10 Questions for Grace and Whit

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I loved Ali Edwards’ 10 Questions for Simon post a couple of weeks ago.  I decided to ask Grace and Whit the same 10 questions (well I changed one, #2, which was originally about Batman), and it feels apt to share their answers now because they are both at sleepaway camp.  This is Grace’s third summer, so I was expecting the tears (mine) and heart-rending goodbye (also mine).  It was the first time I left Whit at camp and … wow.  I miss them.

1. What is your favorite thing right now?

Whit: Legos
Grace: soccer and dogs

2. What food do you love most?  How about least?

Whit: most: mac & cheese and least: sweet potatoes
Grace: most: summer squash and least: fish

3. How do you feel about going into 3rd/5th grade in September?

Whit: I feel good about it.  I am excited to see my friends again.
Grace: I’m excited about it.  I’m looking forward to doing the Soul Cake and the play.

4. What are you thinking about the most during the day? 

Whit: That’s a really hard one (and if his litany of random questions is representative, I can vouch for this).
Grace: Probably how lucky I am to have a family that loves me and takes care of me.

5. What’s on your summer wish list?

Whit: I want to make a lot of friends at camp and become good at swimming and archery.
Grace: To convince Daddy to get a dog.

6. What do you love most about summer?

Whit: I like the extra time away from people who are always crowding me at school.  I love Legoland and swimming.
Grace: Being able to be with my family a lot more, and having extra time to do things.  I love going to Marion with Nana and Poppy and swimming out to the raft.

7. What do you like to do with your brother/sister?

Whit: I like it when Grace plays with me, and sometimes I feel fortunate to have a sibling and sometimes I don’t feel that.
Grace: I like it when you’re out and I can tuck Whit into bed at night.  I like helping him with homework.

8. What does your brother/sister do that you don’t like?

Whit: It annoys me when she rejects playing with me.
Grace: It bugs me a lot when he wants to play with me and I want to just read by myself.

9. If you could travel anywhere right now where would you go?

Whit: Back to Legoland.
Grace: Paris.

10. What book are you reading right now?

Whit: Brixton Brothers #2.
Grace: The Bad Beginning, which is the first in the Lemony Snicket series.

I love right now more than I have any other moment in my life

afterlightIt was an emotional ride to go from the 24/7 togetherness of Legoland to dropping Grace and Whit off at camp last Thursday.  You could view it as I spun it to them: so many memories to sift through while we’re apart!  So much water in the well of closeness!  But you could also say to yourself: wow that was a tough transition.  And the truth is I’m still reeling from it.

On Wednesday night I could sense that both kids were apprehensive; they were unusually quiet.  Even though this is Grace’s third year at camp, it’s the first time she’s gone for 3.5 weeks.  And it is Whit’s first time.  I read them both Harry Potter, one at a time (Grace is on #7 and Whit is on #4 and I am still not bored of Harry’s world, even after a third complete read).

I tucked Whit in first.  He asked me to lie down with him, and so I did.  He stared up at the bottom of the bunk above him and asked me, out of the blue, “If I went through a black hole and was still alive on the other side, would I end up in another universe?”  After a soft chuckle I told him I didn’t know, but I’d prefer he not try that, at least not yet.  I turned my head, next to his on the robot-print pillow, and looked at him.  He kept staring up at the slats above him, which I noticed recently are covered with stickers.

We lay in silence, and I looked at the curves of his face, as familiar to me as my own hand.  His profile hasn’t changed from when I first saw it on a cloudy ultrasound screen, and it feels like only a few heartbeats ago that I lay in that darkened room, a technician swirling a wand over my just-beginning-to-bulge belly.  After a couple of long minutes, during which I swam through the swirling waters between then and now, which are both infinite and instantaneous, and which are full of phosphorescence, I leaned over and kissed his cheek.  “Good night,” I murmured.  “I love you.”

“I love you too.”  He didn’t turn to look at me, and I could see his that his eyes were glistening.

I sat up and looked at him.  “I love you as much as that universe, Whit, or that black hole.”

“I love you as much as all the universes, Mummy.”  I left the room before I began to cry.

I pulled it together before walking downstairs to Grace’s room.  I stood in the door and watched her reading in bed.  The small clip-on lamp on her headboard cast a pool of light around her, and I could see the shadows of her eyelashes on her cheeks.  Her legs looked impossibly long.  It was a full two years ago she stopped me in my tracks, this same night, before camp, when she told me sternly that my life was full of magic.  I have never forgotten that, because it is.

The next day we got up early to drive to camp.  Matt told me later that as the children were eating breakfast, he overheard Whit tell Grace quietly that he was “feeling kind of anxious.”  She apparently reassured him.  When we arrived at camp I was flooded all over again with memories and with an intense gratitude that Grace and Whit now share this place that meant (and still means) so incredibly much to meGrace’s best friend, the daughter of my best friend from camp, arrived, and the whole planet seemed to click into place.  All was well.

I helped Grace settle into her top bunk in the cabin that I lived in in the summer of 1991, met her counselors, and watched her happy reunions with a few familiar faces.  She did not cry, but she kept asking me to stay.  I finally told her firmly that I had to go and left her with a long hug and our secret sign that means “I love you.”

In Whit’s cabin I encountered a wall of broad-shouldered blond young male counselors whose names I promptly forgot, settled Beloved on his pillow, and heeded his vociferous insistence that he did not want to unpack his underpants.  He said he was ready for us to go and my saying “I love you” out loud made him flush.  He looked at me sternly, making it clear that was not okay.  But then, as we left, his eyes eyes followed us to the door and, before we were out of sight, he gave me our private sign for “I love you.”

And then we drove away.  I cried on and off for the whole ride home.  I am not sad because I have any single inkling of doubt about how wonderful this experience will be for Grace and Whit.  I don’t.  I am sad because I miss them; being alone for 10 days makes abundantly clear how much time I spend with my children in a normal day, and reminds me of how much I love their company.  It’s not that I forget that, exactly, but I am definitely more aware of it when they’re gone.

But most of all I cried because 10 years of my life with small children at home is already gone.  I was, and am, sad for all that’s over, for the years that have fled, for all that I can never have again.

There’s no question that I love right now more than I have any other moment in my life.

But that doesn’t erase the anguish I feel over all that is over.  I wish it did.

As we crossed the Sagamore Bridge it began to rain lightly.  The familiar, beautiful, astonishing world was blurred and refracted through the raindrops on the windshield.  I thought of Grace and Whit, of the sandy wooden floors of their cabins, of the low voices of the JCs singing Taps at the end of an evening assembly, swaying, arms linked around each others’ shoulders, of the dunes that slope down to the beautiful sailboat-spotted bay.  I thought of all that changes and all that stays the same, and gratitude swelled alongside sorrow in my chest.  It kept raining, and we drove home.

 

 

 

The Worry and the Wonder

When I was a very new mother, a close friend sent me a subscription to Brain, Child magazine.  It was the only magazine, she offered, in which she found the full spectrum of emotion and experience of motherhood.  I agree with her.  I was honored when they published a short story by me last year (fiction!  shocking!) and today I’m delighted that they are running an essay of mine on their blog.  I hope you’ll click over and read The Worry and Wonderment of Parenting.

“All of these fears are real.  But I know there is one central, overarching worry.   It is that our relationship will irrevocably fray.  I worry that if that happens we won’t recover the closeness we share now.  I believe fiercely in the importance of my daughter’s blossoming independence, and over and over again I actively foster it.  But in my deepest, most honest mother heart, I worry that I’m not myself strong enough to weather months or years of her desire and need for distance.  My most common and frequent worry – occurring to me several times a day, at least – is that this season of my life is almost over.

But twined through all these worries, there is so much wonder.”

… please visit Brain, Child to read the rest of my essay.  Thank you!

Solstice

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It’s well established that I love the solstice.  In some fundamental way, my spirit feels the ebb and flow of light and dark, and the way that they dance with each other from one end of the year to the other mean something to me that I can’t quite entirely express.  Last Friday was the summer solstice.  I’d been feeling it coming for weeks.  A gradually-building awareness thrummed inside me that we were reaching the pinnacle of the year’s light.

To mark the day, Grace, Whit, and I went for a notice things walk after dinner.  It was a spectacular evening.  When we set out, the sun still quite high in the sky, and the light turned golden as we walked.  For some reason, it had been a long week; Grace and Whit were bickering and I felt tired.  Still, we walked.  We noticed things.  A spray of small pink flowers in a yard, the fact that the years-long construction at a house near ours seemed to be over, the almost-imperceptible hum of a dragon fly that accompanied us for a block.

In between the noticing, there was arguing.  Everything Grace did aggravated Whit.  He kept snapping at her, exasperated.  Everything Whit did annoyed Grace.  She kept scoffing, rolling her eyes, and walking ahead of him.  I finally stopped them and looked them in the eye, one at a time.  Stop it, I barked.  Enough.  This day is important to me.  Pull it together, I said in a raised voice.

Chastised, they kept walking.  I trailed them, taking this picture.  I felt a surge of that agitation, that restlessness that feels like an itch inside my head, that I now understand to be my brain and heart trying desperately not to be present.  Giving in to it, I looked down at my phone, scrolling through recent emails.  I glanced up to see that Grace had turned and was watching me.  She glared at me, and I looked back, raising my eyebrows questioningly.  “What?”

“Put down your phone,” she said and turned away from me.  To punctuate her dissatisfaction, she reached over and took Whit’s hand.  He let her, and they walked off, away from me.  My cheeks burned as I slipped my phone into my pocket and hurried to catch up to them.  All I could think was: don’t waste this, Lindsey.  We waited to cross a street and I leaned down and whispered in Grace’s ear, “I’m sorry.”  She smiled at me and we walked together, the three of us, into the large grass quad near our house.

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I sat and watched them run.  They did cartwheels and raced, and Whit climbed a tree.  Then we walked on.  A calm settled gently over us.  Nobody argued.  My restlessness eased.  It was as though we’d slid quietly into a slipstream, suddenly stopping our splashing against the current and instead letting ourselves be carried.  Relief washed over me as I grabbed hold of the shimmering ribbon that is being open to and aware of my experience.  I remembered, yet again, that it is a practice, this noticing, this being here now, this breathing, this watching with glittering eyes the immense holiness of life itself.

I trip, I fall, I yell, I snap, I fail.  And I start again.  I train my eyes right here, on what is in front of my feet.

We noticed the print of a leaf in the sidewalk, talked about how it must have happened, how a leaf must have fallen into the wet concrete.  We fell into step in silence.  We noticed a slew of heart-shaped leaves.  Under our feet, the earth tilted, shifting infinitesimally towards the darkness, commencing its gradual movement down from this apex of light.  And we walked on.

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Whit right now

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Almost daily I wish desperately that I could freeze my children into in amber.  I want to remember exactly who and how they are right now.

Lately Whit is slaying me with adorableness and hilarity. There’s his under-his-breath proclamation that someone is a “tionary,” or his loud, from the back seat question while we sit in traffic, “Which donkey hole isn’t moving?”

Things I love about Whit right now, May 2013:

The other day, as we drove to school, Whit exclaimed “look at that!” from the backseat.   I glanced back to see that he was pointing out a newly blooming patch of daffodils along a fence.  “So pretty, ” he sighed.  May my son always notice things around him, including the flowers.

Last Sunday, at family dinner, Matt announced his idea that each of us pick something that’s hard for us to do that week.  He was going to go for a long run, Whit was going to eat his whole lunch, etc.  Matt’s suggestion for me was that I introduce myself to two new people at baseball practice.  I must have blanched, because Whit reached over and patted my hand.  “I’ll help you.  I’m not shy,” he said, smiling at me.  And he did.

Over the weekend I was trying to recruit a child to come with me to the grocery store.  They were reluctant.  “I’ll let you pick out flowers for your room!” I tried.  Whit was instantly in.  He loves having fresh flowers in a vase in his room.  This may be connected to #1.

Whit’s loyalty to me knows no bounds, and is often completely without logic.  He will stand up for me whatever the situation, back me no matter what, even when there’s no reason to.  The weekend I was away for work recently Matt called me, aghast at how Whit always, no matter what, defended me (what were they talking about that this was notable, I wondered?).  He presumed I had put Whit up to this, but I had not.  I know I won’t always be his favorite person, but right now I suspect I am.

A couple of months ago we were at someone’s house and the kids had vanilla ice cream.  I did not know if the chocolate sauce was safe for Whit (he is allergic to nuts) and I told him that.  I expected him to be upset and instead he shrugged his shoulders, resigned.  A moment later he asked if he could put maple syrup on his ice cream.  “How very Canadian of you, Whit,” someone noted.  I was impressed with both his understanding of why he couldn’t have what the other kids were having and his resourcefulness in coming up with another idea.

Recently, Whit bemoaned the fact that the magnolias were all gone, already.  “It’s so fast, Mummy,” he said morosely, and I had to swallow before agreeing.  But then he bounced back, announcing that “so many exciting things are happening right now!”  I asked him what he meant.  He explained that the trees were all in bloom, the chicks at school had hatched, and the chrysalises they had been following were all beginning to crack and butterflies were imminent.  My little naturalist.  My little noticer.

I can’t stop time, that much I know, but I can do my best to pay attention and to capture its minutes as they fly by.