sweet, round grapes.
Cheryl
Dietrich lives in South Asheville with her husband and dog. She’s
written several articles that have been published locally, including
in WNC Woman. Stories of hers will soon appear in MudRock: Stories
and Tales and the Gettysburg Review. [ cleedietrich@cs.com ]