object of memory

we must return to where it was lost / if we want to find it again

Tag: parenthood

  • catch up

    catch up

    Believe it or not, I have seven posts sitting idle in my draft folder, with a few for each month that this site has been silent. It’s a fitting metaphor for how I’ve been feeling—many thoughts but few words to express them. Those who know me in person understand that I’m not a big talker. I enjoy people and conversations, but I often hit a wall when the words suddenly stop. I think them, but they don’t come out.

    Sid returned home in May after eleven months away. The growth has been astounding—a mix of intensive work and natural maturity—and we’ve spent the past two months adjusting to being a family of four again. We left off with a ten- and thirteen-year-old. Now we have a tween and an almost fifteen-year-old, in sixth and tenth grades. That shift feels pivotal, as there’s no going back to early childhood. Young adulthood looms, which is both beautiful and frightening, leading to midnight musings about what comes next.

    (more…)
  • i feel numb, burn with a weak heart

    i feel numb, burn with a weak heart

    My family has a Labor Day tradition – a trip to the shore without me, because to be blunt, while I love beaches, I am not a fan of sitting on them in the blaring sun. I am more of a rocky, cold, rough water, and sparsely populated beach person, which is the exact opposite of the Jersey Shore. Tradition dictates that I remain in our home with the dog, three cats, and a very antisocial and possibly blind lizard. I don cruddy clothing and pajamas and chip away at the layers of our house that come from living with three humans who cannot part with anything. In short, they leave, and I donate things and throw a lot away. It is my favorite weekend of the year.

    This is why I am sitting in the dark at my kitchen table, the moon’s glow filtering through the skylight, apologizing to a parent whom I just spammed with things to think about for the school year, not realizing it is past midnight. I have five browser windows, three documents, and four email accounts open on my screen. I am bouncing between discussions with schools, lawyers, clinicians, my own teaching/caseload, a course presentation that is due soon, a creative writing piece that I can’t seem to push out words for, and a pleasure project that I am slowly hedging through that involves rewriting Sol LeWitt’s sentences on conceptual art for preschool (because OMG, it works. It. Works.). I’ve only been able to sit still to work on the above because of the satisfaction gained from organizing the garage and both kids’ rooms and 85% fixing the rusted ball joint on our basement bathroom sink stopper.

    That was a very long way of explaining how one person in this giant world regulates herself during a period of deep sadness. I write this not because all is doom and gloom because it’s not, but because sometimes we need to acknowledge the strange mass of Vantablack in the room. In my case, that’s grief.

    I tackled one of the messier spaces in our house a few hours ago – a small sunroom that holds an exercise bike, a few weights, and our PC and printer. It was filled with piles of crap – both kids’ unemptied backpacks from last year, random pieces of paper, baseball and Pokémon cards, Sid’s art supplies, and all of the phone chargers I have been looking for over the last twelve months. I emptied Emmett’s pack first, then scooped the playing cards into a box to be sorted. I pulled out unused supplies that could be used this year and paused for a second to sigh and lament that my baby is now in his last year of elementary school. Then, it was time to go through Sid’s things.

    Sid has been away for seven weeks, and we are preparing for his next step, which likely will not be at home with us. I cannot express how difficult this has been for the entire family, and each time we get over one hump, another higher hill of emotion awaits. I am incredibly proud of my child and of all four of us. Healing – understanding and learning from how each of us communicates, tackling and sitting with excruciating feelings, navigating the should have / could have / wish we had threads of guilt – is really fucking hard work.

    I had spent the morning on calls and email back and forths about my child’s future, and then took my seething anger at the American school and mental health systems and channeled it into cleaning out the refrigerator. When I finally went through Sid’s backpack, I was blasting music on the turntable because I needed to feel it reverberate through my everything. Plus, it can’t hurt to dance a little.

    So, I was dancing on the gross carpet after chucking half-completed homework assignments and old candy wrappers into the garbage when I realized I was hugging Sid’s backpack. I had pulled the canvas close to my chest, my fingers rubbing the material, and the lyrics Home is where I want to be / Pick me up and turn me round /I feel numb, burn with a weak heart / I guess I must be having fun ran through my brain like razors of emotion. I curled around the backpack, kneeling on the half-cleaned floor, and sobbed. I cried hard and then hung his things in the hall closet and stood in the clean, empty living room and listened to the needle tracking on the record’s dead wax, the crackle of no sound, and thought to myself, did I just hurt so hard that I feel nothing, or did I open wide until the emotions completely filled me?

    I’ve been thinking a lot about that irony of emptiness. A room can appear so full but actually be vacant; conversely, an empty space can be so full of memory. In these days of intensity, these moments that trigger the need to cleanse and organize and reorganize and seek sense and order, the fullness feels so empty, and the emptiness so full.

  • and never trust a heart that is so bent it can’t break.

    and never trust a heart that is so bent it can’t break.

    It’s been a while. I’ve had a lot to say but not a lot of words, if that makes any sense. Summer began and passed and here we are almost at the cusp of school starting. I’m not sure if I have much to show for it other than work hours logged, a few good books read, and some intensive therapy – and I’m transparent about that one because these things need to be more at the forefront of conversation. Humans can be fragile and strong at the same time. I used to think that it was a balance but these days I feel that it is a composite, for there is strength in fragility and, conversely, strength can be fragile.

    I am sitting with a beer at SEA-TAC, waiting for my red eye flight home. Four hours ago I was in California hugging Sid for the first time in almost two months and then navigating a flimsy rental car through a canyon of giant flood puddles and mudslides and rocks and pretending that I could see the road on the 405. Apparently there was an earthquake in Ojai around the time that my first flight took off. Seattle is sunny and warm and full of forest fire smoke. I don’t think it’s dramatic to say that the world is upside down.

    This has been the summer of hard feelings – encountering them, acknowledging them, facing them, feeling them. I’ve never been good at any of that. I have always felt things deeply but received a D- in the processing department. If anything, I will complete this summer with a degree in feelings. Take that, Harvard.

    I’m not even sure what highway I was on this morning – maybe 14 – en route to the 405, hustling to try and get ahead of the flooding and feeling guilty for not spending the full allotted four hours with my kiddo, but also cognizant of the fact that if I missed my flight, I wouldn’t be home until at least Tuesday. I’d spent the night in a random hotel, blackout drapes drawn, diving into and surfacing from intense dreams that left me covered in sweat, shaking so hard that I thought I would be sick. The rain barreled down onto the road, so much so that the car sensor registered that I had crashed the front. It kept dinging and flashing for a good half hour, the camera obstructed by sheets of water. Every so often, the car would lift with a surge, and I’d grasp the steering wheel tighter, training every thought on the lyrics of Bright Eyes songs that I’d set up to play, album by album, from my phone.

    The rain reminded me of a trip my husband and I took to Turkey shortly after we were married. We drove from Izmir to Cappadocia, stopping in various towns and cities along the way, and at one point we were driving up a mountain behind an oil truck that was moving exceedingly slow. When it finally let us pass, our car was pelted with hail, and we realized quickly that the slowness and largess of the truck had been shielding us from the harsh reality of our future. When this memory hit, tears ran freely down my cheeks. I wasn’t making a sound, but the physicality of the emotions surfaced.

    Much of this summer has been acknowledging the fact that I have been using life like that oil tanker, the feelings like hail just out of view. At some point that truck is going to pull over and the natural elements will reach you. So, here I am with a lot of dents and scratches. I think the hail has gotten smaller, though sometimes the smallest balls of ice sting the most.

    In other news, Sid has been connecting with farm animals, and one of the chickens is named Patricia.

  • stepping off the gravitron

    stepping off the gravitron

    Things I have learned in the last two weeks in no particular order:

    1. The house is exponentially quieter with one child vs. two.

    2. The house is still just as messy.

    3. Once there is quiet, you realize there are so many layers to peel back, wade through, or hide beneath.

    4. After several years of being on edge, the brain doesn’t know what to do with itself.

    5. The body retaliates after several years of being on edge.

    6. Sleep is a fickle creature that evades at night and then attacks during the day.

    7. Music is solace. The more I listen, the more I hunger for a thrumming beat, rhythm that pushes my body into movement, for sounds that vibrate through my entirety.

    8. Perhaps I am starved for the feeling of wholeness and am attempting to fill it with sound.

    9. Or maybe the sound reminds me that I am alive.

    10. My lynx point Siamese rescue kitten will eat half a loaf of challah if we leave it on the counter.

    11. My orange cat curls around my head each night and purrs like he is gifting me a lullaby.

    12. My tuxedo cat has started sleeping in my oldest child’s vacant room.

    13. I am tired of using oldest and youngest to name my children, so I’ve created pseudonyms: oldest = Sid, youngest = Emmet

    14. I talked to Sid on Zoom today – it was the first time in fourteen days that I could see his face – and the distance felt so stark, immovable, and overwhelming.

    15. Ravens are living in the trees near my house.

    16. Their screams are fabulous.

    17. Mid-summer magic hour, when the lightning bugs begin to rise, will always be magical.

    18. One day, millisecond by second by minute by hour, I will stop feeling like I have just stepped off a Gravitron.

    19. One day the pieces will fall back into place. Likely not the same place, but adjacent, with edges that line up just enough but not quite, which is good enough for me.