Loneliness and friends and 1st grade

Gracie has been sort of a whiny pain about her birthday party lately. It’s going to be joint with another classmate and she can’t stop complaining about that. She doesn’t want to share, she doesn’t want to share, she doesn’t want to share. Well, shocker.

I’ve gotten pretty short about the whole topic as ingratitude is one of my least favorite things. Tonight she came out of her room in tears at about 745 and I was not remotely patient. She told me she was having nightmares from a movie she saw recently and I sighed heavily and marched her back to her bed, delivering a none-too-heartfelt Sweet Dreams headrub and extra hug.

I was reading Google Reader in my room a few minutes later when I heard her door creak open. She tiptoed out, obviously waiting for me to hear her. I decided to wait her out a sec and listened in silence. She hesitated and then went into the bathroom, apparently killing time. Finally I said, “Grace?” That was all the opening she needed, I guess, as she walked into my room with tears streaming down her face.

I pulled her up onto the bed with me and lay next to her. Resigned mothering, I think you could call it. I cast a longing look at my book and asked her what was going on. She started telling me again about how she did not want to share her birthday party; I think she could tell from my body language that I was closing up again because she dissolved into more vigorous tears. I battled my own impatience and asked her gently what was really going on. Finally, eyes closed, she choked through her tears, “Mummy, I’m scared nobody is going to want to play with me. They are all going to want to play with Caroline.”

I felt a wave of empathy and identification almost knock me over, with sharp rocks of guilt cutting into my ankles. She went on to tell me about how all of the girls in her class have a best friend and she doesn’t and she feels like she does not fit in. She described the playground dynamics and how she often gets left out since what she likes to do best is swing by herself. Oh! Swinging by herself – one of my very very favorite things to do (Still, to this day, I can be found swinging on playground swings. A lot).

I don’t have an answer for her. The vague sense of alienation that has defined much of my life swelled up in my own heart, my sense of myself overlapping with my sense of her into one big intertwined mess of sensitivity and differentness and heart and an aching desire to belong.

I wrapped Grace in my arms, looking down at the side of her face, noticing that the chestnut colored hair by her temple was soaked with tears. I kissed her forehead and just rocked her, shhhing quietly into her hairline. I told her that I felt alone a lot, and lonesome a lot, and that that did not mean that she would not find friends. I told her about all of the people who love her, citing a couple of dear friends outside of school.

I remembered a few mornings ago when I dropped both kids off at school. Whit dashed into the early morning activity room, leaving both Grace and I in the dust. I had to go and so I asked Grace where she wanted to wait until 8:10. She said she did not want to go into the activity room, and I felt an unsettling awareness that she sort of wished she could just dissolve into the wall until she had her clearly-defined seat in her classroom to take.

I steered her to a chair over by the double doors to the playground. “Sit here,” I said, sitting her down and kissing her on the cheek. “What should I do, Mummy?” she asked me plaintively. I told her to read her library book, and she refuted that with “But I already read it.” Fine. I told her to count. “What?” she asked, puzzled. “Count. I count everything, Grace, all the time. Count windows. Count people. Count backpacks.” She didn’t even challenge me, but smiled happily and said, “Okay.”

Tonight as I listened to her slowly ebbing sobs I remembered that morning’s keen awareness of Grace’s discomfort. When I tucked her into bed a few minutes later, I kissed her and held her face in my hands. Her eyes were incandescent in the dark, still wet with tears, red-rimmed. She stared right at me, her desire for me to make it all okay disconcertingly clear. If only I could, Gracie. I hugged her and told her I would always love her, no matter what, that she would always be my very favorite daughter in the whole wide world. She nodded wordlessly at me.

I’ve been wondering all night if telling her that her uncertainties are familiar to me was the right thing. I don’t know if that reassured her or scared her. I don’t know if I ought to have been more glib, telling her of course she will make friends and everybody loves her. Even if that is so, I’m not sure I could. My own wariness about people and my own hesitation about whether or not people like me is such an omnipresent part of who I am that I can’t fake otherwise.

Tonight was just another reminder of how my own worst qualities are animate in my child. Another glimpse at the load she carries because I am her mother. Oh, my poor insecure tearful girl. I love you, Gracie. I’m sorry that your inheritance from me is so complex, that it includes such swampy marshes of the soul.

The Alphabet of Right Now

I was in a sound sleep last night (a rare occurence) when I turned my head and opened my eyes to see Whit standing about six inches from me. No idea how long he had been standing there. Hi, buddy. Turns out he was complaining about his ears hurting. After I gave him motrin and water and a whole lot of back rubbing and snuggling (no complaints here, though his body is starting to have that lanky kid feeling now too, which is alarming to me) I went back to sleep and lay there for a while. As I lay there alone with my racing thoughts I considered that since I often do lists and things with numbers, it was high time for the Alphabet of Me Right Now.

Anxious – Not so much right now as permanent baseline throb, regular as a heartbeat. My anxiety pulses in my veins along with my platelets and red blood cells. I don’t love it but am not sure if I could ever change this inherent part of me. Also: American Girl dolls.

Blogging – I love my little blog. Random and meandering as it is, I am truly glad to have this record of my childrens’ hilarity and growth and of my own mundane introspections. Also: books, bacon.

Cashmere – As the days turn cool the uniform shifts from tee shirts to J Crew cashmere long sleeve sweaters. So comforting. Also: Cambridge.

Dog – Big family debate over a dog. All three of my family members are desperate for one. I actually love dogs as well, but feel quite sure that the responsibility for the pet will be mine and am a little leery of this. Also, not in this house that we are already bursting out of (there is violent agreement that any dog will be large, not small). Also: Diet Coke.

Elegant – Something I am most defiantly not and deeply wish I was. Getting less elegant, sadly, rather than more, as I get older. Also: exhausted.

Frantic – Too often I feel as though I am running around with a thousand balls in the air, dropping approximately one per hour. I tell myself this will be ameliorated when I make X or Y lifestyle change, but I’m starting to suspect this is a state of mind more than anything else. Also: French fries, flip-flops.

(the) Ghostie Dance – Something I have to do for Whit before bed every night to assure that he does not have ghosts in his room. Also: geek, godmothers, Gossip Girl, Goldfish.

HBS – A school I sort of can’t believe I went to.

iPhone – The focus (and locus) of my life. Camera, video, web, email, text, and phone. Also: insomnia.

Jeans and Juicy sweats – what I am wearing 90% of the time.

Kindergarten – Have one kindergarten graduate and one child one year away from it. Still can’t believe I have children this old.

Legos – These are a big part of my life. Whit is utterly obsessed, Grace partially. I find following the diagrammatic instructions to build something complex from small blocks deeply satisfying. Also, I walk on discarded Lego pieces almost every day and always shout obscenities and hop around as though a toe has been amputated. Also: lunches to pack, laundry, leather bracelet that I never take off.

Magic Treehouse books – Grace’s current fixation. She cruises through them. I love the little tidy row they make, lined up by number, in her bookshelf. Also: mess (literal and figurative), magazines.

Neatness – A fixation, and one that is fighting a losing battle against the inexorably encroaching tide of stuff that children bring with them: art, plastic toys from birthday parties, toys with lots of little pieces, and other assorted flotsam.

Overwhelmed – Often.

Princeton – Still a place I love dearly, and the place where I met most of the people who are dearest to me to this day. Also: pizza, photographs, panic.

Quotes – Refuge and inspiration, the words of others often make me feel like I am not alone and help me understand the world more clearly. I’ve kept quote books since I was in 6th grade and am now on my fourth book. I treasure these hand-written compilations that trace the words and sentiments that spoke to me in various parts of my life.

Running – My only exercise. Except I haven’t done much in the last few months with the knee injury/H1N1 one-two punch. I love to run in the cold, the rain, the snow, so am looking forward to getting back into the groove this fall. Also: robots.

Sauvignon blanc – Key beverage in my life. On the rocks. In a stemless wine glass or (arguably better) water glass. Also: Sweet Dreams Head Rub (for Grace before bed to assure no nightmares).

Twilight – I may be the only middle-aged woman I know who decided this series is lame. I thoroughly enjoyed #1, found #2 bearable, slogged my way through #3, and quit 50 pages into #4. Plus I think Robert Pattinson is creepy looking, I really do, sorry. Also: Tabblo, where all of my photographs live, toy train tracks, time passing too fast.

Underneath – The internal, essential me that I am trying to excavate. Underneath the pleasing, underneath the achieving. And the fundamental fear: what if, in truth, there is nothing underneath that?

Venn Diagrams – I often think about the world this way, about how categories overlap. I imagine venn diagrams in my head as a way of understanding situations. Also: vegetables (I’m trying).

Worry – All the time. Often ridiculously, about things totally out of my power. Somehow I believe that if I fret and fear and hold on until my knuckles are white I’ll be able to control whatever it is I’m worrying about, believe that by sheer force of will I can determine the outcome of things.

X-ray – Also: xylophone. Neither has any relevance to my life whatsoever.

Yelling – Way too much of it happening with my kids. I know. It is not helpful to shout at them to keep quiet. Yes, I get the lunacy and hypocrisy of this. Still, hard to stop!

Zithromax – Whit’s on it now for an ear infection, I’ve taken two z-packs this year because of my terrible immunity. Also: zoo (life is one).

A sage on the plane

I took the 6:30 shuttle home from New York last Saturday. As I am wont to do, I lingered near the gate so as to be one of the first people onboard (after those first class folks – taking first class on the shuttle is something I will never understand). I like to sit right up in front, in order to get off fast. I sat down and put my bag on the window seat next to me, hoping to avert anyone from joining me. No dice.

I was texting and emailing on my iphone when a nice, albeit slightly doddering, elderly lady asked to sit with me. I stood up and let her in. I smiled briefly at her and then returned to my iphone. Overcome with the emotion of the day, I found myself crying quietly. Big, fat tears were rolling down my cheeks as I sat and tapped on my phone. I wiped them away as surreptitiously as I could, aware suddenly that my seatmate was staring at me.

After the doors closed and I was forced to shut down my phone, I sat back in my seat and shut my eyes, trying to contain my roiling emotions. The nice woman next to me said “you are breaking my heart.” She spoke almost under her breath, such that I wasn’t sure she was talking to me. I looked at her, enquiringly, and she repeated herself, looking into my red-rimmed eyes.

I was taken aback. Wiping my face with more fervor now, I laughed self-consciously. “Oh, I’m fine.” I said, hoping the conversation would be over. She wanted to keep talking. She asked me what I was crying about, and I tried as gently as I could to make it clear I had no interest in discussing it. I am terrible in situations like these, woefully bad at making my own desires (ie to sit in silence) known. This friendly woman was not taking no for an answer.

Then she dropped the comment that I haven’t been able to stop thinking about. “You looked so hard when I sat down.” My head whipped around to look at her. Hard? “You looked so put together and self assured and I was shocked when I looked over and you were crying.” She shrugged as she shared this matter-of-factly.

I haven’t been able to get this out of my head. I am reminded of all the times my father has said that the great task of life is to understand how others perceive us. Of the wisdom of my friend’s comment about not confusing people’s insides and outsides. Of how frequently I apparently come across so radically differently than I feel.

It amazes me to hear this. I, who feels and is many, many things, but pretty much never either hard or self-assured. I, who mostly feels shy and awkward in social settings but is sometimes told she is a bitch. I, whose personality is defined in large part by a deep seam of insecurity that sometimes manifests as judgment. I was going to ask how it is that vulnerability can come across as such a formidable wall, but I realized that question is dumb: of course in 35 years we build up calluses over our sore spots, build barricades over the holes that have tripped us up over and over again.

I guess it’s no surprise that on a day already jammed full of reflection and introspection the universe sent me this slightly hunched little woman to remind me of this. To hold up the mirror for a second, just long enough for me to see the unattractive reflection and commit anew to change.