The measure of a day

We’re back to walking the dogs three times a day, which gives us the opportunity to soak up the new-morning sun, to bid the neighborhood goodnight, and to wander these cul-de-sacs all afternoon long. Yesterday we were out for an hour, never further than a couple of blocks away from home. We investigated squirrel nests, corralled our hounds when other dogs walked by, tested a dozen different ways to hula-hoop. Anna built a fairy village of sticks and leaves and grasses, with acorns for fairies and seed pods for boats and little beds made out of moss. She narrated an elaborate tale of a fairy mommy and her fairy babies, of unseen monsters chased away with magic and storms roaring outside the fairies’ cozy hole. She leapt and twirled and recited, as the dogs curled in the neighbor’s grass and snoozed.

It was, by any measure, a lovely afternoon. And we get to do this every day.

So I wish I knew why, then, I couldn’t sleep last night for fretting over all I hadn’t done. The neglected second job, the thank-you cards still piled on the counter. None of this should matter.

Hemmed in by chores, finances and the uncertainty of our future, we have every right to essentialize, to tuck in and make the most of that rare commodity we actually have at the moment: time. Time to play. Time to dance. Time to sing and to talk and to make it up as we go. Time to enjoy.

And yet I fretted because I wasn’t cooking from scratch. I thought about the unfolded laundry. I wondered if she’d remember this afternoon, long into her life, when she could have been … learning Spanish, I suppose, or soccer or t-ball or swimming.

I nearly ruined it, this happy memory, and that’s such a shame. How many of us do that? Every day? I do. I do. I do.

It’s so difficult for me to evaluate a day by what went right, and so natural to look for what went wrong. It’s just the two of us and the dogs.

Our shepherd, Tuco, assumes the role of deputy pack leader, patrolling, guarding, keeping us safe. He takes this so seriously that it’s almost comical, but I can’t laugh at him; he’s working so hard. (Of course, should I ever cry or get upset at anything in the house, he slinks into the shower. This does challenge his tough-dog image.) Rosa, the female dog, never quite lets me parent alone; she’s always on hand to help manage the puppy.

Who is managing quite well, thank you very much. When Allan is away, she sleeps in my bed and brushes her teeth in my sink and bathes in my tub. Much of this is sheer practicality; it takes half the time to supervise her if she’s right with me. But I like it, too, if I’m truthful, having her cozy-close, sharing a bath, singing while we dress.

We have as much of that as we want, these few days. What a treasure it is, this thing we have, so precious and so fleeting. I know this, really I do, and I won’t forget.

Published in: on January 27, 2012 at 10:23 PM  Leave a Comment  
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Me and my trashy habit

I have a taste for cheap gossip magazines, a hobby acquired and nurtured at the University of Chicago. One of my friends got a free subscription to People, and we’d pass each weekly edition around our group, gorging on glossy photos and italicized revelations like dieters set loose in a candy shop. The taste never quite went away. I still find the concept of a life put out for public consumption to be fascinating; not the bottom-feeding ethos of the reality star but the negotiated stance of the person whose work or position require public buy-in. The crafting and selling of the image, the flow of the narrative; the interplay between commodities and what is, after all, someone’s one and only real life.  There’s a code, a language, with its own signifiers and signifieds and ever-changing shades of truth and sensation. I love it.

I’m particularly struck when something one of these public people says rings flat-out true. Michelle Williams, an actress who is generally press-shy but who, in the run-up to a promising bid for an Oscar, we can expect to see bursting into every available frame, said something in a recent interview that perfectly framed for me that alien sense that absolutely everyone else knows exactly what’s going on while you, and you alone, aren’t in on the joke.

Part of it’s here:

“I didn’t know how to keep myself warm in the winter or cool in the summer. It felt like somebody was withholding all the secrets—how to take care of yourself and where to get the things that would help you take care of yourself. I just literally didn’t know where to go. I was too shy to ask for help or to admit that I was cold or that I was uncomfortable or that I didn’t know what I was doing. Look, I didn’t know what I was doing at so many points in my life that I felt that if I had stopped and admitted that I didn’t know what I was doing then I would be really lost, and the best thing to do was to just keep forging and to act like you were okay.”

Read More http://www.gq.com/entertainment/movies-and-tv/201202/michelle-williams-gq-february-2012-cover-story-article#ixzz1jrCcb4b9

Published in: on January 18, 2012 at 8:09 PM  Leave a Comment  
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It’s not the worst problem in the world, but it’s the worst problem in MY world…

The thing about a job is, it’s sort of like a heartbeat: you either have one, or you don’t. It’s hopeful when former managers phone, expressing sympathy and saying they’ve got their ears open; it’s heartwarming to hear how hard the boss tried to save the contract. But in the end it doesn’t pay the mortgage.

I worry sometimes that this might be the universe correcting course, that I am somehow responsible for dragging our family east by the sheer force of my will, an act so pushy the universe could not allow it to slide. I won’t let it happen again.

If the lesson I’m supposed to take away from this is to live and let live, then I’m in a crash course not of my choosing. Allan is home all day now, which means the house is adapting, in ways subtly and … not. He’d rearranged the kitchen (the horror) before a week had passed, and is now eyeing the rest of the house. The Christmas tree came down in record time and for the first time since we moved in there is food in the cupboard that I neither had to purchase myself nor will be responsible for cooking. We share pickup, and dishes, and vacuuming… I don’t know which has surprised me more: how much I used to accomplish each day, all by myself, or how miserable it actually was for him to be gone from before sunrise to after sunset every single day.

If this is in fact the universe correcting course, then the universe clearly has a thing or two to learn about balance.

Which it’s welcome to get on with: the sooner, the better.

Published in: on January 11, 2012 at 5:11 PM  Leave a Comment  
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Firsts

Anna completed homework for school for the first time, just yesterday, writing her name over and over again in fluid d’Nealian script. It’s just the beginning, I thought, as I watched her grip her pencil, and who knows where it will lead? She says the word in a funny, two-syllable way, emphasis on the first: “Mom! I finished my home-work. My home-work!”

Then, also for the first time, she put together a 24-piece puzzle entirely by herself. She carefully found the four corners, then the straight-edged side pieces, then the middles.

Noting these firsts, one right after the other, I felt that mother-feeling. The feeling we live for, the we-are-one sensation (an illusion, I know, but let me have my moment), the feeling that we are parts of one whole, sharing one emotion, one moment, just us, undivided.

It had become too rare, and I worried.

I remember when the ‘firsts’ came so quickly that I could not keep up, scribbling them in a journal, then forgetting to scribble, then forgetting where I’d put the journal, finally giving the whole thing up. Then they slowed down, became less remarkable, sometime around her second birthday, when she began to spend long hours away from me, away from home, making new friends and learning so much.

We’re back, somehow, to a world of our own. All of those firsts never really went anywhere, I suppose, they just grew harder to spot, tinged with melancholy at the passage of time. She hasn’t ceased her explorations, certainly; she casts her net wide, loving recklessly and with abandon. She’s as engaged in school and friends and playdates and birthday parties as any five-year-old.

The difference, it seems, is with me. The difference is that my world is so aligned with hers: my work is her school and her teachers are my colleagues and my schedule is hers too and her friends are my friends’ children … it’s cozy. So cozy. So cozy it hurts sometimes, like a hug held just a moment too long. But mostly, it’s comfy.

I like it here. I like to remember, as I watch her flash across the playground, the moment we spent this morning, choosing purple socks or red ones. (I like that that even matters: purple socks or red.) I like sitting here, laptop glowing in the dark, thinking of all of the things I like about this life. I like the fumbly way she plays with the language, telling me she “goed” here and “goed” there and how much she loves “Sabannah” no matter how often she hears the name of our town pronounced correctly (all-too-soon, she’ll say it right, for the first time, and then this small chapter too will close). I like to listen as she tells of her day, that she played blocks with Olive and Victor spilled his milk and Tyler is a red square now instead of a green triangle. The surface of her narrative slides over and around me like a smooth current, words tumbling and flowing and playing in the light as she makes sense of her shiny new world.

That’s how the world seems to me, too, when I stop and look at it through her eyes: shiny and new, I mean. Every corner, every minute, bursting with first-times. When I think of it that way, it’s not so hard, watching the firsts slip away, for there are always more to come.

Always, always, more to come.

Published in: on January 6, 2012 at 9:45 PM  Leave a Comment  
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God bless us, every one

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Published in: on January 4, 2012 at 8:32 PM  Leave a Comment  
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Who she is

I took this video of Anna twirling around Reynolds Square after the Nutcracker matinee performance. She’s oblivious to people around her, lost in her graceful, fluid world.

I hope she keeps this trait, always.

Published in: on December 30, 2011 at 4:27 PM  Leave a Comment  
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All is calm, all is bright

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The view from my balcony this morning, in Florida for the holiday. Taking a breath and seeking perspective.

Published in: on December 24, 2011 at 10:17 AM  Leave a Comment  
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When bad things happen at the holidays

I planned it all week. First I got my work done, in my favorite coffee shop, a cheery place of brick and overstuffed couches, close enough to the art college to earn street cred even if the street it sits on is a meticulously groomed cobblestone roundabout. Then I was free to wander those historic streets, to drift in and out of shops dressed for the season. I saved my favorite for last. The Christmas Shop seems created just for me: nativity scenes by Wendt & Kohn, Mark Roberts’ wizened old fairies, puffy blown-glass Christopher Radko ornaments that I love to inspect if only for their outrageousness. 

And best of all: an entire tree dedicated to the Nutcracker, dozens of Sugar Plum Fairies and Marzipans and Cavaliers and Claras. Gorgeous. One, in particular, caught my eye: a tiny pink blown-glass Clara, delicately poised on her toe, cradling her beloved Nutcracker. I wanted it. Oh, I wanted it. I had the cash in my pocket, and it was on sale … 

But I didn’t. I couldn’t.

My husband was laid off, just last week. It wasn’t supposed to happen; how could such a thing happen? Quickly, apparently: the company cancelled an entire contract, so he went to work, as usual, on Thursday, but not, as usual, not on Friday. 

“Today didn’t go well,” he began as he walked in the door, hours earlier than expected.

I fear that forever, now, I will look up in dread any time he comes home a few hours early. It’s just never good news. 

Happy Holidays to us.

It’s a lot to take in. The best case scenario? The company is experiencing a momentary panic and will re-hire early in January. Painful but survivable. We’ll always tell stories about that “first tough Christmas in Savannah.” We’ll plan better, then laugh ruefully, remembering the year Christmas stopped in its tracks.

It’s too unlikely. The worst? 

Please don’t ask. 

So much is threatened. So much stands to change: where we live, where she goes to school, our economics. Our end-of-the-year financial review has churned into crisis management, shuffling, re-distributing, eyeing the short-term instead of the long, speculating instead of planning. Christmas has palled.

I know three states of being, these days.

In the best of times, I am oblivious to our situation. This most often happens with the little one, skipping and singing and enjoying. We so looked forward to this season: she is five, a magical time of cookie-decorating parties and letters to Santa and searching the skies for flying reindeer. When I am under the spell of the holidays, then all is calm, all is bright.

Too often, though, awareness comes in on little cat feet. I watch her twirl and dance and I am of two hearts: one full of holiday joy, the other buckling with the effort: Don’t let her see. Don’t let her hear. Don’t let her suspect. 

And finally, occasionally, I turn and face it. I crawl into my closet, three shut doors and a hallway protect her from my sounds I make. I snapped at Allan the other day and he shot back, That’s just anger talking, and I knew: no. It’s fear. I have nothing to be angry at or about except the vagaries of corporate decisions, which feels like raging against the rain. 

But fear? That’s real. It has dimensions and depth and edges. It’s tangible, visible in the curtainless windows, the empty space waiting for the dinette set we were going to gift ourselves for Christmas. 

It’s palpable in the pulsebeat before the bank balance floats onto the webpage. 

It lives in the space between my fingertips and the ornament, Clara dancing with her Nutcracker, a $20 bauble I would have easily purchased just a few short days ago but which, now, and for who knows how long, is just out of my reach.

 

 

 

 

 

Published in: on December 21, 2011 at 5:47 PM  Comments (1)  
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Steam engine

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Published in: on December 15, 2011 at 11:53 AM  Leave a Comment  

Christmas!

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Published in: on December 15, 2011 at 11:40 AM  Leave a Comment  
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