It never fails: a visitor will stop by my office, needing information or whatnot, and will see my computer desktop picture. It’s not a nature scene, or a print…it’s a picture of my kids, taken about twelve years ago.

It’s not an unusual image; lots of people put pictures of their kids on their monitor screens. On photo day, I had brought them home from summer camp and daycare, dressed them hurriedly in something clean and neat, and arranged them in a set so I could snap a good picture for a Father’s Day present for my husband. (Somewhere, there is a set of pictures that tell the hysterical story from that shoot. My daughters, aged eight and seven, historically fought over who got to hold the six-month baby. In subsequent pictures, the tug of war got heated and the baby’s breathing was increasingly challenged as the girls fought for control. Mercifully, there are only twelve pictures or we wouldn’t have that baby to kick around any longer.)

But to most visitors, there is something fairly unusual about the picture: there are four children in there, sitting (relatively) nicely for the camera.

And the question always comes. “Those aren’t all YOUR kids, are they?”

Happily, the answer is ‘yes.’ At this point in the conversation I generally tell the story of the baby being strangled and whip out my current set of pictures.

It’s an office, so people don’t say much more, and I work in human resources, so no one ever, ever goes there, but the look on their face says it all: “Why?” (Their confusion makes sense. Statistically speaking, I’m an outlier: a Gallup poll in 2007 found that two-thirds of Americans believe that two or fewer children in a family is ideal. Women at my professional level, on average, have no more than two children.)

A friend made me a beautiful silver crucifix that I always wear, so the first, most common supposition is that I have all those kids because I’m a devout Catholic. The truth: I’m a fair-to-middlin’ observant Catholic, yes, but I wear Kathy’s gift because it’s beautiful, and she made it for me.

The truth? I’m really, really good with numbers, but as a veteran analyst I’m ashamed to admit that I’m shockingly bad with calendars.

More truth? I had always thought that three kids would be just about right. I’m the youngest of five kids and ‘just’ having two kids seemed a bit…quiet. Of course, for over three years I had three kids but my husband had always hoped for more, and who am I to say that my vision of the best family size is the only one that counts, or that I should arbitrarily override such a fundamental human desire in a man I love so much?

And so I’m glad that my calendar skills bite. Every single one of those kids has taught me something that none of their siblings could have taught me. I love them all with all my heart. But as my mother is fond of saying about her own five: “I wouldn’t take a million dollars (in trade) for any of them, but I wouldn’t give you a nickel for another one.”

Amen.

© E.S. Evans 2010