An MRI, and being smart and brave

Last weekend I had an MRI on my knee, because of some funky stuff that’s been going on.  It was uneventful (though I did think to myself: I’m glad it’s December, because my requesting Christmas carols on the headphones doesn’t seem weird): I was chilly in my enormous hospital pants and double gowns, and Grace sat patiently in the waiting room for 30 minutes.  What the experience really did is make me respect, in a new and wild way, my daughter’s bravery.

Let me explain.  Over the summer, Grace participated in a study at MIT where they watched her brain activity on MRI while she did memory games.  She did it for a number of reasons, which included cool pictures of her brain, the opportunity to contribute to science, and an $80 Amazon gift card.  I had never had an MRI at that time, so I didn’t think much of it.  I stood in the room with all the controls and computers and watched her through a thick glass window.  She nodded as a stranger explained what was going to happen and then lay down obediently on the table.  She was slid into the MRI tube, and then I heard her voice over the speaker.  “Grace, say hi,” the technician prompted.

Her voice shook and I heard tears in it as she said, “Hi, Mummy.”  I said hi back and then the tech turned the microphone off and turned to me.  “This is when they lose it, if they’re going to,” he said with a shrug.  I left and spent an hour and a half building a marble run with Whit (not a surprise, is it, that the MIT waiting room had the best engineering toys ever?)  It turns out Grace didn’t lose it, and she spent an hour and a half in the tube playing games with the PhD students on the other side of the thick window.  When she was finished she bounded into the room where Whit and I were sitting holding print-outs of brain images, Amazon gift cards, and lots of stories about the games she had played.

For weeks after her MRI experience Grace regaled people with the stories.  I did not realize the extent of her pride in what she’d done – her justifiable pride – until I lay there on Saturday, listening to the loud whirr of the MRI machine even through the Christmas carols playing in my ears.  My head wasn’t even in the machine; my neck and face stuck out (thank God).

When Grace was a toddler, I always used to say that I wanted her to grow up to be smart and brave.  For some reason, these were the two traits I picked, mostly to combat what felt like the wave of emphasis on being pretty.  Smart and brave.  Brave and smart.  I thought of those two words as I lay there motionless in the MRI machine.  Whether it’s flying alone at the age of 5 or sliding into an MRI machine for two hours in the name of her own understanding and that of the world: she’s smart and brave, and I am proud.

What she knows

Now that Grace is 10 years old (an inflection point I’ve written about before, on the Huffington Post), I thought it was time for her to make her first appearance on this blog.  On our train ride home from a marvelous, memory-packed weekend in New York to celebrate her birthday, we talked about what she wanted to share.  I was going to try to ask her about what 10 things she knows, but that didn’t flow.  So we decided instead on some specific questions.  Answers are straight from Grace.

1. How does it feel to be 10?

I feel more mature and I feel I have more responsibility! I also feel excited for my 90 more double-digit years ahead!

2. What are your favorite books you’ve read lately?

I really enjoyed reading The Mysterious Benedict Society. And the Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. Also Have a Hot Time Hades from the Myth O Mania series by Kate McMullan! And last but not least: Penny Dreadful by Laurel Snyder!

3. Was our New York weekend special?  What were your favorite moments?

I thought it was very special! I really liked jumping on the Big Piano at FAO Schwartz. Also riding in a horse drawn carriage was amazing. I really enjoyed our dinner at Balthazar the fries were delicious. I had a blast passing notes under my friend Caroline’s door at the place we stayed before we went to bed! I’ll remember the weekend forever!

4. I think our family has some nice traditions.  Do you think these are important?  If so, why?  And which are your favorites?

I think all of the traditions are important. I think that a tradition is something that you do and like and then do it over and over and over again! I think that the traditions we do are important because it’s something my whole family does ( or part of my family does ) that only we do alone! I also feel like part of the family. Some of my favorite traditions are: Lego Land, Story Land, decorating the Christmas tree as a family, the Fourth of July in Marion, and making a wish when the clock numbers are all the same!

5. How do you feel about the fact that your mother blogs and writes about you?

I like it most of the time. I don’t like it when she writes  things I might not want her to share to the world! (note from Lindsey: I always ask her these days – I did not always do that)

6. Do you have any words of wisdom to share with other ten year olds?  Any advice for other kids?

Some advice for other ten year olds: Take responsibility seriously. Do the right thing even if now ones looking or you don’t feel like it. Love the library or anywhere that has books! Always exercise. Vegetables aren’t always bad!

 

10 years old

Dear Grace,

Tomorrow you turn ten.  I won’t even try to convey my disbelief at this fact.  It’s neither secret nor surprise that I’m feeling sentimental right now, absolutely awash in memory.  I can’t stop thinking about ten years ago.  Ten years ago, when I was in labor, walking around the red-leafed, sun-dappled streets of our neighborhood, feeling the beginnings of your inexorable descent, riding a tide of fear and anxiety and impatient anticipation.  We had not found out your gender at our ultrasound, but I knew in a bone-deep way that you were a girl.  And how I wanted you, Grace: I hope that is always clear, even when you hear and read (as you will) about the difficult months that followed your arrival.  I wanted you desperately, specifically you, a first-born daughter, a strong-willed and gentle-souled girl to share all of life’s adventures with, my Grace, my grace.

This particular moment is almost unbearably golden.  You are so positively, absolutely radiant right now.  You and I often feel like a club of two.  My favorite days are the empty weekend days – rarer now, and I cherish them all the more for that knowledge – when we simply putter.  We walk around the neighborhood, we do errands, we cook, we lie in my bed and read, we talk idly and just as often share a deeply companionable silence.

One day last week you were home sick from school.  I had to work for most of the day, but you propped yourself up against the wall of my (tiny) office and read.  I kept asking you if you’d be more comfortable in your bed, but you said no, no, you just wanted to be close to me.  And so we spent hours within inches of each other.  Around noon you told me you thought you needed some fresh air.  “It really can fix a lot of what’s wrong, Mummy,” you told me, echoing something I’ve told you more times than I can count.  And so we set off to the library, and you slipped your hand in mine, and we noticed the bright yellow leaves against the cornflower blue sky and the red ones piled against the sidewalk and I almost cracked in half with contentment and joy.

For me, though, untrammeled joy does not exist.  Every single day is stitched through with my piercing awareness that this time grows short.  I anticipate some rockier years ahead, and the shadow they cast on today is long and dark.  I don’t mean to be a pessimist – I know there are adventures and great joys ahead.  But I will miss your hand in mine, and your hug, always with a contented sigh, when I tuck you into bed, and your running up the stairs when you get home from school, crying “Mummy!” as you come to find me in my office.

You love school, which brings me great joy  and doesn’t surprise me at all.  You are organized and neat, and you do your homework every single day without my having to remind you.  In fact I rarely even realize you have done it.  You are interested in writing; this summer you completed your first full short story.  You love to read, and enjoy both books that I remember from my childhood (Island of the Blue Dolphins, Little Women and my all-time favorite, A Wrinkle In Time) and titles that are new to me.  You also like Math, and all the time I spent quizzing you on your multiplication tables last spring seems to have worked.  Science and social studies are both of great interest, and I get detailed reports on what you are studying in each.  You love to use your newly neat cursive.  You gladly write thank you notes for gifts and play dates and await with bated breath your own email address, which you will receive tomorrow.  This will be a good chance to practice the subject that has been hardest for you so far: touch typing.

More than your apparent comfort with things academic, though, it is your enormous, evident empathy that impresses me.  You worry about classmates who seem to be struggling, flinch when people raise their voices, and are visibly moved when you encounter those who are clearly struggling (the homeless, the injured, the sick).  You passionately adore animals and your dearest wish is for a dog.  Volunteering is an important value for me, and something we do often as a duo, trio, or all four of us.  You embrace each activity with enthusiasm and are always very interested in who we are serving, and why, and how we could do more to help them.  Never has this been more true than at the project we participated in at a dog shelter.

I absolutely love watching you playing soccer.  You plunged back into practice without hesitation after your season-ending collarbone break in May.  I worried, unnecesarily, you would be nervous and tentative.  That afternoon at the ER, when you were hurting and afraid, is a vivid memory for me.  I lay next to you on the gurney as we waited for the x-ray results to come back.  You pressed your face against my neck, and I could feel your hot tears on my skin.  I stroked your gold-streaked mahogany hair.  You asked about the bones I’ve broken (numerous) and whether you’d ever break anything again.  I hesitated, then swallowed and said it was possible, probable even.  You sobbed quietly and said you didn’t want to hurt like this again.  Blinking back my own tears I told you that I knew the pain was bad, and that there may be other injuries, in sports and in life.  But I promised, promised, promised you that it was always worth it to play.

Your recovery was as fast as the doctor said it would be.  Within a month you were sling-less and pain-free.  Within two you were back on the soccer field and doing cartwheels everywhere.  You still have a small, hard bump on your collarbone, which incidentally matches my own bump from last year’s separated shoulder.  Our matching bumps, which show that we’ve both been broken and recovered.

You love Taylor Swift and Mia Hamm and Hermione Granger.  You’ve chosen to be an Olympic (gold medalist) soccer player for Halloween.  You love to make things out of Perler beads and out of duct tape.  You drew and wrote me seven birthday cards this year.  You recently instituted a new family tradition, the “compliment pouch:” all week we can put small notes into the pouch thanking someone for a special act, behavior, or kindness.  At Sunday night family dinner you read them, one by one.  You are zealous about working on puzzles, a passionate reader, and a loyal friend.

You are growing into a young woman and I watch this in awe, Grace.  I feel nothing short of wonder when I see who you are becoming.  You are wise and thoughtful, kind and generous, brave and open-minded.  Your heart is big and you want to make those you love happy.  You are my very favorite not-so-little girl in the world.  You make me laugh and you teach me things and you make my heart swell to the point of pain.  All within the same ten minutes, often.  I won’t lie to you about my sorrow that 10 years have already flown by.  I would love to have them all back, every single bedtime, every single bubble bath, every single time I’ve watched you fly across a set of monkey bars, laughing as you go.

We can’t have them back, but we can know we lived most of them as fully as possible.  We touched the brass star on the floor in Bethlehem that marks where Jesus was born and we stood at Walden and read Thoreau’s famous lines aloud and just last week we experienced an earthquake together for the first time, startled, eyes wide, caught somewhere between panic and astonishment as the earth shifted underneath us.

You are beginning to understand the way that life is mottled with loss.  At Pops’ funeral, his bereaved companion Helen reached for your hand for comfort.  You held it for most of the service,  not knowing she would die 6 weeks later.  Their back to back deaths touched you deeply, and I know you are still grieving.  As you and Whit have both noted, you get all of the firsts and he gets all of the lasts.  You are my pioneer, my trailblazer, my firstborn, my only daughter, the person who made me a mother.  You walked with me through an intense darkness and you led me out.  You are my amazing Grace.

I love you, Grace, now, then, always.  Happy tenth birthday.

Previous birthday letters are here: nine, eight, seven, six

Ten years ago

The last picture of me taken before Grace was born.  39+ weeks. October 22, 2002.

The day before Grace was born was crystal clear, the blueness of the sky matched only by the brilliance of the leaves that seemed to surround us as we walked slowly up and down the streets of our neighborhood.

Matt’s father was in the hospital and very ill.  We did not know he was a month away from a life-saving heart transplant.

We had just – literally just – finished renovating the third floor of our house into a nursery and a family room.  The nursery stood ready and empty, with freshly-painted yellow walls and a white crib and a giant stuffed yellow duck from Matt’s parents.  The drawers of an old bureau that I had painted yellow were full of Dreft-scented size 0-3 month clothes.  I had chosen a yellow velour outfit to bring our baby home from the hospital in.

We still called our unborn baby Finbar.  Finnie, for short.  A friend’s husband had named him or her when we saw him over the summer.  I was so attached to the name Finnie I didn’t think I could ever call my baby anything else.

I had just turned 28 years old, at the end of a summer filled with the joyous, love- and celebration-filled weddings of some of my closest friends.  I was the designated driver a lot.

I could feel tiny feet kicking my ribs.  My back ached.  A devoted lifetime stomach sleeper, I was having a lot of trouble getting rest.  I was ready to not be pregnant anymore.  But I could never have imagined how entirely unready I was for what came next.  I went into labor on Thursday night the 24th.  I sat in my father-in-law’s hospital room sensing the very first stirrings of a pain whose rhythmic and intermittent nature made me suspect that This Was It.  But I wasn’t sure.  My due date was in 2 days and I had thoroughly internalized the warning that I would go 2 weeks late.

I didn’t sleep that night, and by Friday morning we were walking around the neighborhood trying to pass the time and manage the pain.  Our doula arrived.  We walked and walked, and I moaned and rocked.  I drank apple juice.  The day was one of the most beautiful I can remember, drenched in glorious, glossy, elegaic late-fall light.  I was on the brink of a change so large I could not fathom it, of the darkest season of my life, but then, also, of the most beautiful.

The births of my two babies, in all their violence and glory, are two of my most cherished life experiences.  They are not only moments of my life that I recall with stunning, crystalline detail. They were also passages from one world to another, and somehow in the passage I was able to glimpse through the seam of this reality to something bigger and more breathtaking. What I saw and sensed changed me forever.

Grace’s birth was the story of resistance. It was about my gritting my teeth and stubbornly laying in for the stay. Part of the resistance was that she was posterior, but it was also about my own fears, anxieties, and utter lack of preparation to be a mother. I was in battle against myself, I know that now: I was holding on, not ready to embrace a new life (mine, not hers) and identity. I was not ready to face the end of a phase of my life, the multiple deaths that are contained in birth. The inexorable force of a baby descending the birth canal went to war against my own quite powerful subconscious, and I was in active labor for over 36 hours, and at 9+ centimeters for 3 hours.

I cried and I screamed and I begged to be put out of my misery: I distinctly recall telling my midwife, completely seriously, that I’d like her to put a bullet in my head and just cut the baby out. The pain was both incendiary and incandescent. It was a crucible through which I had to pass, the heat so extreme that I was rendered molten. It was an animal experience, a raw, passionate, and terrifying introduction to a ferocity I had never imagined I possessed.

I delivered Grace myself. At my midwife’s instruction, I reached down and put my thumbs under her armpits when she was half born and pulled her onto my own chest. I am more grateful than I can express for photographs of this moment. Little did I know I had months of darkness ahead of me before the grace that I had just brought into my life would be made manifest.

She came home from the hospital two days later in the outfit I had chosen.  We arrived home the day the clocks turned back, and commenced months of crying, darkness, and difficulty.  Labor had been just the beginning of a long process of being utterly changed.  Talk about a crucible!  That fall and winter, 2002-2003, remains the most difficult time of my life.  But how outrageously beautiful is the view on the other side.  I would never do it differently.

And ten years ago today that all lay in the hours ahead of me.

Parts of this post were originally written in December, 2009.

A very special weekend

Grace and I spent this past weekend in New York with her best friend and her mother (who is one of my dearest friends; I know, I am fully aware of how lucky I am!).  They turn 10 exactly 7 days apart from each other, this week and next, so we were celebrating their big transition into double digits.

The weekend was gorgeous.  The sky was a saturated, autumn blue and days were warm.  We rode the subway, had dinner at Balthazar, went to a wonderful show on Broadway, danced on the big piano at FAO Schwartz, clinked white wine and Shirley Temples in a toast at dinner.  We took a carriage ride in Central Park,, ate cupcakes from Magnolia in a deserted park in the soft dark of early evening, walked up and downtown, visited mecca (Dylan’s Candy Bar), and had sushi for lunch.

The girls wanted desperately to play on a playground and so we did, walking into Central Park late in the afternoon on Saturday.  I watched them running around, their joy palpable, aware of it won’t be long until they won’t be caught dead at a playground.  My favorite moment in a weekend crammed with happy ones was our walk home from dinner on Saturday night.  Park Avenue was empty, the air held the last gasp of October’s warmth, and the girls ran ahead of us, their laughter ringing in the night air.

As usual it is the in-between moments that move me the most.  I walked down the street, chatting easily with a friend I cherish, watching my daughter and her daughter dancing ahead of us.  Those ten minutes were life at its richest and most wonderful, and I knew it as I stepped through them.  As we rode the train home on Sunday, Grace turned to me, eyes shining with tears.  She told me that she was really sad the weekend was over, but that she knew she would never forget it as long as she lives.

Neither will I.