It’s been a long week. I miss my life in Cambridge. I am too emotional by half to work in my field. I had a tantrum yesterday on some colleagues because I didn’t feel they were treating candidates with respect. Then I cried to the headhunter who helps with this process (and who has been trying to hire me all week – you can bet those efforts will stop now!).
Woke up out of a dead ambien sleep at 5am this morning to come to JFK where I am currently sitting in a temporary departure terminal (this is a trailer, and literally reminds me of the temporary classrooms we had at St Paul’s Girls’ School). Am heading to Florida for Kendall’s wedding. Leslie is picking me up at the airport and we head right to the bridesmaid’s lunch. Leslie has been SO funny over email the past few months that I am really looking forward to that drive. She may be just the tonic I need right now.
I miss Cambridge. I miss my children and the other people who populate my life. To those special, much-missed people:

I felt it shelter to speak to you. – Emily Dickinson

springtime in the world

Lydia Rose Sussman
April 23, 2008
Sending so much love to Jess, Jake, Julia, and Lydia. What an extraordinary affirmation of life and hope and the future your birth is, Lydia!

Morning in New York

View from the 31st floor, somehow seems quintessentially New York to have an ornate church nestled in among high-rises.
Tired this morning, with a long road ahead of me until I get to go home! And feeling a little wistful; thinking about those I love deeply:

All that we love deeply becomes a part of us. -Helen Keller

Sky from this morning’s Delta shuttle. I love the light. This is another one of those photos that makes me believe heaven might exist.
Am in New York for a week of interviewing and then going straight to Jupiter Island on Friday for Kendall’s wedding. Lots to look forward to but also a long time to be away from G&W. This morning Grace was adorable on the phone, sweet and missing me and then saying, without missing a beat, “I’m so proud of you for your job mummy.” Whether or not she was being prompted in the background, sure brought tears to my eyes at the Marine Air Terminal this morning.

Here if you need me

I just finished Here if You Need Me, a beautiful, unexpected memoir by Kate Braestrup. The story is about her life after the early and accidental death of her police officer husband. She enters the ministry and describes life with her four young children in writing that is both simple and compelling, funny and sad.
The memoir is short and a quick read, but I imagine it will stay with me for a long time. Braestrup’s incandescently hopeful outlook on the world is earned and thoughtful, not naive and untested. She writes about the redemptive power of love and about how life can be changed in a single second. Even when the change is one you did not anticipate and would never have chosen, she argues, life can reassemble in beautiful new ways. She mulls the power of showing up and shutting up – something I could clearly learn. She also articulates a relationship to God and religion that is simultaneously complicated and very clean. As someone who struggles sometimes with the traditional definitions of faith, this combination is very appealing.
As usual, she can say it a thousand times better than I can. A few passages from this book that I heartily recommend.

And my whole, lovely job at that moment was to bear witness to rejoicing and to join in the gladness of the coming day.

Eventually, my heart – my fragile glass heart – would again be offered to the mortal hands of another man guaranteed to break it, one way or another, since that is the lunacy and loveliness of love.

I felt a pang of anticipated loss, sharp enough to prickle in my eyes; it wouldn’t be long before Zach would be too big to sit on my lap or be tickled out of an existential crisis.

I am sympathetic. I too want wildness, the existential freedom, the release and exaltation of being in and of a world in which humanity is only one dimension of the whole. But then I want it to end. If I am lost, I want the wardens to come find me.

“Don’t drink and swim.” “Wear a helmet.” “Make your stand in the parking lot,” I tell my children, as if I can hector them into a lifelong immunity from fear and pain. As a mother, I pray for miracles of the most ordinary kind on their behalf: I want their hearts to keep beating. I want them to live. But then, a grateful heart beats in a world of miracles. If I could only speak one prayer for you, my children, it would be that your hearts would not only beat but grow ever greater in gratitude, that your lives, however long they prove to be and no matter how they end, continue to bring you miracles in abundance.

her first prayer to the police officers and game wardens she works with:
May you be granted capable and amusing comrades, observant witnesses, and gentle homecomings.
May you be granted respite from what you must know of human evil, and refuge from what you must know of human pain.
May God defend the goodness in your hearts.
May God defend the sweetness in your souls.