I am very proud today: Exeter has announced that tuition will now be FREE for all students whose families earn less than $75,000 annually. This now means that Exeter and Princeton lead their respective communities in financial aid offers. I am distinctly proud to be affiliated with both of those schools, today and every day.

Also: important fact: Did you know that the plastic top on 2 litre and 20 oz sodas can’t be recycled? That the recycling plants will just throw the whole thing away rather than unscrew the top? So, be sure to remove the tops before you recycle those bottles (particularly important to me, given that I drink 5 of those 20 ouncers a day!).


Catherine Newman, yet again, has me simultaneously smiling and crying:

“I don’t know what to say about this — the way I incline towards sadness, latch on to it as it floats past, ride up into its currents. But it keeps me grounded somehow, however paradoxical that may sound…Looking into the face of loss is like a bell of mindfulness for me. This very heart that pounds sometimes with anxiety — this heart is beating! These very noisy children who make me want to fill my ears with rubber cement — they are vibrantly alive! This very full-to-bursting life — well, it’s life, life itself. “

In the spirit of trying to recognize all the good in my beautiful, complicated crazy quilt of a life, I’m trying to count my blessings today. This is timely with Thanksgiving around the corner (did Thanksgiving move up a week? Am I the only person who feels that way?). And given that my children are mostly yelling, screaming ingrates lately, this is a topic I need to infuse our home life with a bit more actively.

Life is full of simple pleasures. A short list:

  • clean, ironed sheets on my bed
  • cold 20 oz diet coke with lime, out of the bottle
  • the mail! (I am irrationally excited by the mail)
  • Christmas cards
  • having my head rubbed
  • occasional afternoons all by myself to do nothing but wander, drive around, think
  • peacefully sleeping children
  • Weeds and Brothers & Sisters, my two favorite shows on TV
  • A new spy/political thriller in hardback from Costco (Baldacci, Grisham, Connelly)
  • Acela rides between Boston and New York
  • good french fries
  • Oyster Bay sauvignon blanc on the rocks
  • hot Starbucks venti latte every morning (the thrill of being handed that cup never, ever fades)
  • the smell of clean laundry
  • the Davis Square farmer’s market
  • Ben Harper’s new CD, especially “Having Wings”
  • fall light on red, orange, yellow trees (Lacy, I think of you and walking on the tow path)
  • the sound of halyards slapping against masts
  • the peace and isolation of cross-country flights

Pouring rain, cold, windy. Was feeling a little gloomy from the weather and I suited up in raincoat and tied sneakers and went out for a run in the gale. I’ve always loved running in weather like this, for some reason. I remember early morning runs while at BCG, 5:30am in the pitch black of winter, slipping and sliding on the frozen Esplanade. I must have looked like the michelin man, trundling along in my snow gear, but I always loved being out there.
And indeed, the mood has turned around from the run. There is something, maybe, about asserting my own small power over the bad weather, something about refusing to let the elements daunt me. Saw only one other brave soul out in the storm, but we gave each other a big wave and a knowing smile!
Home now and thawing out, just made chocolate bread pudding to bring to dinner tonight and am feeling much improved. Run in the rain + chocolate = surefire mood improver!

We can learn nothing except by going from the known to the unknown. – Claude Bernard

Leaving babyhood


My little man. He is such a moment of transition. His babyhood clings to him, but he’s really turning into such a little person. He’s in the throes of the terrible two behaviors – tantrums, screaming, falling apart when he doesn’t get his way. Stubborn refusal to do what I ask of him, staring me down while blatantly flouting a rule, and generally being difficult: these are all central behaviors right now. I swear it’s as though he decided he was going to make up for being a super mellow baby for his first two years. Some days it feels as though he spends a solid 9 or 10 hours a day screaming and yelling (and the other 14 or 15 he is usually sleeping).

But at the same time he’s such a downright little love. He is quick to say, “I love you, mummy” and is always eager for a hug and a kiss. Sometimes I go into his room before I go to bed and lift him out of his crib (cage, fine) and rock with him in the rocking chair, and he curls sleepily into my arms, resting his blond head on my shoulder and being so calm and content I often find myself crying. The tenderness in those moments is heartbreaking because I know its time is running out. The last vestiges of babyhood in Whit are fading away fast, and this time in my life is coming to an end.

The combination of Whit’s occasional warmth and gentleness with his fundamental boy-hood – the throwing-hitting-climbing-jumping that everybody told me would be there (and is) represents the kind of man I aspire to raise. My relationship with Grace, so thoroughly documented and overanalyzed in this blog, is complex, intense, full of identification and the impossible-to-untangle wishes I have for both her and my child self. Whit, however, brings a different set of challenges and joys to the emotional table. Chief among these is the deep sense of responsibility I feel to raise a truly good man – a man who will engage intellectually and ethically with the world, who won’t be afraid of his own strength and will in fact cultivate it, and who will respect women as both equal to and different from himself.

A more articulate summary of what I’m talking about:

“I think a lot about the man Charlie will become … I can’t seem to get used to the fact that one day I’ll be the mother to a man, and that somewhere within that man will be the wild little boy who barreled through the house with a dump truck, and the tender boy who pretended to nurse his dolls. Maybe that’s part of the appeal of being the mother of a boy: the chance to plant something gentle in his soul, to give the future a small gift – a man who can be as loving as he is strong.” – Jody Mace