Mothers and daughters

Nov02

Thanksgiving 2002.  Grace was one month old.  Three generations, who share the same middle name.  The red hair clearly didn’t translate.  Also, Grace seems displeased by Thanksgiving.

My fascination with and investment in the mother-daughter relationship is well documented.  Just last week I wrote about it for Brain, Child.  This is a long-standing interest of mine.  If I’m honest, the ferocity with which I wished for a daughter when I was pregnant sometimes scared me.  It also shocks a lot of people that we chose not to find out the gender of our baby (either time).  And then Grace arrived – somehow brutally slowly (40 hours of back labor) and instantaneously – and suddenly I had a daughter, my frantic wishes were answered, and I became the fulcrum, a daughter to a mother and also a mother to a daughter.

One of my most vivid memories of those first blurry and difficult weeks of motherhood was of an afternoon when Mum came over to sit with Grace so that I could nap.  I lay in my darkened bedroom, knowing that my infant daughter slept above me and my mother cooked in the kitchen below me.  Matrilineage flanked me in a concrete, visceral way and I remember feeling warmed by it, firmly aware of my place in the line of women that I came from and had, now, birthed and contributed to.

Mothers and daughters and daughters and mothers and the women out of whose soil we grow.

While I don’t write about her that often, my mother is truly extraordinary and I am fortunate to live only a mile away from her now.  Last fall I said that “one of my mother’s many gifts is her immediate and expansive warmth, the genuine way she welcomes everyone into her life.  She has always attracted people to her, and, like a sun, is surrounded by more orbiting planets than I can count.”  I aspire to be the kind of relaxed, loving, outgoing, the-more-the-merrier kind of mother that Mum was and continues to be.  Watching her with my own children, as I did over Easter, is one of the principal joys of my life.

Mum embodies the quote that she and I both chose (clearly, I was copying!) for our high school senior yearbooks: To miss the joy is to miss all.

Motherhood and daughterhood, while always on my mind, has been particularly so of late.  I’ve been thinking of lessons that my mother taught me …

1. Some of the best stuff in life occurs in the outtakes.  Keep your eyes open to the stuff around the edges.

2. Don’t worry about the small stuff.  Really.  It takes care of itself.  Keep an unerring focus on the big stuff.

3. It is not an issue to cook dinner for 14 people with an hour of notice. Or to routinely serve Thanksgiving to more than 30 people.  In fact it’s not really Thanksgiving without a random international student or someone your daughters have never met at the table.

4. Use the silver.  All the time.

5. Female friends are essential and are in many ways the single most important bulwark against life’s storms.  Invest heavily in those you know you love dearly.  Old friends are precious, and cherish them.  Family friends are a genuine gift.

6. Showers are always better outside.  Even in November.  In New England.

7. You can’t judge peoples’ insides by their outsides.  Don’t bother trying.

8.  When your new son-in-law brings you a whole pheasant that he shot to cook, just smile and make pot pie.  Serve it for Christmas Eve dinner.  It’s not a big deal.  To go further, there is nothing culinary that is a big deal.  At all.

9. Attitude is everything.  When Mum was injured several summers ago she demonstrated this in spades, and I can’t count the number of people – literally, tens upon tens – who reached out to tell me that her positive spirit and energy were tangible and would carry her through.  They did, and I admire(d) it.

10. There is a mysterious alchemy in the wind and the water that cannot be fully explained.  I watch her at the helm and understand what that there is something truly intuitive and beyond logical thought about sailing.

11. You can and should play tennis until you are 90 years old.  And possibly beyond that.

12.  Don’t waste your time and energy on negativity.  Of any kind.  Focus on the good in people, in the community, in the world, and eventually that positivity will become your default.  “It takes an awful lot of energy to hate,” Mum used to say to the occasionally irate, incensed child me.  She was always right.

13. Always write thank you notes.  By hand.  On paper.  In the mail.

14. Look forward, not back.  There are adventures to be had, gardens to plant, Scrabble games to play, trips to be taken, people to meet.  So much lies ahead, and turn your energy that way.

15. People flock to those who radiate energy and warmth like my mother does.  At an event recently a man I’d just met took me aside and whispered, “Your mother is a force of nature.”  I know, sir, I nodded.  I know.

Parts of this post were originally written in 2012.  And I was hugely inspired by Galit Breen’s beautiful piece about lessons learned from her own mother,

Pinky swear

IMG_2470

Labor Day Saturday, 2012

Labor Day weekend 2012.  Grace and I pulled two of the lounge chairs on my parents’ back porch into the shade and sat down to read.  She was utterly absorbed in Judy Blume’s Sheila the Great, and I was re-reading an old favorite, Anne Lamott’s Operating Instructions.   The sky above us was the saturated cornflower blue that I associate with late August, and once in a while I looked up from my book to watch a cloud skid across the sky.  The day felt elegaic, swollen with summer’s end, with awareness of earth’s turning towards autumn.

I put my book down on my lap and looked over at Grace.  I studied her, the planes and angles of her face as familiar as my own.  Though we were in the shade I could see the spiky shadows her eyelashes cast on her cheeks.  Her deep pink lips were pursed slightly as she concentrated on her book.  She must have sensed me looking at her because she turned to me with a quizzical look.  “What, Mummy?”

“Oh, nothing, G.  I was just looking at you.”  She smiled at me and leaned her head back against the headrest of the chair.  “Look at that blue sky.”

She looked up.  My children are both accustomed to my stopping in my tracks to look at the sky, and often to photograph it.  “Mmmm, yes.”  I heard her say under her breath as she gazed at the sky.  Something broke over me like a wave, nostalgia and sorrow and deep joy, and I mourned the loss of this moment even as I sat right in the middle of it.  Awareness of all that is already over tightened like a band around my chest, and I felt short of breath.

“Grace, I love you, you know.”

“Oh, Mum,” her eyes widened with surprise.  “I know!  I love you too.”

“Good.”  I blinked quickly, my vision suddenly spangled with tears.  “Do you promise you always will, even when you’re a teenager?”

“Yes, I promise.”  She nodded vigorously and studied me.  “I swear, Mum.  Pinky swear.”  She held out her pinky.  With her other hand, she reached out to lift my sunglasses off my face.

“Are you checking to see if I’m crying?” I smiled, thinking of all the times she’s sighed, resignedly, as I sit in tears in public at a school event.

“No.  I just wanted to see your beautiful eyes.”

Grace turned back to her book but I stared up at the sky, fighting my emotion and then, like slipping underneath something, gave into it.  They are not long, these days of sitting side by side and reading, these moments when she openly admires me, these moments of pinky swearing, tears, and overwhelming love (well, that part may stay).

Already this is a distant memory, but I am so, so glad I wrote it down at the time.

Firsts and lasts

Feb05

My first baby and my last baby, February 2005

Years ago Whit remarked, in his now-classic casually offhand yet startlingly insightful way, that while Grace gets to have all the firsts in our family, he gets to have all the lasts.

And they just keep coming, firsts and lasts, piled on top of each other in a pile that grows so high it teeters and sometimes threatens to swamp me.

Last week at bedtime Grace was wistful and sad.  I scooted into her bed next to hear and leaned back against her pillow.  I asked her what was wrong.  She looked at me and let her tears come.  “Why does it have to go so fast?  I don’t want to grow up.  There are only one and a half years left of my childhood.”

“Wait a second!” My breath caught in my throat.  “What?  Why do you say that?”

“Well until I’m a teenager.”

Holy shit. I looked at her face, speechless.  I smoothed her hair behind her ear and watched her big, deep brown eyes as they studied me.  How many first are left?  I know there are so many ahead but there are also so many behind us.  So many firsts we’ll never have again.  I looked up at a self-portrait she made at age 3 in nursery school, when she was in the Yellow Room, which hangs over her bed.  Time telescoped and collapsed on itself.  I felt dizzy as all the hours, nights, weeks, and years that I have spent in this room with Grace, and all that we will never have back sudden filled the room, pressing in on me, and I couldn’t breathe.

The next morning I woke Whit up, and as I do every morning I knelt next to his bed and watched him for a few moments.  His entire life was visible in his sleeping face.  The scar by his eye from stitches on Christmas Eve 2010, which marked his second Christmas Eve in the Children’s Hospital ER in six years.  The blond hair that had so surprised me when he arrived.  The profile which I recognized from his ultrasound image, so many years ago.

So many lasts.  When I got Whit a new pair of sneakers last week I cried getting rid of the old ones, thinking: I won’t ever buy size 1 Nikes again.  In nine months I won’t have any children in the single digits.  Whit’s years as a Mite in hockey are over now.

The lasts are especially poignant because he is the last last.

I know.  I know.  There are so many new horizons to explore, so, so many firsts, experiences and adventures to share.  I know.  But still.  There are also so many lasts.  So many hours, days, weeks, and years that I can never get back.

This is truly the story I can’t stop telling, the song I can’t stop singing, the ringing bell whose echoes I can’t stop hearing.

Raising strong girls (giveaway!)

Grace is hurtling towards adolescence with a speed that routinely makes me catch my breath.  It feels like yesterday I shared this piece about what I wanted her to know as she turned ten, and I actually wrote it two years ago.  When I hug her now the top of her head doesn’t even fit comfortably under my chin.  It’s very easy to mix up our pants when I’m folding laundry, and I can squeeze into her shoes, no problem.  I feel as though I’m entering a new, shaky season of motherhood, one more fraught and perilous than even the infant months which were very difficult for me.

I’m guided by a few key principles and one is to help Grace continue to feel good about herself as she moves into a time famously full of self-esteem pitfalls.  I am always looking for resources to support an environment of strength and positivity.  One area I’d love to see some innovation – and have thought about this as something I should do! – is clothing for tween girls.  There must be a middle ground between Justice and J.Crew?  Something that’s appealing to my daughter without forcing me to wade through the perfume-drenched, spring-break-bikini-athon that is Abercrombie?  Here are some of the resources that are front of mind for us right now.  If you have other suggestions and ideas, I would welcome them!

Books:

Grace reads a lot, and the books she reads often feature strong female role models.  I love Young Adult as a category and often read alongside her.  A few recent ones that we have both loved:

The Fault in Our Stars – Hazel might be my favorite narrator of all time.  Literally, of all time.  Funny, brilliant, honest, optimistic despite her situation.

Gathering Blue – The second book in Lois Lowry’s Giver quartet (which I worship), this is Grace’s favorite.  She chose to do her last book report of the year on it.  The narrator, Kira, is brave, human, and deeply relatable.

The Hunger Games (Book 1) – The book’s not new, but I only recently let Grace read it.  I think Katniss is a terrific role model, for her strength and courage, for the loyalty to her family, for her fierce love for and protection of Prim and others.

I read with enthusiasm about Allison Winn Scotch’s new endeavor, Moms Read Best, which will be a book referral and suggestion site focused on children.  I’m really looking forward to finding new titles to add to this list for Grace and also to find books that will capture Whit’s imagination.

Firebugs

Firebugs is a monthly book subscription service catered for girls ages 3-9 and their parents. Founded by seven women at Harvard Business School, their mission is to inspire confidence and leadership potential from an early age through enhanced story time, with themes like building confidence and self-esteem as well as analytical skills development. While this is too young for Grace, I love what the company is doing, and again, like supporting female entrepreneurs.  I am thrilled to offer $5 off a one-month ($15) Firebugs subscription to the first 10 to comment!

I’ve written about how much I love GiftLit, another book subscription site, and I love the empowering angle that Firebugs has put on this idea.

Yellowberry

I share founder Megan Grassell‘s horror at the over-sexualized underwear available for tween girls.  I’ve been shocked to see padded bras and bikini tops and a host of options that don’t feel right at all.  I love what she’s doing with Yellowberry, love the product, love the mission, love the message, and also love being able to support an entrepreneurial teen girl.  I will certainly be purchasing some Yellowberry products.

Do you have ideas, wisdom, or suggestions for me, as I forge ahead into this scary and uncharted territory of parenting a tween?

 

Can’t have one without the other

photo(2)

We had a spectacular spring break.  The trip to the Galapagos was more magical than our everyday life, of course, and Grace and Whit, sponges that they are, soaked it all up.  As we headed home, on the last morning, Grace was tearful. In the airport lounge (as we embarked on what would be a full 24 hours of travel) she looked at me with mournful eyes.  “I don’t want it to be over,” she said, hugging me hard.  I nodded, my own eyes filling with tears.

“Why does it have to end?  Why does it have to be so sad?” she asked me, her voice muffled against my shoulder.  A wry smile flitted across my face, though she couldn’t see it.  Why does it?  This is something I ask myself every single day.

“Oh, Gracie.  You can’t have one without the other,” I said.  She pulled away and looked me in the eye, a question in her face.  “You know, the amazing experience is part of it and then being sad it’s over is the other part.”  She nodded silently, chewing her lip.  We sat in silence, the huge ceiling fans in the Guayaquil airport spinning slowly overhead.  I watched Grace’s knee jiggle as I thought of the two edges of this world, of the joy and the sorrow, of the beauty and the pain, of how inextricably linked they are, of how ambivalent I feel that my daughter is learning this lesson already.

******

The last night of break, Whit came out of his room a few minutes after I had tucked him in.  I walked him back into his dark room and sat down on the edge of his bed.  “What’s on your mind?”  His cheeks were wet and he had clearly been crying.  He shook his head and I waited.

“I want to go back to the Galapagos, Mummy.  And I am just sad.  Sad about everything that’s over.”  I stroked his blond hair off his forehead.  “I’m sad we’re not going back to Legoland.”  I nodded.

“I know, Whit.  It’s always sad when things are over.”  I had a lump in my own throat as I spoke.  Over and over again, Grace and Whit seem to go straight to the heart of all the things I find the most difficult.  This is what they do: they drag me to confront the emotions with which I most struggle.

“So many things,” he hiccuped, “that didn’t seem that much fun at the time, like the hot slow bus to the turtle farm, or the long layover in Guayaquil, or the flight where we didn’t sleep…” his voice trailed off.

“Or that lunch in Puerto Ayora when you were so cranky,” I offered, and a small smile cracked his face.

“Yeah.  All of those things.  They didn’t seem that much fun when we were going them, but now I miss them all.”

Happiness isn’t something you experience; it’s something you remember. – Oscar Levant

I read this quote the day after that bedtime conversation with Whit, and I think it’s saying what he was, too.  So often things take on the sheen of joy after the fact, their memory burnished with something that wasn’t necessarily there as we lived it.  I don’t think this is a bad or a sad thing, though it does make me more aware that the experiences that feel like a slog (and Whit is right, that long bus ride back and forth across Santa Cruz qualifies) often become cherished memories.

It’s all connected, all of it: the delight and the sorrow, the experience and the memory, the difficulty fading into the background as the joyful center of an experience moves to the front.  You can’t have one without the other, of any of these dualities, of that I’m sure.  It’s a bittersweet thing, to watch my children learn this, and they both did on our trip to the Galapagos and in its wake.  And it’s something I’m still learning, too.