Saturday, May 31, 2014

Farewell and Goodbye

Tonight was our local high school’s graduation. As a School Board member, it is the highlight of my year to watch each student walk across the stage to receive his/her diploma. It’s exciting and sweet and hopeful and nostalgic.

Some of the kids stride confidently across the stage, eager to shake the Principal’s hand and receive the diploma. Others skitter across quickly, barely looking at the Principal as they grab the diploma and run down the stairs. And there’s always the handful of kids who boogie or saunter or strut rather comically, eliciting hoots and howls from the audience. It’s fun and funny!

The walk across the stage speaks volumes about one’s personality – it’s almost as though you can tell what their futures will look like. Except that you can’t.

While we said farewell to these kids tonight – wishing them to “fare” “well” in the coming years, we said goodbye to another kid who walked across this stage just one year ago. On that day, one never would’ve guessed that Cole would be gone one year later. He was a bright, funny, loved and pretty amazing young man. He was on the cusp of great things. It is a tremendous loss.

The emotional rollercoaster of saying farewell to the Class of 2014 and saying goodbye to Cole, all within 24 hours, is really too much to bear. I swallow the lump in my throat as I watch the graduates move their tassels and throw their caps into the air. I hold back the tears as I hear Pomp & Circumstance during the recessional. I smile with somber pride as I watch the graduates posing for pictures, hamming it up with their friends, and just BEAMING with relief/pride/happiness that they have graduated.

It was this same scene last year for Cole. He walked across that stage – confidently, I’m sure. He was happy and on top of the world with his friends. He posed for pictures with his loving and proud family. He had a great summer. He went off to college. He played baseball there and even received the team's Newcomer’s Award – quite an honor.

His family and friends will lay him to rest tomorrow. It will be a moving celebration of his life, but also incredibly difficult to say goodbye. So, let’s not. Instead, let’s say farewell.

Farewell acknowledges a parting, with the expectation that you will see each other again – wishing them well until you’re together again. Goodbye has more permanence to it. With that in mind, as a person of faith, it really is more of a “farewell” to Cole than goodbye. RIP sweet boy. Until we all meet again…


What I learned today: Life is short. Carpe diem.

Friday, May 23, 2014

Expedited Grief

On our way to soccer yesterday, my son remembered, “Oh hey Mom, this guy called the other day when you were gone and said his wife Jennifer died. Sorry, I forgot to tell you that.”

What?! Really?! You forgot?! Someone died, and you FORGOT!?! (I continue to be astounded by the aloofness and cluelessness of my kids, sometimes. Alas, I’ll save that rant for another day.)

He couldn’t remember the man’s name or when exactly he called. There was no identifying number on Caller ID. I could think of only one person it might be but wasn’t sure how to proceed. How do you just randomly call someone you haven’t heard from in several years and ask if his wife is still alive? Thankfully, this person had also left a message for Bert on his cell a few days later, thus verifying my suspicions and giving me an opportunity to reach out to him.

When we finally spoke, he told me his wife passed away over a year ago. Turns out she had hidden her address book in the piano bench and he just found it last week and called us. Jennifer had a liver disease. She was quite sick and ailed while she awaited a transplant. She was next on “the list.” Her opportunity arrived a week after she passed. It’s always in the timing. So very sad.

(Ironically, I had another friend who was enduring a liver disease at the exact same time. Through an amazing connection, he received a transplant from a living donor and slowly improved and became healthier at the same time that Jenn slipped away. Astounding story – read it here.)

Her husband told me so abruptly, I was taken aback. He’d already managed through it. He’d moved on with his life, he said. His head was in a different place than mine at the moment. While his head was reconciled and he had come to terms with the loss, my head was swimming. I had 15 minutes to process the news and get a grip on my expedited grief.

While we hadn’t spoken in several years, Jenn was a large part of my life for several years. She babysat my youngest daughter for two years, so I saw her twice a day every day for two years. Then we hung out as friends for several years after my daughter entered pre-school. She moved, we got busy, I moved, calls were fewer, we had young kids, they were empty nesters, etc. Different lifestyles. Different priorities. Friendships just drift away sometimes.

It’s a surreal thing to know that she’s gone; to know she’s BEEN gone for over a year, and I knew nothing about it. I missed her illness. I didn’t get to comfort or visit her. I didn’t get to grieve her. I didn’t get to support her husband or family during their grief.

It’s not about me…I get that, but I feel like I missed the opportunity to be a friend in her time of need. Of course, she could’ve contacted me during that time and didn’t – so there’s a reason. And the husband could’ve contacted us without the address book – I mean, it’s pretty easy to locate someone’s number using the Interweb! Again, he didn’t – so there must’ve been a reason; just as there was a reason he reached out to me a year later.


I have no idea. All I know is she’s gone. It’s weird to grieve without the conventional process. I missed it, and I will miss her. RIP Jennifer.

What I learned today: Ignorance is bliss.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Parenting with "crazy eyes"

Tonight was not a stellar night of parenting. The boys have been pushing my limits of late. They’ve been deceitful with their actions, lazy with their responsibilities, and have taken bickering to a whole new level. Add to that the layer of year-end stress from SOL testing, projects, and exams, and there is a heightened level of stress that hangs over the house like Pig Pen’s cloud of dirt.

I’m not a yeller. I generally keep an even keel. But when I lose it, I lose it big. I bring out the Greek and go ape sh*t on the kids. It is a high decibel rant that covers every foible and insecurity that any child would have. It is a rant so loud and outrageous and spiteful that I expect CPS to show up on my doorstep. Coupled with my “crazy eyes,” it absolutely gets their attention – but at what cost?

After my apoplectic fit, I order them to their rooms. “Brush your teeth. Go to bed. You’ll be up at the butt-crack of dawn to do a list of chores so heinous, you’ll beg for mercy.” Nice.

I hear one in his room crying. The other sheepishly leaves a note of apology on my bed. It is written with such tenderness and self-loathing, that I’m arrested. To know that my words and actions have extracted such drastic feelings from him absolutely cuts me to the quick.

After an appropriate time of reflection, we gather together to talk about it – to talk about everything – their actions, my reaction, our family, our love, how hard we all try, how truly blessed we are. I wipe their faces and tears with a washcloth, trying to erase the night. I calm them. I breathe with them. I try to quell their fears and misgivings. I tuck them in. I kiss them and tell them they are loved, and tomorrow will be better.

My 17 year old daughter walked into the maelstrom right before I sent the boys upstairs. She knew what was going down and quickly went upstairs to shower. Later, she asked me if everything was OK and I shared my thoughts. She asked, “Geez Mom, how loud did you yell? I remember, one time…” and she continued to share another proud (not) parenting moment of mine, complete with the “crazy eyes.”

On the one hand, I was horrified that she remembered it in such great detail. On the other hand, I was happy that it didn’t ruin her. She is a responsible, motivated, self-respecting and confident young woman who respects her parents. The boys, I feel sure, will be the same. The things that really matter are steadfast – they are smart and kind and caring and considerate, even if they don’t always show it.

Her parting words? “It’s just a phase. You have to do it or they’ll be complete brats.”

Perhaps. I just wish I could accomplish that without whipping out the “crazy eyes.”


What I learned today: Parenting ain’t for sissies.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Dog vs. Daughter

I've been replaced by a dog.

Mom talked last year about getting a dog. I was vehemently against this. I was concerned it would be too much for her...that she would trip over the dog...that it would be overwhelming and taxing and just the wrong thing to do. Turns out I was wrong.

The dog has been a saving grace.  A constant companion who not only brings Mom relief and love and comfort after a difficult visit with Dad or a lonely day at home...but also a welcome diversion and constant distraction for Mom.

It is wonderful and awful. I feel guilty that I'm glad she is now so busy and distracted so that I do not receive twice daily phone calls. Yet, with that, comes the realization that there is someone in her life who demands more attention and is, apparently, quite wonderful and talented and special.

While I'm happy she is busy and occupied, I cringe every time I hear her speak to the dog like a baby. That sugary talk, that doting, all-consuming attention should be reserved for me or her grandchildren. She tells the dog that I'm her sister. I'm so not.

After setting aside the childish envy, I see an old woman who is trying her best to cope...to forget, if only for a few minutes, how stressful her husband's health is.

She is an amazing woman who is quite suddenly alone - no children or husband to care for - no one on whom she can dote. So what's the obvious solution? Well, clearly, it's a 3#-nothing little ball of fur named Missy who thinks my Mom hung the moon.

What I learned today: Let it go. 

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Recycling & Repurposing

I wrote this piece about my (then 11 yo) daughter 5 years ago. "What sucks more than being 11?" was my way of capturing the angst and growing pains she was experiencing at the time. It is infinitely interesting to now view this 5 years hence - to see how she's grown and changed during that time, including her views of me. I still think it sucks to be 11, but apparently it also sucks to be 16. That's a post for another day. In the meanwhile, I've allowed my work-life to overshadow my writing-life this week and am recycling this older piece, repurposing it for my current blog. Hope you enjoy it.

What I learned today: Recycling & repurposing can make you cry.



What sucks more than being 11?
It sucks to be 11 years old. Just ask my daughter. She’s caught in limbo – literally…purgatory, that place between heaven and hell. Not a child anymore, though not yet a young woman. Seeing her deal with such raw emotions every day brings back the same memories to me. The ones I wanted so much to just leave my mind and never return, because when you’re eleven it’s all quite dramatic. 

Both my girls, like me, were late bloomers. Of course, now as a parent I’m terribly grateful for them to not grow up too quickly. But I remember how devastating it was for everyone else to be “ahead of me” in nearly every sense of the word – not yet time to shave…no need for a bra…can’t wear make-up or high heels…no period. No matter how many times I read Judy Blume’s book, I couldn’t will puberty on fast enough!

My daughter is a microcosm of me – truly a “mini me.” It’s like looking in a mirror. She looks like me, has the same interests and talents, and the same tendency to make much more out of a situation than is necessary. I understand her deeply, and this is what makes it so hard to step back and let her find her own way. I’d much rather draw a map for her – take two steps forward, one to the side, hop over this guy, slide down this railing, poof, you win! But then what would she learn? I don’t want her to be a soldier; rather, I want her to lead.

It makes me think back and wonder if my Mom felt the same way. Was she attuned to what I was feeling? Did she want to fix things for me? From my perspective, she was agreeably absent from my middle school dramas. She would envelop me every afternoon with a hug and a healthy snack, but I don’t recall detailed discussions about my day – who did what; she said this; he made me cry, etc. So why does my daughter feel compelled to share this with me? 

Despite what she thinks, she is quickly growing up. I see a devastatingly beautiful face behind the hair that falls in her face. She’s more gorgeous than she can even imagine. The curve of her face, the blue grey eyes, the freckles spattered across her nose and cheeks – it’s a dead sexy woman in the making. And really, who the hell wants to think of their daughter as sexy?! Her body is changing too – taut, athletic, growing curves, and a butt you can bounce a quarter off of. It’s ridiculous. 

I know she sees these changes. She’s been waiting for them. But now that they're here, it’s a little scary for her. She waffles between wanting to be more grown up – putting on make up, wearing fashionable clothes, looking “hot,” having more responsibilities and privileges – and just wanting to be a kid – running around in the mud, acting goofy, making rude noises, having no responsibilities. 

I’m the lucky recipient of her love and adoration. For some reason, she thinks I have my act together and models herself after me. How long will this last? Another month? Another year? Before too long, she’ll decide that her friends are much wiser than her mother. In the meanwhile, I’ll enjoy any moments she chooses to be with me because while she thinks being 11 sucks, having your children grow up and leave you sucks even more. 

Saturday, January 18, 2014

Sadness & Inspiration

”Meg Cross Menzies was tragically killed by a drunk driver while out for her morning run on January 13, 2014. As an avid runner, member of the Richmond Road Runners Club, and Boston marathoner, she was a member of the running family nationwide. In her honor, our hope is to raise awareness of drunk driving, texting and driving, and overall safety of runners and cyclists everywhere.”  Source: Meg’s Miles FB page

I’m feeling sad this morning. While the tremendous and global outpouring of support for this event is uplifting and impressive, my heart is very heavy for the loss of this young woman. That her children will grow up without her, that her husband has lost his partner, that her many friends will miss her presence is really too tragic to think about without being sad.

I have thought about it all week. I have wanted to write about it all week but, honestly, I’ve been unable to express how I feel. There simply are no words, and yet trying to articulate the jumble of emotions I feel is what brings me comfort.

I didn’t know Meg, but I can identify with her. It’s that “mother thing.” Once you become a Mom, your lens is forever changed. I find myself projecting others’ situations or events into my life. What would I do? How would my family be affected? I don’t know why this is. Perhaps it’s a coping mechanism, or a way to prepare for unforeseen tragedies that could befall one at any time.

Looking at Meg’s FB page, there are pictures of a recent trip to Disney and the kids in front of the Christmas tree. The family with arms around each other. All smiles. No idea that in a mere few weeks their worlds would be forever changed. But who would expect it, really? We cannot spend every minute worried that it may be our last. We can only live in the moment, and enjoy it, and be grateful for it.

I found this blog post, If I Die on Monday, to be especially lovely and really capture a lot of what I was feeling. What happens in the aftermath of a tragedy like this? If I were to die, what would I want for my family?

I think about Meg’s morning and what it must’ve been like. Did she brush the hair back from her sleeping babes and kiss them before she left for her run? Or were they awake and she poured them a bowl of cereal before she left? Did she and her husband enjoy a cup of coffee before lacing up her running shoes? Did she holler “Be back in a little while” over her shoulder as she headed out the door?

So, while I feel tremendous sadness for the family of this woman I’ve never met, I also feel inspired by Meg and how she lived her life. It was short. She was only 34. She was Christian. She loved and was loved. I’m inspired to recognize my blessings…every.single.day…and not take any of them for granted.


What I learned today: The banality of every day is what makes it special.