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	<title>A Design So Vast &#187; nostalgia</title>
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		<title>May: moments of wonder</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/12/may/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Dec 2011 04:24:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[musings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Last night I folded up a big Target box and put it in the recycling bin.  The box was covered in sharpie words and crayon drawings, and has been a major focus of this house for several days.  As I took it out, noticing that the air is positively swampy with spring as I did [...]]]></description>
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<p>Last night I folded up a big Target box and put it in the recycling  bin.  The box was covered in sharpie words and crayon drawings, and has  been a major focus of this house for several days.  As I took it out,  noticing that the air is positively swampy with spring as I did so, I  thought how thrilled I am that Grace and Whit still find a cardboard box  to be a thrilling thing to play with.   The arrival of a big cardboard  box is met with celebrating, and provides days of fodder for playing  together or alone.  I love this.</p>
<p>It reminded me of the night, a few weeks ago, when I decided to make a  chocolate fudge cake that I’d first made for Whit, on his request, last  summer.  I surprised the kids with the cake in the morning, and gave  them each fat slices for breakfast.  They looked at me, bewildered  wonder on their faces, suspecting, I think, that I was going to announce  that I was joking and snatch the plates away.  I wasn’t, and I didn’t.   They were thrilled beyond all reason at this tiny surprise.  Grace even  told me recently that she had written a “whole page” in her journal at  school about this, and I groaned at her that she wasn’t making me look  very good in front of her teacher.</p>
<p>I get the same sense of awed pride when I asked Whit recently what  his favorite part of spring break was.  He said, without hesitating,  “Disney,” but then he went on, “but close after that, <a href="../2011/03/to-learn-what-it-had-to-teach/" target="_blank">our trip to Walden</a>.”  Or when, after a dinner full of rowdy, obnoxious bickering, they calm down, within minutes, when we go for <a href="../2010/10/wonder-2/" target="_blank">a pajama-clad ‘notice things’ walk</a>.  Furthermore, that they ask, over and over again, for these walks.</p>
<p>I know for sure that this is one of the things I most want to pass on  to my children: the propensity for delight, the willingness to be  amazed, an openness to the hugeness of small things.  Whether it’s a  trait or an inclination I’m not sure; I don’t know that it matters.  I <em>do</em> know, however, that it is one way to assure a life full of joy.  That  doesn’t mean there won’t be great sorrow, too.  As far as I can tell  they are often twined entirely together.  If there’s one thing I want to  do as a mother, it is to help Grace and Whit hold onto their capacity  for wonder.</p>
<p>I noticed, as I tried to find a link, that I have more than a few  blog posts with “wonder” in the title.  All of a sudden it occurred to  me that maybe <a href="../2011/04/help/" target="_blank">that’s what this blog is about</a>:  the wonder of ordinary life.  The wonder of that design, of which we  sometimes glimpse the contours, though never the whole.  The wonder of <a href="../2011/04/old-friends-and-the-next-generation/" target="_blank">human relationships</a>, <a href="../2010/01/1640/" target="_blank">the sky</a>, <a href="../2010/04/two-halves-of-this-achingly-full-and-short-life/" target="_blank">the turning of the seasons</a>, <a href="../2011/03/the-miracle-in-everything-speaks/" target="_blank">poetry</a>, <a href="../2010/01/january-light/" target="_blank">the power contained in the light of a day</a>.   The wonder of living in the slipstream of time, whose eddies are both  utterly unique and totally universal.  That’s what this blog has been,  for almost five years: a record of my moments of wonder, both in their  thunderous joy and their swelling sadness.  And a love letter to those  two small guides who have shown me the way here.</p>
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		<title>April: The tenderness of pain itself</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/12/april-the-tenderness-of-pain-itself/</link>
		<comments>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/12/april-the-tenderness-of-pain-itself/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Dec 2011 09:19:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[musings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I didn’t have the best Easter I’ve ever had.  On Saturday afternoon I began feeling sick, a nausea that intermittently escalated and ebbed.  By 7 I was in bed with a fever, trying hard not to throw up.  Sunday I woke up feeling somewhat better, though I remained vaguely carsick all day long.  This made [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-5782" title="Easter1-550x366" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Easter1-550x366.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="366" /></p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-5783" title="Easter2-550x366" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Easter2-550x366.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="366" /></p>
<p>I didn’t have the best Easter I’ve ever had.  On Saturday afternoon I  began feeling sick, a nausea that intermittently escalated and ebbed.   By 7 I was in bed with a fever, trying hard not to throw up.  Sunday I  woke up feeling somewhat better, though I remained vaguely carsick all  day long.  This made me short with the children and with Matt in the  morning, barking at them when I felt frustrated, annoyed at myself that I  could not avoid this behavior.  Everything felt frayed and difficult by  8:30 in the morning.</p>
<p>At church, ease floated down to rest on my shoulders.  Sitting there,  in a place that has held so much of my history – my sister’s marriage,  both Grace and Whit’s christenings (each, actually, on Easter weekend)  –  I exhaled.  I sang the songs I know by heart, their lyrics rising from  some deep, hidden reservoir of memory, from <a href="../2010/12/tomorrow-shall-be-my-dancing-day-2/" target="_blank">the years at St. Paul’s Girls’ School</a>.  My eyes filled with tears as I remembered the three grandparents I have lost, particularly Nana, <a href="../2011/03/grandmotherless/" target="_blank">my maternal grandmother</a>,  who always cherished Easter above all holidays.  I sank deep into the  familiar cadence of the prayers before communion.  I felt gladness enter  my heart, and in its wake, gratitude.</p>
<p>But as soon as we left the church, into the almost startling  brightness of the day, into the sudden full-bloom of spring, the grace  I’d felt in the pew sloughed off and my agitation rose to the surface  again.  I felt nauseous, I felt tired, I felt cranky.  We had a lovely  egg hunt at my parents’ house, with both <a href="../2010/01/the-godfamily-and-red-wine-2/" target="_blank">my godsister</a> and her family and <a href="../2010/08/family-running-through-my-veins/" target="_blank">my cousin</a> and her boyfriend.  And then we had a relaxed, comfortable lunch at our  house, my father and mother full of fascinating stories and  observations from the trip to Jerusalem from which they just returned  yesterday.</p>
<p>The day was nothing short of delightful, with only a couple of whiny  kid moments to mar its gleam.  And I felt the person – the mother, wife,  daughter – I want to be floating in the room, sometimes within reach,  sometimes not.  The presence and peace that I grasp for so clumsily was  just in my palm and then jerked away again, replaced by an unease of the  soul that manifests as physical discomfort.</p>
<p>After lunch my nausea rose up in my throat again, threatening, and I  climbed back into bed.  I felt demoralized, frustrated: after so many  years, after so much trying, how can I still stumble, fall back into  these traps, these old ways of being?  Didn’t <a href="../2011/04/perfect/" target="_blank">I just write, a few days ago</a>,  that the black emotions can blow through, like a squall, and still  leave me with the memory of a beautiful day?  I know what this agitation  is about, I think: it is <a href="../2011/02/there-are-many-ways-to-hide-from-your-life/" target="_blank">hiding</a>, it is refusing to <a href="../2010/10/grandeur-and-terror/" target="_blank">stare into the sun</a>.  It is my attempt to evade <a href="../2010/12/easily-hurt-easily-overjoyed/" target="_blank">the pain that is an inextricable part</a> of truly engaging in my life.</p>
<p>But oh, what irony there is in this, I see now.  The pain I feel in knowing <a href="../2010/02/preemptive-regret-clouds-the-riches-of-the-moment/" target="_blank">how much I’ve missed</a>, in realizing how much these avoidance behaviors have cost me is <em>so</em> much keener than the pain of looking my life in the eye.  I know this as well as I know my own name.  Many days now, <a href="../2011/04/perfect/" target="_blank">like last week</a>,  I can acknowledge the irritation that comes as regularly as a tide, and  let it pass.  On Easter I could not: I got tangled in it.</p>
<p>“Healing,” Pema Chodron reminds us, “can be found in the  tenderness of pain itself.” I read this last Easter, on <a href="http://www.katrinakenison.com/2010/04/04/easter/" target="_blank">Katrina Kenison’s gorgeous blog</a>,  and the words returned to me today.  The pain of living my life, of  accepting the passage of time, of embracing my own wounded heart: these  are the kinds of pain that Pema speaks of.  The awful, toxic pain of  regret, however, carries no tenderness.  There is no healing in  avoidance, in the way I felt for big swaths of Easter Sunday.</p>
<p>What is Easter if not the day of renewal, rebirth, resurrection?   Yes, I squandered a lot of it being crabby and irritable and  short-tempered.  Yes, I drove myself to sobs alone in my room thinking: <em>I will never have another Easter egg hunt when Grace is 8 and Whit is 6</em>.   I don’t know exactly why I felt this way on Easter, a day I’ve always  loved deeply.  I know that instead of attacking myself for this waste,  lying in the dark, crying, as my stomach roiled as though I’m at sea in a  storm, I should instead embrace what Easter means, believe in the  return of my peace.  I am trying.</p>
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		<title>The Five Year Plan</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/11/the-five-year-plan/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Nov 2011 09:13:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[musings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Five years ago we celebrated Thanksgiving with my parents and my father&#8217;s whole family (picture above taken after I had bathed the children and was about to put Whit, in his red fleece footy pajamas - sob &#8211; into the car for the drive home).  Grace had just turned 4 and Whit was not yet [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-5708" title="Nov06" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/Nov06-550x412.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="412" /></p>
<p>Five years ago we celebrated Thanksgiving with my parents and my father&#8217;s whole family (picture above taken after I had bathed the children and was about to put Whit, in his red fleece footy pajamas -<em> sob</em> &#8211; into the car for the drive home).  Grace had just turned 4 and Whit was not yet 2.  I was still working at the consulting firm I spent almost 7 years with after business school.  We lived in this house.  One of my nieces was a baby, and the other was not born.</p>
<p>Where will I be in five years?  I really have no idea.  I will be 42.  Eek.  Grace will be 14 (<em>EEEK!</em>) and Whit will be 12.  It is possible Grace will be considering leaving home for boarding school.  I don&#8217;t know where we&#8217;ll be living, but if I had to guess, I&#8217;d say still in this little house (the &#8220;two years, three years, max&#8221; house we moved into in 2001).  I hope I am still working in search, which is a profession I finally really like.  I really, really, really hope I have written a book or articles or somehow more fully inhabited the mantle of &#8220;writer&#8221; that remains so elusive.  Most of all, I hope fervently that my family remains healthy and safe, my nuclear family and also my parents, sister, and extended family <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/08/family-running-through-my-veins/" target="_blank">of blood</a> and <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/11/a-complicated-equation-of-gratitude/" target="_blank">of choice</a>.</p>
<p>If the last five years have taught me anything at all, however, it is about the futility of a five year plan.  I know how quickly the best plans can unravel.  Furthermore, and more importantly, I know how even a life that unfolds exactly according to plan can still be missing something essential.  That was the lesson I was just beginning to learn five years ago.  When I reflect on five years ago it feels both like yesterday and like a hundred years ago (as is true of all major things I remember).  Most of all, though I cannot believe the rocky, sometimes vertiginous emotional terrain I was about to embark upon.  Emerson said that the &#8220;years teach us much the days never know,&#8221; and it is certainly true that now, with the perspective of years, I can look back and realize how very much I&#8217;ve learned in five years.  How much I&#8217;ve learned about who I am and about what I want.  I&#8217;ve mourned certain things that are lost as well as some that will never be true.  I&#8217;ve celebrated other things I never dreamed I would.</p>
<p>And here I am.  &#8220;There are years that ask questions and years that answer,&#8221; Zora Neale Hurston famously wrote.  It has been a series of intense years, full of both questions and then, quickly, often startlingly, answers.  I&#8217;m not naive enough to imagine that the next five years won&#8217;t hold their own set of challenges and delights, of heartbreak and sudden joy.  I would like to believe that the woman the last five years have helped make me is more sturdy, less sensitive, but I actually suspect that the reverse is true.  I anticipate further switchbacks, more confusion, and a continued need to <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/01/word-of-the-year-2011/" target="_blank">trust</a> my <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/03/beyond-the-headlights-retrospect-and-prospect-and-letting-go-of-my-need-for-an-order/" target="_blank">headlights</a>, even if they can only see a few feet into the fog.</p>
<p>And so we drive on.  Or beat on, boats against the current.  After all, what choice do we have?</p>
<p><em>I&#8217;m adding my voice to the chorus, sharing thoughts on five years ago and five years hence, and honoring, in so doing, those whose next five years are not assured.  <a href="http://dailyplateofcrazy.com/2011/11/12/what-would-you-do-to-save-one-life/" target="_blank">Big Little Wolf</a> started this, and my friends <a href="http://mothereseblog.com/2011/11/16/the-five-year-plan/" target="_blank">Kristen</a> and <a href="http://www.ivyleagueinsecurities.com/2011/11/the-five-year-plan/" target="_blank">Aidan</a> have both participated.  This effort is in support of <a href="http://themillermix.blogspot.com/2011/06/kidney-cutie.html" target="_blank">Ashley Quinones</a>, the &#8220;kidney cutie,&#8221; who is raising money for a life-saving kidney transplant.  Please <a href="http://dailyplateofcrazy.com/2011/11/12/what-would-you-do-to-save-one-life/" target="_blank">click here</a> to learn more.</em></p>
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		<title>Commencement</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/07/commencement-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jul 2011 09:50:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[musings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A month or so ago, I was writing (incessantly) about the end of the school year and the way it triggers a cascade of sadness for me.  I was thinking about it even more unremittingly, I assure you.   One detail that kept popping up in my mind was the fact that graduation, one of the [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4975" title="IMG_0133" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/IMG_01331-500x500.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="500" /></p>
<p>A month or so ago, I was writing (incessantly) about <a href="../2011/06/closing-ceremonies/" target="_blank">the end of the school year</a> and the way it <a href="../2011/05/feast-of-losses/" target="_blank">triggers a cascade of sadness</a> for me.  I was thinking about it even more unremittingly, I assure  you.   One detail that kept popping up in my mind was the fact that  graduation, one of the most official markers of an end in our culture,  is called <em>commencement</em>.  I started writing about that several times, but never really figured out what I wanted to say.</p>
<p>I guess another month of life, with my baby losing his first tooth  and my daughter slipping into flip-flops that sometimes get confused for  mine has made it clear.  Isn&#8217;t this fact, on the surface odd, just a  more elegant way of describing what might be the central preoccupation  of my life?  <em>Commencement</em>.  You end and you begin, on the very same day.</p>
<p>As something ends something new begins.  Even though I never, <em>ever</em> embrace the endings, I am often surprised with joy at the beginnings.   You&#8217;d think after 36 years I might have figured this out.  You might  imagine that I would have learned to lean into the certainty that there  is sunshine around the corner.  Unfortunately, you would be wrong.  My  sentimentality and melancholy is nothing if not tenacious, and it  refuses to yield to logic.</p>
<p>Yes, I know all of the trite sayings: when a door closes, a window opens.  Etc.  I even know they are <em>true</em>.  But still.  But still.</p>
<p>One thing I know I write over and over here is the basic, simple tenet of <em>begin again</em>.   I stumble, I fall, I mess up, I yell, I shout.  I regret.  Oh, wow, do I  regret.  I am sometimes so suffused with regret I can&#8217;t see anything  else.  But what else is there to go other than to begin again?</p>
<p>Other than to <em>commence</em>?</p>
<p>(PS <em>Commencement</em> is the title of J. Courtney Sullivan&#8217;s first book, which I read and enjoyed.  I highly recommend also her new novel, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Maine-J-Courtney-Sullivan/dp/0307595129/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1310079378&amp;sr=8-1" target="_blank"><em>Maine</em></a>, which I read last week.</p>
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		<title>Inexorable as the tides</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/06/inexorable-as-the-tides/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 2011 09:53:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[everyday life]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Whitman]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[summer 2007 summer 2011 Still rocking the 3T seersucker suit.  What happened to my baby? first day of Beginners, September 2009 last day of Kindergarten, June 2011 My baby is 6.5  He swims competently, though inelegantly.  He reads short words.  He loves Star Wars and Legos.  He beats up on his sister.  He makes me [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4864" title="IMG_6355" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IMG_6355-e1308585250736-375x500.jpg" alt="" width="375" height="500" /><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4866" title="IMG_6356" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IMG_63561-e1308585275296-375x500.jpg" alt="" width="375" height="500" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">summer 2007</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4867" title="IMG_0040" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IMG_0040-375x500.jpg" alt="" width="375" height="500" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4868" title="IMG_0042" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IMG_0042-375x500.jpg" alt="" width="375" height="500" />summer 2011</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Still rocking the 3T seersucker suit.  What happened to my baby?</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4869" title="whit 1st day" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/whit-1st-day-375x500.jpg" alt="" width="375" height="500" />first day of <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/06/the-end-of-the-beginning-2/" target="_blank">Beginners</a>, September 2009</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4870" title="IMG_1867" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/IMG_1867-375x500.jpg" alt="" width="375" height="500" />last day of Kindergarten, June 2011</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">My baby is 6.5  He <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/07/he-swims/" target="_blank">swims</a> competently, though inelegantly.  He reads short words.  He loves Star Wars and Legos.  He beats up on his sister.  He makes me laugh every single day.  He is about to lose a tooth.  He still curls up in my arms when <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/03/the-biggest-transition/" target="_blank">I pick him up at night</a>.  He tells me he loves me as much <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/08/856/" target="_blank">as the sky</a>.  He has a very strong <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/02/its-fashion-week-every-day-around-here/" target="_blank">sartorial point of view</a>.  It&#8217;s not his fault, but he also makes <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/05/raw/" target="_blank">me cry every single day</a>.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/03/the-biggest-transition/" target="_blank">The transitions, big and small</a>, keep coming at me, inexorable as the tides.  When will I learn <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/12/day-5-of-reverb10-let-go/" target="_blank">to let go</a>, to <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/06/welcoming-what-is-to-come/" target="_blank">float on them</a>?</p>
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		<title>Solstice</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/06/solstice/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 09:05:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[everyday life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Yesterday was the summer solstice.  I&#8217;ve written before of how important the solstice is to me.  For all the years of my life my parents have hosted a party from 9 to midnight on the night of December 21st (awesome when it&#8217;s a Thursday, less awesome when it&#8217;s a Sunday).  As midnight nears, a friend, [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4874" title="sunset" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/sunset-550x366.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="366" /></p>
<p>Yesterday was the summer solstice.  I&#8217;ve written before of <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/12/moving-towards-the-solstice/" target="_blank">how important the solstice is to me</a>.  For all the years of my life my parents have hosted a party from 9 to midnight on the night of December 21st (awesome when it&#8217;s a Thursday, less awesome when it&#8217;s a Sunday).  As midnight nears, a friend, the co-host, leads us in an ancient Mayan ceremony to welcome the light back.  This tradition gives me goosebumps every single time I experience it, and a huge room full of people holding candles does seem to ward off winter&#8217;s intense darkness for at least an evening.</p>
<p>I am fiercely attached to the winter solstice.  Not so the summer solstice.  In fact, I find it a little sad.  It marks, after all, the slow rotation back towards darkness.  As of today, the days are getting shorter again.  I know, I know: <em>buzzkill</em>.  Believe me, if I could somehow change this orientation of mine, this way I lean always towards melancholy, I would.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/02/preemptive-regret-clouds-the-riches-of-the-moment/" target="_blank">I am often preemptively sad</a>, well before I need to be.  And yes, this can cloud the brightness of even the most luminous moments.  Why on earth can&#8217;t I just relax into right now, these swollen days of both sunshine and sunlight, these happy children, this relative ease?  I don&#8217;t know, and I hate that I can&#8217;t.  I am simply too aware of the shadow behind that swollenness, too achingly conscious of the turning of the earth, of the hovering darkness on the horizon.</p>
<p>Often I am jealous of those who can walk  through this world without being so regularly brought to their knees by both its grandeur and its heartbreak.  I wish &#8211; desperately, wholly, wildly &#8211; that I could just sit and enjoy a day of my life.  One day.  I wish I could sit by a pool, giggling at my children jumping off a diving board, a glass of white wine in my hand and a dear friend at my side.  And if you were at that pool, that&#8217;s what you would see.  That&#8217;s what <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/02/the-receiving-end-of-judgment-and-assumptions/" target="_blank">it looks like from outside</a>.  But inside there is an essential crack in my spirit that yawns open, more narrowly or more widely depending on the moment.  This crack &#8211; <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/12/easily-hurt-easily-overjoyed/" target="_blank">this wound</a> &#8211; is always there.</p>
<p>I promise I&#8217;m not a hugely depressing person.  I&#8217;m not even depressed.  I&#8217;ve <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/04/the-rocky-path-to-grace/" target="_blank">been there, believe me</a>, and this isn&#8217;t it.  I&#8217;m actually a fairly happy person.  <a href="http://janeroper.com/" target="_blank">A new friend</a> (<em>hi Jane!</em>) who knew me here before she knew me in person even remarked that I was much funnier in person than she expected.  I try to keep my heartbreak to myself.  But the truth is that even on days like yesterday, a day as gorgeous and perfect a summer day as I can imagine, <em>the longest day of the year</em>, there is a kernel of sadness buried deep inside my experience that I can&#8217;t ignore.</p>
<p><em>And there is still so much here I do not understand</em>.  These are my favorite lines in Adrienne Rich&#8217;s <a href="../2010/12/3751/" target="_blank">deeply moving poem</a> that I publish every winter solstice.  No matter how  much I struggle and think and unpack and write, there is still so much  that is unclear to me, both within and without, so much that I find  perplexing, sad, complicated.  What I <em>am</em> beginning to see that it  is in these knots of tangled meaning that my life actually exists.  Certainly they are shot through with strands of radiant joy, that only revealed themselves once I started really paying attention.    I&#8217;m slowly realizing that my hope that someday I&#8217;ll be <a href="../2010/04/storm-tossed-and-run-aground/" target="_blank">sailing smoothly down some clearly-defined path is simply naive</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/03/the-heartbreak-that-hovers/" target="_blank">3 months ago</a> I said this:  &#8220;I realize, again, fiercely, is that <a href="../2010/10/what-if-my-sensitivity-is-the-road-home/" target="_blank">this is how I <em>want</em> to live:  in the right now of my life with a broken heart</a>.  I want this, in full knowledge of the pain it carries, far more than I want to <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/02/there-are-many-ways-to-hide-from-your-life/" target="_blank">keep hiding from my life</a>.&#8221;  Reading this avowal is a reminder of something I <em>do</em> know, somewhere deep inside myself.  On a day like this when I want to simply <em>enjoy</em>, it is easy to forget these commitments I make, to myself, to my family, to those I love.  But I won&#8217;t.  I will <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/11/official-photographer/" target="_blank">pull out my camera</a>, take some pictures of this glorious day, of my alarmingly tall and lanky and <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/08/witty-whit/" target="_blank">funny</a> and sad children, surrender to the knot of sadness that will gather in my heart as the sun sets, and acknowledge this is what it is to be me in this world.  <em>It just</em> <em>is</em>.</p>
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		<title>I know the feeling</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/06/i-know-the-feeling/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Jun 2011 09:23:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Grace]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oh this is hard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Whitman]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[This is, as I&#8217;ve said before (ad nauseum, you might say), a time of year tinged with sadness for me.  The endings and goodbyes come one after another, waves lapping onto the shore of my life, eroding anything I have written in the sand.  An extra farewell this year is the fact that Matt&#8217;s parents [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4795" title="FathersDay5" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/FathersDay5-550x366.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="366" />This is, as I&#8217;ve said before (ad nauseum, you might say), <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/05/feast-of-losses/" target="_blank">a time of year tinged with sadness</a> for me.  <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/05/earthquake-of-the-soul/" target="_blank">The endings and goodbyes</a> come one after another, waves lapping onto the shore of my life, eroding anything I have written in the sand.  An extra farewell this year is the fact that Matt&#8217;s parents have sold their house in Vermont, the house that Matt grew up in, the house where the family has gathered  for years, the house that is one of Grace and Whit&#8217;s very favorite places to visit.  The picture above was taken on their very last morning there, looking out over the field that unfurls gorgeously, its colors undulating with the seasons, in front of the house.</p>
<p>On Sunday night Whit was beside himself, unable to go to sleep because he was crying so hard.  He sat on my lap and wept, face wet with tears, wailing over and over again that he didn&#8217;t want Grandma and Grandpa to sell the house in Vermont.  It reminded me of the night a year ago when <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/06/its-hard-being-a-kid/" target="_blank">he dissolved into genuine, heartbroken sobs about the fact that he was no longer a baby</a>.  His humor and little boy bluster sometimes camouflage his intensely sensitive core.  He was not comforted by my reassurances that there were many more fun visits ahead, just in different places.  He just sobbed and sobbed, burrowing into my neck like he did when he was much littler, and cried his heart out.  I know the feeling.</p>
<p>Today I picked the kids up from school because it is the last day of regular pick up.  Grace ran up to me, a friend in tow, frantically asking for a playdate with this girl and one more.  The girl standing next to her is moving out of state at the end of this week, and this was literally the last chance.  I said, as gently as I could, that we could not do it, because Grace had a doctor&#8217;s appointment.  Long minutes of negotiation ensued, complete with arms crossing, feet stamping, and voices being raised.  When we walked to the car, Grace was in angry tears and Whit was uncharacteristically quiet, not quite sure what was going on.  In the car I told her that this was the last pick up of the year, that I was disappointed that she was acting this way.  She crumpled even further, cried harder.  Almost immediately I apologized, and told her that was unfair of me to have said; there have been hundreds of wonderful pick ups, I said, and there will be more.  One day is not a big deal, and I ought not freight it too much with being the last. She said she felt worse, even worse, about having marred the last pick up of second grade.  She wept.  I know the feeling.</p>
<p>We got home and curled up on her bed to talk it out, and she turned her bad mood around surprisingly quickly.  But her rapid disintegration at school, the urgency of the request, and the emotion in the outburst all speak to how sensitive she is, too, to this season of endings.  While transitions are hard for everyone, I suppose it&#8217;s shameful that it&#8217;s taken me this long to realize that my children may struggle especially with them, as I do.  When Grace and Whit evince these qualities, straight from the heart of who <em>I </em>am, I am overcome with both compassion and guilt.  I relate intensely to how they feel, but I also feel enormously responsible for the fact that they have these feelings at all.  I wish I could lift this from their shoulders, this inchoate anxiety about change whose darkness can cloud even the most radiant days.  But I can&#8217;t.  I think all I can do is try to remain gentle with them about the complicated, non-rational emotions that swirl in times like these.  To allow their sadness room to breathe while also reminding them of all that is bright.  After all, I know the feeling.</p>
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		<title>Lightning</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/06/lightning/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2011 09:15:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[musings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[One night last week there was a big thunder and lightning storm.  This was after a torrential squall in the morning and a tornado warning in the early evening.  The weather has been swooping dramatically lately; maybe the restlessness in my spirit these days is just another manifestation of the vibrations I sense out there [...]]]></description>
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<p>One night last week there was a big thunder and lightning storm.  This was after a torrential squall in the morning and a tornado warning in the early evening.  The weather has been swooping dramatically lately; maybe the restlessness in my spirit these days is just another manifestation of the vibrations I sense out there in the universe.  Something feels out of whack right now.</p>
<p>I sat in the window of my bedroom watching the blackness of night crack open, over and over, listening to the rolls of thunder and feeling the house literally shake.  And I thought about another night of thunder and lightning.  I was with <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2006/11/ethan-brother-i-never-had/" target="_blank">my almost-brother, Ethan</a>, on the Vineyard, in the house our families rented together for several summers.  This house (we actually rented a few, in the same general neighborhood) had a separate guest house where the four kids stayed (Hilary, Tyler, Ethan, and me).  Ethan and I were sleeping in sleeping bags on the floor of the loft, underneath an enormous skylight.</p>
<p>I love lightning.  One summer on the Cape, when I was a camp counselor, a friend and I ran across the front fields in a torrential storm.  I remember literally dancing with the lightning, which blazed all around us.  What an idiotic and naive thing to do, I realize now.  At the time, it was thrilling: I felt as though I was inside the storm.</p>
<p>But last week my thoughts turned firmly, and completely, to that night on the Vineyard.  I remembered lying in the dark with Ethan, watching the sky burst into brilliant light right above our faces, whispering to each other.  It was Ethan&#8217;s birthday, or the end of it, because it was nearing midnight.  What I remember most vividly is feeling sad that his birthday was coming to a close, painfully aware of the last moments of his day ticking away.  Even all those years ago &#8211; I think I must have been 10 &#8211; I was <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/08/the-slow-turning-forward-of-my-time-on-earth/" target="_blank">anxious about endings and about time&#8217;s passage</a>.</p>
<p>This realization made me feel something in my chest, a knot of inchoate feeling.  Am I saddened to remember the melancholy that twisted through me even as a young child?  Do I feel reassured, resigned, ready to stop struggling against something that is so clearly an essential and indelible part of who I am?  Or am I frustrated that still, so many years later, I&#8217;m experiencing the same sorrow, <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/09/navigating-by-the-stars/" target="_blank">am twisting through the same spiral</a>, over and over again?</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know.  So I just sat, my ten year old self and my 36 year old self staring through the same eyes in frank <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/05/wonder/" target="_blank">wonder</a> as the night sky burst again and again into light outside my window.</p>
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		<title>thank you</title>
		<link>http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/05/thank-you-3/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 29 May 2011 22:43:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[everyday life]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you. I thank you god for this most amazing day. Thank you&#8230;. &#8230; to the lovely, loving crowds that made my 92 year old grandfather, celebrating his 71st reunion, smile more widely than I&#8217;ve ever seen &#8230; to the rain for holding off.  The absence of biblical flooding [...]]]></description>
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<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4746" title="P Rade 2" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/P-Rade-21-550x481.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="481" /></p>
<p>Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/04/this-most-amazing-day/" target="_blank">I thank you god for this most amazing day.</a></p>
<p>Thank you&#8230;.</p>
<p>&#8230; to <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/05/from-the-first/" target="_blank">the lovely, loving crowds</a> that made my 92 year old grandfather, celebrating his 71st reunion, smile more widely than I&#8217;ve ever seen</p>
<p>&#8230; to the rain for holding off.  The absence of biblical flooding was unnerving (at the 5th reunion we literally wore trash bags), but in a good, good way.</p>
<p>&#8230; to the people who came up to tell me that they read this blog.  I cannot possibly convey how much hearing that means to me.  At all.</p>
<p>&#8230; To <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2011/05/heartbreak-fear-and-sudden-startling-joys/" target="_blank">my friends</a>, who so generously talked to, played pool with, and posed for photographs by (and with) my children.  You are family.</p>
<p>&#8230; To the seniors who gave Grace, Thacher, Cade, and Ava a hundred or more high fives as they walked in front of us, leading our class, wearing costumes, holding signs, and demonstrating true spirit and pride.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m praying <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/11/praying-means-saying-thank-you/" target="_blank">my favorite &#8211; and only &#8211; prayer</a> tonight (and Meister Eckhart&#8217;s):</p>
<p><em>thank you</em></p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4747" title="P Rade 1" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/P-Rade-1-550x429.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="429" /></p>
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		<title>From the first</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 May 2011 09:41:33 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[dear friends]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nostalgia]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[From the first he loved Princeton—its lazy beauty, its half-grasped significance, the wild moonlight revel of the rushes, the handsome, prosperous big-game crowds&#8230; (Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise) Princeton takes reunions very seriously.  Very.  This weekend is my 15th.  This will be Matt&#8217;s 3rd reunion and for the first time, we are bringing the kids.  [...]]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-4731" title="expansion_004669-large" src="http://www.adesignsovast.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/expansion_004669-large-329x500.jpg" alt="" width="329" height="500" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>From the first he loved Princeton—its lazy beauty, its half-grasped  significance, the wild moonlight revel of the rushes, the handsome,  prosperous big-game crowds&#8230;</em></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>(Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise)</em></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Princeton takes reunions very seriously.  <em>Very</em>.  This weekend is my 15th.  This will be Matt&#8217;s 3rd reunion and for the first time, we are bringing the kids.  The centerpiece of reunions is the parade on Saturday &#8211; the P Rade.  All of the alumni classes put on costumes and parade through campus, while the rest of the gathered alumni stand by the sides of the road and cheer.  You heard me right.  At his first reunion, my 5th, Matt turned to me incredulously and asked if he had unwittingly married into a cult.  Why yes, honey, you did!  I smiled and answered, and then promptly returned my attention to my friends and the orange-clad groups of alumni, ranging in age from 100+ to 22, parading past me.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The P Rade always makes me cry.  It has something in common with why the <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2007/07/200707in-marion-for-fourth-of-july/" target="_blank">World War 2 veterans</a> walking in the <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/07/the-annual-marion-fourth-of-july-parade/" target="_blank">Fourth of July parade in Marion</a> make me cry.  The first class to march in the P Rade is the 25th reunion, and after them comes the Old Guard, is the oldest returning alumni (<a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/06/the-old-guard/" target="_blank">of which my grandfather is now a proud member</a>).  These men are elderly, some of them walking, some riding in golf carts.  There are always some widows in this group, who come back in their husband&#8217;s honor.  The embodiment of how much a place can mean to a person brings tears to my eyes, as does the visible evidence of time&#8217;s relentless forward turning.  For these men, I&#8217;m certain, it feels like mere moments ago they were the graduating class, arms slung around each other&#8217;s shoulders, singing bawdily, rowdily into the spring air, more in touch with their futures and their promise than they ever would be again.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">I know, because that was just me.  Mere moments ago, I swear.  And now I&#8217;m in the thick of the pack, among the strollers and toddlers and grade schoolers.  This year I&#8217;ll have my own children walking beside me, holding my hands.  Both <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2010/03/les-meilleures-du-monde-2/" target="_blank">Whit&#8217;s godmother</a> and <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/09/qabm/" target="_blank">one of Grace&#8217;s</a> will be walking with us; simply writing that makes me cry.  How to capture or express the feeling when the past, the present, and the future are all animate in a single moment, in a place that was &#8211; and still is &#8211; <a href="http://www.adesignsovast.com/2009/12/home/" target="_blank">home</a> to me as nowhere else ever has been?  I can&#8217;t even begin to do that.  I&#8217;m emotional about and nostalgic for a moment I have not even lived yet.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The P Rade is tradition exemplified.  Our fierce commitment to it speaks, I think, of the deep human need to feel a part of something.  It is authentic, the love that swells through the crowd on watching the Old Guard and the young graduates and everybody in between.  There are always many tear-soaked cheeks, and even the most sophisticated or cynical of my friends give themselves over to the rolling pride and belonging and nostalgia that is tangible in the air during the P Rade.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">I&#8217;m reminded, as I think about this weekend, of how I too loved Princeton from the first time I set foot on its campus.  I visited with my father, Labor Day weekend of 1991, and within an hour of our wandering around I knew I wanted to go there.  Somehow I half-grasped the significance the place would have for me and in an instant made a decision that would alter the course of my life forever (to withdraw my early application elsewhere and to pursue the magnolia-strewn road I&#8217;d precipitously, and firmly, decided I wanted).  For someone who makes most decisions cautiously, who is only now learning to trust the voice of her soul, this kind of instinctive, impulsive change of course was distinctly out of character.  And how extraordinarily thankful I am about that to this day.</p>
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