that' what i do

That's what I do when I'm not sure what else to do, but I know I need to do something.
Either that or I go buy lemons.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

20 Years, Part II


Here’s the thing: it’s impossible for me to have any one single feeling about this 20th anniversary. In some surprising way, it also feels like a celebration. I can’t think about my mother--my beautiful, amazing mother--without also thinking about my daughter. And Quinn is all possibility, all new beginning, she is oxygen. And breathing the world in with her is like having part of my heart resuscitated after all these years.

There are so many different kinds of love in this life. When my mother was dying I couldn’t see into the darkness ahead of me; I couldn’t imagine a future without her. I didn’t know what anything would look like or whom I would be. I had spent my whole life looking to her for guidance. Inevitably, of course, I did go on, advancing into that darkness one day at a time, and as I did, my eyes adjusted. 

I slept for most of the first year. My dearest friends still called, they made me come out and spend time with them. I remember being at a Thanksgiving gathering in Maine at Chelsey’s house with all of them--our annual crew team turkey dinner. I felt hollow and had little to say, but they let me just be there with them. Moments like that kept my heart beating, though just barely, for months--they kept me in stable condition. And then, a year after my mother’s death, I finally woke up from my long nap. I took a trip with strangers on the ocean, came back and began to live again...began to start imagining myself in the future. 

One adventure led to another. I went to graduate school, lived on a boat for a week, moved into my first solo apartment. I met wonderful people, I read great books, I shared a plot in a community garden. I went out and danced. I laughed. Eventually I got a job; I felt useful. And from there, I got another job and I gave away most of my belongings, put the rest in storage, and began my 2.5 year adventure, traveling, living out of my backpack and my truck, seeing what some of the world looked like. And in that time I met Sam, and I came home to Vermont, and we built a house, got married and got pregnant. I did a lot of living, all with a clear sense that that is the only possible thing to do--to not waste it, not waste this too-short life.

In the early months of my pregnancy, I thought I wanted to have a boy. I told people I did--I’m mostly tomboy, I would say, not very girly. As a teacher I had often had simpler, easier connections with male students. Girls were more complicated for me. The night before our 20 week ultrasound, when we would find out the sex of our future baby, Sam and I got in an argument about something. I found myself hiding in the bathroom with the family photo album my sister assembled for me for Christmas one year. I looked at pages and pages of photos of my mom and me. I sobbed. I didn’t know how to have a baby without her. And I realized, all of sudden, that I desperately wanted a daughter. I had turned my back on the ocean and never saw the wave coming--it knocked me off my feet.

Girls are complicated for me because I want so badly for them to have good lives. I expect a lot of them. I expect them to respect themselves, and to demand that the people in their lives treat them well, all the time. I expect them to earn the respect of others by being smart, and working hard. I expect them not to be coy or give themselves away. I expect them to participate, to be independent, to have a clear sense of right and wrong. To use their voices. That’s a lot, I know. And it’s understandable why some of my relationships with girls over the years (especially my poor sister) have been challenging--who wouldn’t find me overbearing? But those things are ingrained in me--they are my mother’s lessons for me, and they’ve helped me have an incredible life. 

And so, the night before my ultrasound, I found myself facing the fact that even though having a daughter would probably be really hard, it was a challenge I desperately wanted. I knew if I had a daughter, and she was anything like me, she would have opinions of her own, and she would not like to be told what to do or how to do it, and I knew she would likely fight me in my quest to make her the invincible woman I would want her to be. And she might even hate me for it. But still, I wanted the chance to try.

I know there will be rocky times ahead, but I also know that loving Quinn is a lot like loving my mom...in a strange way I can’t quite explain. I imagine my mom standing on the edge of a flat plane, her back to the abyss, she is smiling. The world is flat. It’s the same way I feel about Quinn--I can’t see a life beyond her, or without her in it. I know that makes me sound vulnerable, or crazy, but love so big, so primal and biological is, well...it is the most raw feeling of being alive I’ve ever experienced. And I’ve jumped out of a plane, I’ve inched my way up the face of a 1200 foot cliff, I’ve gone over waterfalls in a boat. I’ve done the adrenaline drug and it’s just not as good as this primal kind of love. Nothing is.

Somedays I think I would give just about anything to have my mom back; I have 20 years of stories to tell her and lots of places and things I’d like to show her.  But other days, I have this strange sense that she’s not gone, just out of reach. And I suppose that’s what Quinn has done for me--filled that void, revived that most sacred and personal part of my heart. Nothing could replace my love for my mother, but being a mother comes very very close...in some ways it's even better.

Quinn is having a lot of fun learning names right now. For a long time if I would say, “you’re beautiful,” she’d say, “I’m not beautiful...I’m Quinn!” Periodically, when she’s feeling sassy, she’ll call out for something: “Say-um! Sam! Where’s my bear?” And she calls me Ker sometimes, or Ker-Mom, or Love--the name Sam uses for me. The other day, driving to school, we got talking about names and she asked, “What’s my name?” I told her, “You are Quinn Claire.” While she obviously knew the first part of the answer, it seemed to be the first time her middle name registered for her. She spent the rest of the drive trying it out: “Quinn Claire...Quinn, Claire...I’m Quinn Clay-ur” She emphasized each new syllable, trying them on for size. I was speechless, listening to my still-tiny daughter taking possession of my mother’s name for herself. Clay-ur. Claire

More than at any other time, in these twenty years, I have a clear sense of connection to my mom. I hear myself speaking her words to my daughter. I can imagine her love for me when Quinn is in my arms. I receive Quinn’s laughter and kisses and questions and I am having the conversations with my mother that I never got to have. I hear answers to questions I never had the chance to ask. I feel like the vector between them. I feel like some of my mother’s energy, dormant in my cells for so many years, finally made it back into the tangible world. She goes on. I breathe her like oxygen..big love fills my lungs.


“The only thing worth grieving over 
[is] that sometimes there [is] more beauty in this life than the world [can] bear.” 
-Collum McCann 








Sunday, July 21, 2013

20 Years, Part I


Twenty years ago, this month, my mother died of lung cancer. She was 46 years old, and would have turned forty-seven the next day. I believe she died angry; she was not at peace. 

There is much about her death and dying I can understand now that I could not comprehend at the time. First and foremost is my understanding of just how young 46 is. I was twenty-one then and didn’t realize that I was not yet even close to my prime years. I didn’t yet understand the value of being rooted in a life of my choosing, and I didn’t anticipate the sense of beginning-possibilities I feel in my own life now at 41. I knew she was robbed, but I didn’t fully understand just how much she was denied.

My parents married at 24, had me at 25, and my sister at 29. They had owned two houses by the time my sister came along. They accomplished a lot early and no doubt worked hard to do so. Their plan, by the time we were older, was to move to South Carolina (or somewhere else warm) once we were both out of the house. They imagined playing more and working less, getting my dad away from the 1-2 hour commute into Boston each day, playing more golf, more tennis, and enjoying being free, finally, of the daily work of careers and parenting they had dedicated themselves to from the time they were very young. We buried my mom two weeks before Amy went off to college. They had already, a couple of years before, taken a trip, without us, to South Carolina to look around. They liked it.

There were days that summer when my mother was dying that a neighbor would come to visit with her. And increasingly, as the summer went on, a visiting nurse would come and bathe her. When either of those two women were in her room with her, my mother had her door closed. I didn’t understand then why she would choose to spend those hours with strangers, rather than us...rather than me, but now I imagine those visits were two small things she did for herself, in the midst of many things she was still trying to do for us. I imagine she needed time to talk openly about how she felt, with someone who could handle hearing about it. 

I wanted to be her confidante, as she had been mine my whole life, but I was definitely not capable of talking calmly about her dying. I was only capable of tending to things for and around her, driving her to the hospital for her treatments, making her tapes to listen to on her headphones when she was there, watering her gardens, making her iced tea, cutting her roses for her and bringing them up to her room. I cried all the time and she comforted me. She smiled a lot, and hugged me a lot. She didn’t cry often with me, and when she did she was quick to make a joke and turn things around. Even while dying she was taking care of us.

The work that I do to keep my family going is minimal in comparison, yet sometimes I still get frustrated when I feel like I’m the only one who registers what needs to be done to keep the family-train moving. Like my mother did, I pay the household bills. And I anticipate the grocery shopping that needs to be done to ensure Quinn will have something decent in her school lunches for the week. I know how long it’s been since her nap blanket at school has been washed, and when it will need to be washed again. I see the last-minute panic that will happen rushing her out the door and realizing her bag no longer has a clean change of clothes...I see it before it happens and get the laundry done. I have only one child, but taking care of her and keeping the house running takes up a lot of mental space and a lot of physical energy. My mother had two daughters; I can only now imagine how important those few hours were to her each week, when she closed the door to us and allowed herself some private time, as her days ran out like warm water through her fingers.

And those talks with outsiders, those warm sponge baths on her deteriorating body, those must have been the things that allowed her to put on her brave face the rest of the time...to comfort us, instead of relying on us to comfort her. Still, in spite of her efforts to keep us smiling, her anger cracked through now and then. Her temper was short sometimes, and the rage that came out once or twice was like nothing I’d seen from her before. 

Throughout our lives, my mother made sure to do everything equally for both my sister and me. Anything she did for one of us, she always did for the other. When I graduated from high school, four years before my mom got sick, she threw me a party and baked an elaborate cake: one half was shaped like the state of Massachusetts where we lived, the other half was the state of Vermont where I was headed. Connecting them was a bridge with a graduate crossing over. High school and college team colors were worked into the frosting; it was elaborate. My sister graduated high school about a month before my mother died. The day she baked my sister’s cake was a difficult one for her. I don’t remember what I did to make her mad that afternoon, but I do remember that she threw a flower pot at me, aiming for my head. Fortunately I had quick reflexes, and fortunately we had enough time left before she died to laugh about it together. But looking back on that day now, I see it as one piece of evidence that she was never accepting of her fate. 

And that’s another thing I understand better now than I did then--just how much was at stake. 

Do not go gentle into that goodnight. Rage, rage against the dying of the light. 
-Dylan Thomas

My mother was tough. I’ve always admired that about her. She fought for what she cared about. She was a clear-headed, purposeful, and tenacious fighter, and also capable of big love--big enough that I can feel it still.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Wolf, Wyoming



Wind on open grassland is like the ocean: a steady march of waves against the shore with incoming tide. Here the waves are green and gold and ceaseless--no coastline to mark the end, just prairie wider than your vision, even as you scan the broad horizon looking for the terminus with your sweeping gaze.

The sound too is like the ocean: wind through tall grass, through stiff spruce at the edge of the meadow, is water crashing against sand. Only the paper flutter of Aspen leaves anchors you to the Earth, to solid, knowable ground. Aspen leaves and the chitter and whistle and melody of birdsong.

Here, by the house, the trees hold up the sky. Step out from under them, walk down the red gravel road, and the weight of it all--the interminable expanse of sky--presses down on you. It is impossible to take it all in. Impossible to be still as your mind measures and scans and rescans. As you try to find the edges of what cannot be contained or defined.

Writing it down is my only meager tool to make sense of the magic of this life. Words, like prayers, called up and offered in the hope that some understanding will come. They come of their own accord, words whose source seems somewhere outside my own thoughts, originating in some unseeable spirit, allowing me, momentarily, to grasp this ephemeral experience of being human and alive.Words, like prayers--a meditation. I am the gold finch pulling seeds from the feeder in the roar of tumultuous wind, riding golden waves of sweet grass and sage. So much that cannot be contained. We are temporary vessels transporting infinite energy.