Friday, September 30, 2011

Always a Daughter

It has been thirty-three years, and two hundred and fifty-six days since I became a mom but it took a while to sink in that I would always be one—no matter what. When Justin and Melanie were young, it was a no-brainer. As soon as Justin was born, it was clear that no matter how many siblings might join him, I was marked for life with another pulse beating in my veins. I don’t think it was just the fact that they literally used my body for an incubator because I know too many moms whose children came in other ways who feel that lifetime bond.

It wasn’t until much later as Justin and Melanie moved out into the world that I began to wonder if that bond is broken by distance or by simply growing into a new life. The separation that came with college definitely got my attention as I wondered if that was it. Did their distance mean that I was less of a mom? Had I lost them forever? Copious tears flowed and I felt like a barren cliché.  Proud and happy for them and the excitement that came with their voices, I was totally miserable and yes if I am honest, afraid. Afraid that something had ben irrevocably severed.

It took awhile, but gradually that fear was replace with the realization that no matter how far away my kids might roam, I would always be a mom—specifically their mom. The bond built on laughter, tears, sickness, vacations, fights and boredom, fires and faith was and is real. Over the years, there have been moments in time when the motherhood connection even deepened. When Justin married, that bond with him remained, and yes, widened to include Farr. And watching my son hold his minutes old child broke my heart open with joy.  On the other hand, Melanie’s cancer brought her back home in a way that I do not wish on anyone. And yet… And yet…I learned that walking with her through her cancer journey bonded us closer together. As a mom, I wanted to take that cancer from her and would have willingly assumed it for her if that were possible. While cancer can bring a family to its’ knees, ripping them apart, it seems to me that more often from that kneeling position a family can learn to stand again, supporting each other in ways they might not have comprehended before.

The mom musing really began this week on a last minute trip to visit my mom in North Carolina when I belatedly realized that she was going for Homecoming at my grandmother’s tiny country church outside Bedford, Va. –a pilgrimage I have made with her several times in the last few years.  In this little church –St. Thomas Episcopal Church—my great grandmother worshipped with her five children. It was where my grandmother was married, where my great aunts and uncles worshiped until they died, and where my great aunt (and Godmother) played the organ with enthusiasm as she belted out hymns well into her eighties—her screechy voice hugely embarrassing to me as a child.

That little church means a lot in my mom’s family. Near the homestead that housed my great grandparents who had immigrated from their native England, it was the spiritual center of their lives; it is where my ancestors are buried. In that space, I felt my matriarchs looking over my should, whispering in my ear reminding me that I come from a long line of mom’s who gave life to their children.  With the shiny hard wooden pews digging uncomfortably into my back, I could picture my great grandmother's darting looks at her row of four squirming girls and tiny son, and feel her angst sending her girls one by one to England for months at a time to visits with Big and Little Granny at her childhood home.

In that tiny church, I could only imagine the pride of my Granny as her son graduated from Annapolis and the heartbreak as he head to the South Pacific commanding troops landing on bloodied beaches; the love of her daughters and their families. Though long dead, for a moment it was almost like she was right next to me, her cool skin next to mine, her strength, fierce determination, wicked sense of humor, and faith holding me still.  

And sitting beside me on Sunday was my mom, who has lost her grandparents, parents, brother, sister and perhaps most crushingly, her husband of forty-nine years now struggling with dimming eyesight.  While she might never express it (that is not her way) I know, too, that she has suffered with her children living so far away. The woman who lived most of her life only blocks from her own mother, now copes with a son in New Mexico and a daughter in Boston. She has agonized as Melanie dealt with cancer and as I struggled as a mom to cope. And she has longed to watch her grandchildren grow up as her mother and her mother’s mother did. 

Last Sunday, perhaps for the first time, I had a glimpse of the long line of strong mothers who came before me--those who fixed cuts and bruises and nagged their children; those who smiled with joy at their children’s and their children’s children’s lives; those who silently wept for them and prayed daily for their lives and who for the most part would be puzzled at my vocation as a priest in their beloved church. Sitting with them,  I was, I am, filled with gratitude--gratitude for their blood flowing through my veins. Even more I am grateful for the blood, and strength, and courage of generations flowing the body of my daughter.





Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Summer Family


As summer has been dwindling down, restlessness has set in. Wanting to hold onto the warmth a bit longer, the cooler evenings warn that is not to be. It has generally been a pretty spectacular season of boating as well as deepening friendships in our little corner of the world on at the marina reminding me that family can be  made in many different ways.  D Dock is the quirky community we inhabit for six months a year. Beginning in April or May, week after week, we show up in various configurations; some to stay aboard for days on end, while the rest of us congregate on long weekends. Impromptu parties and potluck dinners organically evolve as the sun sets behind the Zakim Bridge. Invariably there are gaps on the dock each week as one friend or another departs on an adventure for days or weeks and like a temporary tooth crown, a visitor is plopped in to fill the gap. But no boat pulls into or out of D dock without extra hands and a welcoming face to handle lines.


Each year, friendships of years are renewed and relative newbies like we are (7 years in various slips on D dock does not begin to constitute an old timer) are invited into the scene. Birthdays are celebrated, wedding pictures are ohhed and ahhed over, and we grieve with those who lose a friend or relative. Melanie's check-ups are watched over, and the pictures of the California clan are admired. Cheery sendoffs are shouted as some head to high school or college reunions . We know the status of children, and grandchildren, and parents we may never see in person. But when we do, their stories come back from the accumulation of lazy afternoons sharing food, drink, and conversation on the back of a boat.

Through the summer, D dock is a moveable feast—literally. On a Friday night someone suggests an overnight trip to a nearby harbor; before you know it, a scouting party is on their way, setting up a new camp with different scenery.  With sailboats leaving early, power boaters always dock first to help with lines on each arrival. A Sunday afternoon may find dock boats tucked behind a Boston Harbor Island rafted together as folks scamper over gunnels moving from boat to boat passing food or drinks on the way.

And in the meantime, problems are solved, or at least discussed at length—politics, the economy, the Red Sox, families, friends, books, planets and stars and oh yes, the Red Sox.  When a mechanical problem crops up, (and they crop up often on boats) men converge while a few women cheer from the sidelines as the problem is diagnosed. Tools are shared and our resident mechanic extraordinaire Rick is put into service. In fact, no task is too small to receive advice, encouragement, or extra hands.  Food, food, endless food is consumed and potlucks can form with the tiniest hint.

Of course, we all have other lives but D dock is a place we can leave that all behind or bring it if we wish.  But while I love this summer community, it makes me miss my family so far away. I would like to for them to know these friends who, for the most part, they have met only briefly. It makes me hunger for those days when my grandparents lived a block away and I could run back and forth—knowing their home as well as I knew my own. Even with Skype video chatting, every few months in not often enough to see our children and grandchildren—to have the regular easy flow and exchanges that seem to happen in our summer world on the dock.

Too soon, boats will gradually leave taking their crew to their far flung homes  around Boston. (With the exception of our October Sky friends who will come back next summer with months of adventure to share.) Sprinkled with a few gatherings in the months to come, we will be Facebook friends for winter and early spring until we converge again. Still, at least for now, we have a few more weeks to savor our time together, and I have time to book those flights for a California Halloween.


 Just a few of the fam

Monday, September 12, 2011

A poem for today.


On the day after September 11 when I am feeling saturated with images and memories, this came across my computer from the Writer's Almanac. It feels like something I need to share.

The Word
Down near the bottom
of the crossed-out list
of things you have to do today,




and "broccoli," you find

that you have penciled "sunlight."

between "green thread"



Resting on the page, the word

is beautiful. It touches you

as if you had a friend




and sunlight were a present
he had sent from someplace distant

as this morning—to cheer you up,




and to remind you that,

among your duties, pleasure

is a thing



that also needs accomplishing.

Do you remember?

that time and light are kinds



of love, and love

is no less practical

than a coffee grinder



or a safe spare tire?

Tomorrow you may be utterly

without a clue,



but today you get a telegram

from the heart in exile,

proclaiming that the kingdom



still exists,

the king and queen alive, 

still speaking to their children,



—to any one among them

who can find the time

to sit out in the sun and listen.

"The Word" by Tony Hoagland, from Sweet Ruin. © University of Wisconsin Press, 1992. buy now