Thanksgiving – in so many ways

My first Thanksgiving. I brined the bird, he’s outside in a big white paintbucket on the back porch. Made the spinach and the stuffing and cut up the squash and parsnips. Set the table and did some flowers. Tomorrow will be the real challenge! It feels like a rite of passage – in keeping with a sentiment that’s been a theme lately, I really feel like an ADULT right now. With all the good and bad that that entails.

I was IMing with Lacy recently and got deep into reminiscing about 5 years ago at this time. Grace was 4 weeks old, Matt’s father had his heart transplant: the memories are both vivid and murky. I remember the night that the phone call came, like it was yesterday. Matt, Mark and I had visited John in the hospital in the late afternoon. John was a little bit out of it, and as we left everyone was feeling a somewhat down. As we walked out, John announced, apropos of nothing, “I’m getting that heart tonight.” We all smiled, resignedly aware of the statistics that 75% of those on the heart transplant list die waiting, and walked to the elevators. Another thing I remember from those days is watching a lot of TV, nursing a newborn – whenever the local news would announce an accident, a car crash, an electrical worker who had fallen to his death, Matt and I would look at each other with a surge of guilty hope: is that his heart?

In the middle of the night the phone startled us out of sleep. It was Mark: “There’s a heart.” Matt rushed to MGH, I stayed home with Gracie. Midday I went over to sit with them while we waited. Mark, Marion, Marti, Matt, and me (I clearly have the wrong name to be a member of this family). We sat and we sat. Matt was so agitated; we walked miles through the MGH halls when the sitting grew unbearable. The surgery went on much longer than expected. I remember feeling as though I was going to burst with milk, and felt the incredible, poignant tension between a newborn at home who needed me and Matt’s father and family who also wanted me there. Youth and age. I wondered, also birth and death?

One month to the day after Grace’s arrival, that surprise baby that we did not plan for or anticipate, John underwent a successful heart transplant. Thanksgiving was the next day. We drove down to Marion to spend the day with my parents and my Mead relatives. The memories are a haze of exhaustion and emotion. I remember feeling shell-shocked, somewhat removed from the traditions and celebrations. I did know, in some visceral way, how tremendously much we had to be thankful for, but we were all still paralyzed with anxiety about John’s still-tenuous recovery.

I also remember taking Gracie to Dr. Goldstein for a checkup, and asking about whether it was OK to bring a newborn into the MGH ICU to see her grandfather, who was asking for her. You can’t imagine how much John asked for Grace in those first days post-surgery, as he faded in and out of consciousness. Of course it is a bad idea to have a newborn in a hospital. Dr. Goldstein, however, looked at me and said, quietly: “Take her. Feel her power.” I will never forget the look in his eyes at that moment. So I took her, in the bucket carseat and covered with a blanket, and I do believe that she provided a fixed point for John to focus on in his recovery.

Five years ago. Extraordinary. We will celebrate on Friday night, with Marti and John, Mark and Marion. November 26, 2002: Grace’s one month birthday, Marti & John’s 36th wedding anniversary, and John’s new heart.

Finally! Have figured out how to embed a tabblo. See Halloween photos below. Will do more of this now that I cracked the code.

Blogging from Atlanta airport. I am having quite the day courtesy of Delta.
Flight to Atlanta was actually 10 minutes early. Then we sat on the runway for 55 minutes because the jetway was broken. Then I missed my flight to connect to Florence. The only way to get there was with an overnight in Atlanta. So now I am going home. What a day! Am so bummed to miss the festivities, seeing Gloria and Charlotte, and most of all seeing Leonora and Frank get married!

Last Sunday’s sky was heartbreakingly blue. Total reminder of 9/11 for me. How many of us think of that day when we see such crystal, saturated blue skies? As Bruce says, “that same unbelievable blue.”
It got me thinking about legacy: what is the narrative, the final message, that we each leave in the world? Since I am so hopelessly lost professionally, I can only think about my personal legacy. How do I want to be remembered? What do I want my children to extract, most fundamentally, from the way I lived my life? These are big thoughts for days when my spirit is up for them (and today, pouring rain, bleak, dark, is not that day!), but they have been on my mind.
I think what I want is to be remembered as someone who lived with integrity, who lived emotionally honestly, who never shied away from expressing the truest things in her heart, even when they were hard to say. As someone whose belief in peoples’ essential goodness is manifest in high expectations of those who are close to her. As someone who loved a lot of people, a few of them tremendously fiercely. To be remembered as someone who threw herself into this world of ours and tried her best to make it a better place, even if just for one single person. I would also like to sand down my rough edges a little, to be remembered as more loving and accepting, and less caustic. To find that elusive professional or intellectual passion, so I can go from an awkward trot to a graceful canter inside my own head.

“I believe that the details of our lives will be forgotten by most, but the emotion, the spirit, will linger with those who shared it, and be part of them forever.” – Liv Ullmann

Our turn to dance

“I am breathless and frightened by the frailty of miracles, and full of the fact of our lives.” – Pam Houston.

That has always been one of my favorite quotations, and I thought about it a lot this past weekend. Gracie and I drove to Jamaica Plain to see Tyler and Lyle Crumley, and some other TPT friends, and we were listening to the (fabulous) CD our nursery school made. As Livingston Taylor segued from Twinkle Twinkle into “Our Turn to Dance” I felt the familiar ache in my heart, the sensation of how I need to be here RIGHT NOW, and how woefully BAD I am at that. The song talks about how it’s “our turn to dance,” and I blink back tears thinking about it is Grace’s turn to dance, right now … that’s all she is supposed to be doing: dancing, laughing, learning, being a child. How quickly these lighthearted years slip by. Already school feels more “real,” more serious, more structured. How fast fly the days. I was thinking about how this is LIFE, this moment, this day right here right now, with all of its joys and sorrows, its choices both complex and simple.
I must have been channeling Catherine Newman, AGAIN, because she remarks on a similar sentiment in her blog this week:

“And I’m remembering an email my friend Brian wrote me a couple of years ago, about his sons: “There WILL be a day when they don’t want to be carried up the stairs … But the idea that the last time will go unmarked and slip away without being cherished just made me so sad.”
I’m trying to hold this in mind when Ben wants me to put his socks on or carry him in from the car when he’s actually still awake or stay with him and Birdy while they fall asleep at night. I feel the familiar ripping-away impulse — the same impulse you might have if, say, a baby had been stapled to your bosom — and sometimes I act on it, whispering, “I’ll check on you guys in a few minutes,” and unwinding the arms that are boa-constrictored around my neck, loosening the very claws of love from the hem of my shirt, trotting out before the poor lonely bed-goers can make their emphatic case for my company. But sometimes I just lie there. Let there not be a last time, I think — a last time that slips away without being cherished.”