Posts Tagged ‘family’

The D-Word

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

It’s not the one you think.

This idea has followed me around in much the same way my cat does when she feels neglected.  Quietly padding after you as you go about your business.  Scampering away in fear if you make too much noise or motion, but returning cautiously to sit at the other end of the couch, tail swishing quietly, until you have time to give her attention.

Last week I read this post by Anna and the many comments that followed it.  It struck me that Anna, though a blogger who has created a warm and comforting “home” on the Internet that might rival her actual home in scrumptious splendor, is actually a rather private person.  She shares recipes, photos, and sewing and schooling tips, but she is quiet, for the most part, about herself.  So why would she suddenly open up, as e.e. cummings wrote, “petal by petal,” only to “shut very suddenly, beautifully / as when the heart of this flower imagines / the snow carefully everywhere descending”?  This topic must be such a part of her that she longs to share it, but so painful and personal that she just can’t.

I thought about it for a few days.  And then yesterday, a student phoned me to ask whether she could come a little earlier to her lesson.  She was with her dad that day, she explained, and his schedule was too full to bring her at the normal time.  I said that was fine; we had the lesson early.  Then, five minutes before her regular time slot, her mother called me in a panic.  Where was Katie?  When I explained, I could practically hear the eyeroll over the phone.  She was furious at her ex-husband and thanked me pointedly for being responsible enough to let her know about the change in plans.

As I ended the call I realized I had never seen Suzuki piano successfully practiced in split households.  Ever.  It requires involvement and consistency, two things that are in short supply when a parent is struggling to support a family alone.  Even when the other parent continues to have a relationship with the child, and even to be involved with piano lessons, there are constant miscommunications about everything from tuition to lesson time to weekly assignments.

There is nothing to do but be understanding and sympathetic in these situations.  I know this.  I cannot imagine what burdens these people must carry, and they’re not all as pretty as Anna’s snappy red suitcase, and others don’t have someone to hold hands with on the journey.  But . . . but . . . what about the children?  Is it fair to hand them a burden larger than they can carry?  Sweet Katie is already learning to make excuses: “I didn’t practice because I was with my dad all weekend.”  “I left my book at my dad’s.”  “My dad couldn’t drive me here, so I had to miss my lesson.”  I know her dad; he’s a great guy.  But he and her mom have left her in a pretty terrible position.

And finally, after writing yesterday’s post and feeling downright wretched, I decided to take myself to a movie.  I had wanted to see It’s Complicated since I’d first seen the previews; Nancy Meyers is a great feel-good director, and I think Meryl Streep could paint her toenails and give an Oscar-worthy performance.  A light, happy movie was just what I needed to yank me out of my self-loathing and despair.

(Stop reading now if you plan to see it, which I can’t recommend, although John Krasinki and Steve Martin can make just about anything funny . . . )

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A Woodhousian Madeline

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

“I do not like it when people go away.  I know they must sometimes, but I do not like it.”

So speaks Mr. Woodhouse, the pathetic paterfamilias of Jane Austen’s “Emma.”  Like many of her characters, he is a predictable trope, a cariacature of himself, and most readers find him downright irritating.  But I feel more and more of a connection with Mr. Woodhouse these days.

I was able to write a little when my sister left; what I couldn’t write was the gnawing, grating emptiness that fills me each time I remember how far away she is, and how long it will be before I see her again.

My brother leaves us for months at a time, going to Montana in the summer and now, possibly, out of state for good to start a new branch of his business.  It is harder to write about how badly I miss him — even when he’s here, I miss him.  We inhabit different worlds: his is rocks and dogs and football, and mine is books and dinners and too many choking thoughts.  We are so far apart.  My friend Jessamyn comes close here (yes, that it is a long link, but trust me, it’s worth it.)

Last month, some dear friends moved north.  It’s “just for awhile;” he’s in school up there.  But after school, depending on where the jobs are, there will probably be another move, maybe further away.  Their children are growing too quickly.  I miss them.

Another friend, a brother really, left for a year in an unstable African country last July.  I was able to say goodbye, barely.  But I saw him again last weekend, home for a family wedding, and this time I had to say goodbye for much longer.  This time I knew what it meant, the danger he is in and the loneliness I will feel without him here.  This time it was harder to let go.

I detest the Virtual Community revolution in part because, at its core, it is hollow and empty.  It is a poor substitute for flesh and blood, hugs and tears, shared glances and jokes.  This is especially true of all the people I’ve just mentioned — siblings, friends, people who have moved south and north and west and had babies and joined the Coast Guard and made new friends to fill in the gaps.  When was the last time we were all together?  Probably a decade ago.  I left them first, to go to college; they scattered too, one by one, some bouncing back, some unable to resist the inertia of their new homes.  I guess it’s my Woodhousian Madeline, that memory — washing cars for the youth group, or playing and listening to music, or making up silly games to pass the time and put off homework.

I am certainly not so naive as to imagine I am the first person to miss people who move away and grow apart.  But it’s hit me awfully hard, all of a sudden.  It’s hard to be the one who’s still here.

Oh, Yes, He Is

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

My daddy, quoted in the New York Frickin’ Times:

“I was frozen in my tracks. I felt like I was in the actual presence of God, almost as if I was in heaven. And I’m not the kind of person who gets all woo-hoo.”

It’s a wonderful article, although it gets one crucial fact wrong.  My brother and sister did go into the church in Ben Lomond that fateful day.  I was the one who was oozing adolescent attitude: “I don’t *wanna* go into that weird church.  I just wanna go home.  This is stupid.”  I sat in the car, and thus missed the Epiphany Express.

So, do I deserve to have to deal with all these sullen, angst-riddled teenagers every day?  Probably . . .

Why Women are Sad

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

In case you haven’t heard this from half a dozen different sources already, the current buzz from the General Social Survey is that women are sadder than they’ve ever been.  I really can’t stand Maureen Dowd (despite our shared alma mater and passion for the current president) but what she says here is right on:

When women stepped into male-dominated realms, they put more demands — and stress — on themselves. If they once judged themselves on looks, kids, hubbies, gardens and dinner parties, now they judge themselves on looks, kids, hubbies, gardens, dinner parties — and grad school, work, office deadlines and meshing a two-career marriage.

Even without children, even without a full-time job, I see this at work in our home.  Rob works as hard as anyone I know, but he comes home and lets go.  Plays the guitar.  Cooks dinner.  Tries to get me to watch a movie.  Meanwhile, I am pulled in a thousand different directions: I come home from school and work on music for church, volunteer projects, cleaning, weeding the garden.  Even my “leisure” activities, like reading and writing, are a means to an end — lesson plans for now and, God willing, a future career.

To be clear, I am not complaining about my life.  My life is wonderful.  I have been blessed beyond measure in ways I don’t begin to deserve.  And everything I do is by choice.  But, as Dowd says, choice itself is a funny thing:

“Choice is inherently stressful,” Buckingham said in an interview. “And women are being driven to distraction.”

The more important things that are crowded into their lives, the less attention women are able to give to each thing. [. . . ]

Stevenson looks on the bright side of the dark trend, suggesting that happiness is beside the point. We’re happy to have our newfound abundance of choices, she said, even if those choices end up making us unhappier.

That’s the bright side?!  That we stubbornly insist we’re enjoying ourselves as we report lower and lower levels of fulfillment and happiness?  Dowd calls this a paradox, but I think it’s fodder for an epidemic of female depression.  If not for the Church, I know I’d be part of it.

Six Years Ago Today . . .

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

. . . was the beginning of something transformative, challenging and beautiful.

Wedding

My husband is wonderful for many reasons, but especially because he pressures cajoles guilts encourages me to write, even when I think I have nothing to say.

Thank you, darling, for believing in me.  Happy anniversary.