See the world

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Walking down the street in Palestine with my brother-in-law, Grace, and Whit.

It has been almost two years since the four of us went to Jerusalem to visit my sister and her family.  This, Grace and Whit’s first international trip, was a wonderful and powerful experience and it continues to echo through all four of our lives.  When we got home, I reflected on the immensely different ways that Hilary and I responded to our childhood of hopscotching back and forth across the Atlantic.  She and her husband took her three and five year old daughters to live in Israel for a year.  I have lived in the same house, in the city where I was born, for 12 years.

And yet.  Perhaps that childhood of mine, rich as it was with travel and cathedrals and museums and ski trips in Austria where I learned to speak a few German words and simultaneously striated with tearful goodbyes, acted on me in more ways than I knew.

Over the last year or two I’ve felt a new and firm desire to have adventures with Grace and Whit whenever we can.  Part of this comes from my keen consciousness of how limited the opportunities to travel together are now.  But another part of it comes from having watched Grace and Whit respond to a foreign land, culture, and language.  They soaked up more than I could have imagined in Jerusalem, and I want to make sure we continue exposing them to new places and experiences during our few breaks.  This doesn’t have to be international: last spring break we went to Washington, and the Grand Canyon is surely on my list of places I want to visit with the children.

Adventures.  New places.  Rich experiences that augment their sense of the world and their awareness of their place (important, but very far from the center!) in it.  These are what I’m after.

Last week, Grace, Whit and I somehow got on the topic of Great Pops, who has now been gone over a year.  We talked about how he had truly seen the world, and about how his life had been long and full and marvelous.  Grace remembered the Christmas card he sent the year he was 90, which featured a photo of him ziplining in Costa Rica.  And Whit recalled the photograph of him standing in front of the pyramids in Egypt that stood in his living room, as well as the picture of him skiing in front of the Matterhorn that now hangs on the wall of a bedroom in my parents’ house.

“Great Pops really saw the world, didn’t he?” Whit asked from the back seat.

Why yes, I thought.  Yes, he did.  “See the World,” by Gomez (a song I love) ran through my head.

And that’s what I want for Grace and Whit.  To see the world: not just globally, though that’s an undeniable part of it.  I want them to see their world.  In all of its majesty and multiplicity.  My childhood was extremely different from theirs, but one thing my parents did without question was show me the world.  This contributed to who I am today in ways I’m still understanding, but I know that a certain openness of outlook and orientation towards empathy resulted from the travels, adventures, and myriad experiences that made up my childhood.

I can’t wait to help Grace and Whit see the world.  There’s so much to look forward to.  I can’t wait.

Eleven years old

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Dear Grace,

Eleven.  It is the ultimate cliche, and the most unavoidable truth: where did the time go?  I swear it was minutes ago that I pulled you onto my chest, your squalling, red face as foreign to me as I’d been told it would be familiar.

Since your arrival we have had many years of sunlight, of startling beauty and stomach-hurting laughter and before-bed hugs so sweet my heart physically aches.  It is impossible for me to convey how much I love you, my Gracie girl.  I wish I could.  What I can do is try to capture who you are right now, at this moment, as I’ve tried to do every year on your birthday.  You are standing on a fulcrum, poised between two worlds, a liminal creature flitting back and forth across an invisible but indelible border, the little girl you were and the young woman you’re becoming both visible in your face.

You are in fifth grade.  You love to read.  Every night as I tuck you in I perch on your comforter covered with peace signs and wait as you finish your page (or, more often, your chapter).  Your brown hair splays on the peace sign-printed pillow behind you and you finally, reluctantly, slide a bookmark between the pages.

You say prayers every night, and they are simple and always the same.  You begin “Thank you for …” and list things that you are grateful for.  I never taught you this, and I love that it is how you instinctively end the day.  More often than not you say something about being thankful to live in this wonderful world and every single time it brings tears to my eyes.  Every night that I stand in your door and say I love you and that I’ll see you in the morning, I’m aware of what an extraordinary, incandescent privilege it is to say those words.

This year you joined a club soccer team and the level of instruction and play went way up from the town team you’d been a part of for several years.  I don’t think you have ever actually worked at a sport before, but you are now, and it’s extraordinary to watch the results.  I was at your game, several weeks ago, when you scored your first goal.  The smile on your face was unlike any I’ve ever seen.  And then, just last weekend, your undefeated team suffered their first loss.  You were playing goalie, and you let in the other team’s winning goal.  You were absolutely devastated by feeling that you had let down your team.  I didn’t like seeing you sad, but I was actually glad that you took responsibility for what happened and am certain you learned something from the experience.  Just yesterday, you played the exact same team again.  You had been anxious on and off all week about this game, aware of what you felt was a failing on your part and desperate to beat them.  Your coach may call you “little Gracie,” but you were downright ferocious on the field.  Determination radiated from you.  With one minute left in the game, you made the game-winning goal.  Sweet redemption.

It’s clearer and clearer to both of us that I’m a strict mother, and that you are going to be slower to have (phones, a late bedtime) and watch (TV shows, PG-13 movies) certain things than most of your classmates. Once in a while we talk about this, and you always tell me that you like being a kid still, and that you understand that there’s no reason to rush towards adulthood.  Who knows how long this understanding will last, but for now I do get the sense that you’re grateful for boundaries.

You love top 40 radio and we sing along, together, when we’re driving.  Right now we particularly like belting out Roar, Wrecking Ball, and Royals.

Friendships are still a complicated area for you.  You are completely devoted to your best friend from camp, miss her every day, and are counting minutes until your annual trip to visit.  You’re still finding your way through the murky swamp that is fifth grade friendship, and you are sometimes thrown off balance by the way that loyalties can shift.

You and Whit love each other but you also fight a lot.  I call you The Bickersons, and many mornings you’re huffy and aggravated with each other by breakfast.  But you also have your arm around him in every single picture I take and one of your favorite things is to tuck him in (including performing the Ghostie Dance) when I am not home to do so.

You worry so, so much about pleasing other people, Grace.  Lately I have observed that when I ask your opinion about something, instead of offering it, you often say you’ll do want whatever I want.  This is drawn straight from my playbook, my girl, and I can therefore tell you authoritatively it’s not a path to happiness. You have to learn to say what you want, what you think, and what you mean.  The people who are worth having in your life will appreciate this.  I promise.  It’s something you and I are talking about, and I want fiercely to steer you away from road of pleasing others above all else that I walked for a long time.

You are tall and lean and your shiny brown hair has a marked wave in the back.  You like it when I put it into two wet braids after a shower.  Your cleft chin and deep mahogany eyes are so familiar to me that sometimes I fall into them.  Your feet are huge and I can already tell you’re going to be taller than I am.  You still have a little girl’s body but all around you your classmates are changing shape and I know what lies ahead.

The truth is that I am afraid of what comes along with this physical change, of the separation that I know has to happen between us as you move into your own young adult self.  I know that the closeness between us had so stretch, and I want so much to trust that it will come back, a different amalgam, yes, but still there.

As much as I dread this looming transition, though, I’m even more devoutly sure that it has to happen.  The ache in my heart doesn’t matter as much as does giving you the space you need to move into your own dance.  It’s not that you haven’t been dancing already, but a different music is playing now, and the choreography is starting to change.  I vow that I will never stop listening to your list of what you are thankful for, tipping my face up to look at the funny-shaped clouds you notice, baking you homemade birthday cakes, or holding your hand if you want.  I’ll be here to braid your hair and listen to your disappointments and hear you read your book report on Umbrella Summer out loud.  But I’ll take a deep breath and turn away from your closed door, too, and watch you walk down the jetway to an airplane by yourself and not ask you what you talked to someone about if you choose to keep it private.

You have taught me so very many things, but among the most important is that all we can do is look to what’s coming and greet it with eyes and arms open.  It’s time for me to start living that lesson, Grace, my dear girl, my only daughter.

Happy eleven, my Grace, my grace, the girl who made me a mother, my first baby, one of my two greatest teachers.  I love you.

Mummy

Previous birthday letters to Grace are here: ten, nine, eight, seven, six.

Entering a cathedral with prayer in my heart

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Eleven years ago tomorrow

We mothers are learning to mark our mothering success by our daughters’ lengthening flight. – Letty Cottin Pogrebin

As often as I have witnessed the miracle, held the perfect creature with its tiny hands and feet, each time I have felt as though I were entering a cathedral with prayer in my heart. – Margaret Sanger

 

Catastrophe and beauty, loss and joy

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I had a difficult weekend.  For reasons that I understood and those that I did not, by Sunday afternoon I felt raw and exhausted and emotional and cranky.  Matt and Grace went off to an afternoon of soccer games, and Whit and I headed to do a bunch of errands.  I was aggravated and short, and even as I snapped I knew that I was trying to head off a tide of sorrow.  After returning a couple of things, driving home in a clear, perfect fall afternoon, I suddenly turned into the local cemetery.  We drove back towards the tower that is one of our favorite places.

As we wound through the cemetery towards the tower, I noticed the tree above.  I gasped, pulled over, rolled down my window, and took the picture.  I think it’s my favorite of this entire fall.  Isn’t that always the way?  The most off-hand moments, the things we notice as we’re passing by, the mundane thing our son said after the bath on a Tuesday.  These become our favorite, our most cherished.    I heard the reminder: pay attention.

We climbed the tower, and the views were beautiful, but there were lots of people around.  Whit pulled on my hand and whispered in my ear, “Let’s go.  Maybe there aren’t any people at the fairy stream.”

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The fairy stream was empty, and so I perched on a rock and watched Whit as he began building cairns.  This is one of his favorite things to do lately.  My eyes filled with tears behind my sunglasses and my face crumpled as I began to cry in earnest.  I looked away, not wanting Whit to see.  There was a knot over my heart that felt like nothing less than all of life – catastrophe and beauty, loss and joy.  I looked up at the blue sky and listened to the wind rustling the trees around us and to the gentle burble of the stream.

My breath was ragged.  I blinked rapidly as the blue sky swam in my eyes.  Something physically hurt in my chest.  This is what heartache is, I thought.

“Mum?” Whit’s voice broke into my thoughts.  I looked at him but he was concentrating on his rocks.  “You could meditate to this sound,” he offered as he balanced a small, flat stone on another rounder one.  “You know, like the waves on calm dot com.”

I didn’t trust my voice not to waver so I just nodded when he glanced up.  I watched him and he continued stacking rocks, watching them fall, and starting again.  I don’t know how long we sat there, but eventually I became aware of the snarl where my heart is easing slightly.  I kept breathing, watching the yellow leaves above me dancing in the wind.

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“Mum!  Look!”  Whit held out a rock.  I smiled when I saw that it was heart-shaped, and he held it up to the left side of his chest.  “We should bring this back for Grace.”  He handed it to me and I said, “Good idea,” my voice normal now.

How astonishing this world is, I thought, as I sat under a cornflower October sky and watched my son balance rocks on top of each other.  It makes me so weary, always being open to the sorrow that beats right underneath the surface of every day, but I don’t know any other way to live.  I cry so often, and I’m prone to having my breath literally knocked out of me by the world’s sharp edges, but I can just as easily feel the wind on my skin, marvel at the light on leaves, and feel the radiance and majesty of this life pulsing through my veins alongside my own blood.

I am an extremely porous person; this unavoidable truth manifests in so many ways in my life, big and small, bright and dark, apparent and invisible.  My wound allows me to live in a state of near-perpetual wonder.  Every single day contains grandeur and terror.  I write about this over and over again, but apparently I still need to learn it.  On a day when so much felt so hard, all I had to do was sit in the sun and listen to the quiet bubble of a familiar fairy stream and watch my son working with rocks.  The world ministered to me.  Even when I feel sharp and heavy things inside of me, there is still this, this splendid, beautiful, broken world, this array of ordinary and startling riches, as bright as red leaves against the blue sky.

There is still my son reaching up to take my hand as we walk home in the silence.  And today, that is enough.

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The most fear I have ever known

Today I am honored to be posting at Jessica Vealitzek’s blog, True Stories.  I met Jessica through our collaboration on Great New Books, and I’ve loved reading her work (and she has a novel coming out!).  She asked me to write on the topic of when I was the most scared. 

It was hard to think of one, to be honest.  Outrunning an avalanche on skis in the Swiss Alps as a child?  Yes.  Having a spinal tap not once but twice, just this past January?  Yes.  When I thought I had a neurological condition twelve years ago?  Yes.

I thought about this one for a long time.  And when I figured it out, the words poured out of me.  I wrote about a fear, and a pain, that was both incendiary and incandescent.  One that made me question everything I thought I knew for sure.

Please come over to Jessica’s site to read my short piece about the most scared I have ever been.