Unseen things that do not die

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I went back this past weekend, to Princeton, to hazy, hot, and humid, to the embrace of my dearest friends, to the magnolia-strewn space that holds some of my most vivid and most important memories.

It was a weekend crammed to the gills with joy.  It was the best reunion yet, and I have been to all four of our major reunions (as has Matt!).  My friends – whose greatness I’ve written about at length – are just getting better and better with age.  People seem ever more comfortable in their own skin. Something was in the air this weekend at Princeton, and everyone I encountered seemed charged with happiness and positivity. Maybe it was the heat and humidity.  Maybe it was the beer.  I don’t know, but something special suffused these past several days.
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On Labor Day Monday, 1991, my father and I drove from his parents’ house on Long Island to visit Princeton a last-minute whim.  I had already written my early application to another college, but my father’s twin encouraged me to look at Princeton.  So we did.  And it on the steps of this arch you see here, Blair Arch, where I turned to my father and said that this was where I wanted to go to school.  I recall that moment with crystalline detail, and as I told Grace, Whit, and Matt about it, my eyes filled with tears.  There’s something about Princeton that makes this happen often.  The place, and the people I met there, are lodged so close to my heart.  My years there were certainly not without difficulty, but they remain the most sun-dappled of my life and are without question where I became who I am.

On Saturday I participated in a panel called “Books That Changed My Life” alongside several distinguished alums.  I was certainly the weak link among the panelists, but I loved hearing what they all had to say. I could talk about books all day long.  One person said of at a certain point in his life that when he read he “was after awe.”  That phrase struck with me because I don’t think I went into Princeton – either in 1992 or this past weekend – specifically looking for awe, but that’s what I found both times.

Awe. Wonder. Joy. Grace.

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Four of our daughters before the P-Rade.  Grace is the tall one!

The best part of the weekend was seeing Grace and Whit with the children of my dearest friends. I am glad for Grace and Whit to see me with the women who are my most important group of friends. I love the example that friendships can endure and anchor us.  I met most of these women when I was 18, and and that’s only 5 and 7 years away for Grace and Whit (Oh.My.God). It is one of my most devout hopes that they have friends like this in their lives.  I remain amazed that such extraordinary women are my friends, but, also, slightly more certain that they are.  For life.  There was something unconditionally supportive about this weekend that I can’t put into words, and it was remarkable.

On Friday night I spent about an hour and a half dancing to 80s songs with one of my roommates and my daughter and her friend.  All over the place, over and over again this weekend, memories swamped me, and time did that telescoping thing when now and then collapse into a single, swollen moment, but maybe never more profoundly than on that dance floor.  C has been one of my very best friends for 24 years now, and as she and Grace danced together my chest felt tight in the best possible way.

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We walked, we danced, we talked, we laughed, and I cried a couple of times.  The P-Rade moved me as it always does, a boisterously joyful celebration of all things orange and black.  The Old Guard made me cry (and the whole weekend made me miss my grandfather) and then I was struck, as I always am, by how the procession is nothing less than a panoramic overview of the human experience.  The Old Guard, some walking slowly, some in golf carts, and then people in their 60s and 70s, then younger, and younger.  We went before the masses of strollers and babies this year, but I know they followed us.  And at the end of the parade are the rowdy young alums and, finally, the seniors.  I’ll never forget our senior year P-Rade, when we ran onto Poe Field, sunburned and happy and drunk on the headiness of the moment much more than on the free-flowing beer.

We waited together for our turn to fall into line (into the grand stream of life itself, no longer the young ones, not yet the older ones, smack in the middle, in the thick, hot heart of life’s grand pageant) and cheered, giving a locomotive to every passing class (Hip! Hip! … Tiger! Tiger! Tiger! 62! 62! 62!).  Our children sat at the curb at our feet, and in a couple of moments I felt lightheaded with the intensity of the moment. I will never forget that moment. Our class then fell into the procession, accompanied by our class float, a tribute to Ferris Bueller, with classmates singing and dancing in dirndls atop it.

This weekend was the best of life.  I felt aware in a visceral way of my great good fortune in having spent four years at Princeton.  The place, and the people I met there, left their mark on me in ways I’m still uncovering.  To be with the friends who knew me then is a great gift, a massive exhale, a profound coming home.  To watch my children with the children of those women who shared those seminal four years with me defies complete description.

Then we watched fireworks from the football stadium and, finally, spent, walked back to our dorm.  On Sunday we came home and all day I was both exhausted and full to the brim of love and friendship and learning and 20 years ago and today, of those unseen things that are referred to over the door of McCosh 50 (where I took many classes, and which I showed Grace and Whit one day).  Princeton gave me many unseen gifts, and they do not die.  I know that now. What an extravagant blessing that is.

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you cannot turn away

“Compassion hurts. When you feel connected to everything, you also feel responsible for everything. And you cannot turn away. Your destiny is bound with the destinies of others. You must either learn to carry the Universe or be crushed by it. You must grow strong enough to love the world, yet empty enough to sit down at the same table with its worst horrors.”

Andrew Boyd, Daily Afflictions: The Agony of Being Connected to Everything in the Universe
Thank you to my friend Suzanne, for sharing this marvelous quote with me.

The friends who knew you when

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The P-Rade, Saturday afternoon of reunions, 1996

Tomorrow, I will go to my 20th college reunion.  Of course I feel the expected shock that it’s been 20 years, and time feels especially slippery right now: weren’t we just there, as students, in a fog of sunshine and beer and magnolia petals and senior theses and orange?  So much orange.  Yes we were just there, but it’s also been 20 years.

I’ve written a lot about the friends I met at Princeton.  They are the largest group of native speakers in my life, ground zero, the knot of truest friends I know.  I have called them the women who hold my stories, described the way we are sailing together, reflected on when the future felt like a bright ribbon unfurling in front of us, noted that friendship is made of attention.  I tried to capture those weeks of senior spring in words, a moment of my life that was as high-pitched and glorious as any I can recall since.

This is what I wrote, many years so, and it’s all still true today.  Things are different, yes: our children are older, we are older, and we have more wrinkles and more disappointment and, I think, more joy.  One thing will never change: you will always be the friends who were with me when I was really becoming who I am now.  There aren’t many friends who know the name of the first boy I kissed in college and the title of my thesis and when my grandmother died and the job I really wanted that I didn’t get and what I was wearing (not much) in the Nude Olympics.  As I wrote this post, a group text went around, and one friend on it threatened that “I have nude photos of most of you, just remember that.”  Touche.

There’s a reason college is called the most formative time of our life: that may not be true for everyone, but it certainly was for me.  The friends I knew in college shaped who I am today, and those marks are forever. I can’t wait to see you all.

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We all knew each other when we were becoming who we are now.  Knew each other before we were mothers and wives and partners at McKinsey.  Before we had real responsibilities, a smattering of wrinkles, and the occasional designer purse.  We’ve shared a lot in the 14 years since we graduated: marriages, divorces, the perfect macaroni and cheese recipe, births, deaths, book recommendations, surprises both joyful and heartbreaking.  We’ve visited each others’ brand new babies in the hospital and we have stood next to each other when we buried parents.  We were and are each others’ bridesmaids and the godmothers of each other’s children.

We hold each others’ stories, and that is a unique and privileged position.

I’m still struck dumb, honestly, by the fact that women as fantastic as these would hold me dear.  These are strong and intelligent and compassionate and beautiful and gentle and deeply human women, every single one of them.  I respect the choices they’ve made, whether they are similar to mine or different, and I know I can trust them to be gentle with my decisions.   With these women, I am as comfortable as I am anywhere else in the world.  In their light, I am brave, not shy.

I think, again, of the powerful Adrienne Rich (of whow these women remind me, because I wrote my college thesis on her) and of the line “There must be those among whom we can sit down and weep and still be counted as warriors.”  We sit down together, we weep, we laugh, and we are all warriors.  All in our own way.  But we are safe together.

One of our favorite things to do is to sit around and look at old pictures.  Pathetic, maybe.  Entertaining, absolutely.  For one of our annual weekends, I scanned hundreds of pictures and brought a slideshow.  I’m sure there will be hundreds of pictures from this weekend to add to the pile.  I can’t wait.

Happy Birthday

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Twice a year, I write about this man.  Who is otherwise generally spared.  I have to protect some things, after all!  But today is his birthday, and on this and our anniversary, (9/9) I turn my lens onto him.

This is the 19th of your birthdays we’ve celebrated together, Matt.

The first one, I was heading to my sister’s college graduation, and you drove me somewhere (I can’t recall where) and told me you loved me for the first time as I left.  I’ll never forget the butterflies and elation that filled me when I heard you say that.

The third, my sister-in-law and I surprised you and your twin with a party to celebrate 30.  You had pulled an all-nighter at work and were pretty exhausted.  I think you were happy, though.  We were months away from getting married.

The fifth, we had a small gathering at our then-new house.  My pregnancy belly popped, I swear, that morning.  The change was sufficiently marked that one of my friends walked in the door and noted that the baby had decided to show up on his or her father’s birthday.

The eighth, we had another party with your twin and his family, this time at their home.  We had a baby at home, and a 2 year old, and I remember you thinking the college-aged bartender was very cute.  We have some rowdy photographs from that night.

The tenth, we celebrated with a dinner in the backyard of our house, and a small round cake with a single table candle in the middle.  A pigtailed Grace helped you blow that candle out.

The eleventh, we spent in Bermuda with your twin and his wife.  You two bought black knee socks and Bermuda shorts and wore them to one of the most delicious meals I have ever had.

The thirteenth, I surprised you again with a small dinner at one of our favorite restaurants with some of our most beloved friends.  It was a night I’ll never forget.  We drank a lot of Matt & Stormy’s.  There were toasts.  I wore orange.  You were happy.

The fifteenth, we spent with our dear family friends in New Hampshire, on a weekend that has become a cherished tradition.  We took an Olde Tyme photograph of all the children.  You blew out candles, alongside members of the other two families who share your birthday week.  Grace was in a sling with a broken collarbone.

The eighteenth, we were back in New Hampshire with the same friends.  We helped build a house.  We took another Olde Tyme photograph.  There was another cake with candles for three birthday people.  There were lilacs everywhere, and my memories are tinged with their smell.

This year the nineteenth, we’ll celebrate with with Whit’s baseball game, and, tomorrow, a family dinner.  I’ll bake a cake.  It will be the most ordinary, and therefore, the most extraordinary.  As is every day.

Thank you for all the varied and marvelous roles you play in my life and those of Grace and Whit.  You are a thoughtful question-asker, an improving bed-maker (though still a sub-par laundry-folder), an excellent hockey coach, extremely handy around the house (proven this weekend with the stove saga), an enthusiastic married-in Princeton reunion-er, an avid reader infuriatingly resistant to my book recommendations, and a world-class maker of bacon, egg, and cheese sandwiches.  You are willing to curl into a bottom bunk to read, to encourage a child to go up a mast, to explain how a sport or technology works, to listen when I repeat myself, to tolerate my moods, to be there.  Thank you.

Previous happy birthday posts to Matt are here: 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010

everything is more complicated

Science has taught me that everything is more complicated than we first assume, and that being able to derive happiness from discovery is a recipe for a beautiful life.

– Hope Jahren, Lab Girl