I lifted my hands and then my eyes and I allowed myself to be astonished by the great everywhere calling to me like an old and unspoken invitation.
-David Whyte
I lifted my hands and then my eyes and I allowed myself to be astonished by the great everywhere calling to me like an old and unspoken invitation.
-David Whyte
this is an old photograph of Grace, but I love the way she is literally in flight
Grace went away to school last year. Shortly after she left, our lives veered off the rails. It’s taken until the last month or two for me to be able to see the last year with any kind of clarity (and I’m sure this is not yet perfect clarity). What I can see now, that I could not then, is that I spent most of the year before Grace went in a state of suspended animation and almost overwhelming anxiety. My angst and preoccupation was all-consuming.
I have friends preparing to send children to boarding school in September, and it is talking to them that has helped me understand in a new way how difficult the months between April (her decision to go) and September (her leaving) were for me. In fact, that season was one of the most difficult of my life. I say that even knowing what followed immediately on the heels of Grace’s leaving.
It is such a first world problem: a child going to boarding school. Cry me a river. I know. It’s just the departure for college four years early. And yet it was immensely, guttingly, overwhelming hard for me. No matter how you slice it, Grace leaving for boarding school was the end of something. What’s come in the wake of that end is something new, wonderful, and full of its own pleasures and joys, absolutely. But last September was also, irrevocably, an end and a farewell. Life since then is both a celebration of what is now and an elegy to what no longer is (a similar sentence to once I’ve used before, describing parenting in general).
A dear friend recently posited that perhaps my overwhelming anxiety and grief about Grace leaving was some kind of subconscious preemptive mourning of the other losses that last fall held for me. I’m not sure about that,but it’s an interesting interpretation. In retrospect, Grace leaving was more all-consuming than John’s or Dad’s deaths, in some ways, mostly because it hung over us for months. Of course John’s and Dad’s deaths were bigger losses that helped calibrate Grace’s departure, but the truth is even by the time John died (3 weeks after Grace left), I was already okay.
As is true for me – and yet as I apparently need to keep learning – the anticipation of Grace’s leaving was a hundred times worse than the reality of it. The months leading up to her leaving home were full of angst – I remember last summer, at one point, the mailman asking casually “how are you doing?” as he dropped off the mail and my responding by bursting into tears. I was a skinless, fragile person, walking through the world haunted by the end that Labor Day represented. And once we reached that end, we pushed off into a new world. And that new world has been lovely. Grace is happy, happier than she’s been in a long time. I feel closer to her than ever. We are fine. We have a new configuration, and we are all adapting. The most important thing, for me, is the knowledge that she’s in the right place, doing the right thing. As a parent, that’s all I need.
I wrote about Grace recently that “watching her [you] fly is one of the two biggest joys in my life.” And indeed that’s true. I didn’t realize until I was through it what a painful season last summer was, but I can see it now.
It was letting go, writ large.
Not something I’ve ever been good at, but oh, my, the rewards are glorious. 2017 had a lot of letting go in it, and it’s my belief that 2018 and beyond will show us those rewards. It has already begun to.
For small creatures such as we,
the vastness is bearable only through love.
~ Carl Sagan
Another beauty I found on First Sip.
I’m surrounded by kind, thoughtful people who ask now and then how I’m doing. The question is not simple to answer. In some ways I feel mostly ok, as though I’m moving through my days with a new, stubborn shadow over my existence but moving all the same.
In other ways I feel not at all ok, and if I’m honest, I’m a little bit surprised that that’s still true. I didn’t think I’d “bounce back” after Dad’s death, necessarily, but I thought I’d maybe feel more functional faster. My days oscillate between these two realities: wow, I’m doing okay, and wow, I’m still so darn sad.
But more than anything – and this is what I usually say when asked – I’m astonished by the sturdiness of my disbelief. The sheer disbelief I feel about dad being dead can only be categorized as irrational, and I’ve never been irrational before. Intellectually I understand that he is gone. But emotionally I still seem to not quite get it. At least once a day I bring myself up short with the thought that my father is dead. It is often seeing his photograph that brings that thought to mind. It’s also often the sudden thought, “oh, I want to tell Dad about this.”
And then … oh, wait. No.
How long will it take to feel real? I honestly don’t know. We are nearing the six month mark, and I’m still as astonished by the truth of Dad being dead as I was the day after he died. Life is clearer now, and I feel a bit closer to “normal.” This was brought home to me last week when I finally looked through the basket of Christmas cards that has been on our front hall table since December. I literally do not remember seeing at least half of them. December was such a blur; in retrospect I’m sort of amazed that I walked through it.
When I think of those first weeks, when I’m confronted with evidence of how “other” that time was (like the cards, which I definitely opened, read, and put in the basket) that feels like another life. The days and weeks since then have crawled by, as I’ve mentioned. Yet it’s still not real that Dad’s dead. I can’t believe that I can’t believe it, and yet I can’t. The phrase I return to over and over is sturdy disbelief. Like the sturdy joy of which I wrote several years ago, this feeling of not-real-ness is immovable, stubborn, solid. Maybe it’s some kind of coping mechanism. I don’t know. I have to imagine it will release its hold on me, this disbelief, and gradually Dad’s death will sink in. But for now, I move on, daily gasping when I remember yet again that he’s gone.
Onward. Limping, but, eventually, dancing again.
― Jenny Offill, Dept of Speculation
I’ve read and really liked Offill’s book, but I was reminded of this beautiful quote (oh so true of me!) on the wonderful A Cup of Jo last week.