I just wanted him to keep staring at the bird, because we both know that it could fly away at any moment.
Marian Fontana
Massachusetts School of Law Commencement 2006, 2006
इस उद्धरण के पीछे की कहानी
In the most poignant passage of her speech, Fontana described watching her son Aidan at a Little League game. Aidan, who had no natural talent or interest in baseball, was in the outfield when he spotted a brilliant red cardinal perched on the chain link fence. 'Look Mom! A Cardinal!' he yelled, ignoring the ball sailing toward him. The first base coach whispered to the head coach that Aidan 'sucked,' and Fontana's heart ached to protect him from all of it — from missed balls and mean people, from being fired or broken up with, from the smell of a hospital and unbearable loneliness. The image of mother and son, both knowing the bird could fly away at any moment, became a devastating metaphor for the fragility of beauty and innocence in a world that has already shown them its worst. It captured the paradox of parenthood after loss: the fierce desire to shield a child from pain combined with the knowledge that such protection is impossible.