Friday, August 17, 2012
One Year
Last Saturday morning I was sitting in my last two-hour class of a three week intensive program towards my MEd. For all intents and purposes, it should have been an exhale. I had worked really hard leading up to that point. All my work had been turned in and returned. My bags were packed in the dorm across the street, waiting for me to pick them up and head out. All I had to do in this one last class was to present my research topic for the following year--a topic I had clearly written on the paper in front of me--to a group of people who I had become very close with over the previous weeks. No stress, no sweat, easy-peasy.
But as my turn came closer and closer, I began to have trouble concentrating on my classmates' presentations. Nerves, one would think...but it wasn't nerves. It was the overwhelming feeling that I was going to cry...sob...that if any "constructive" remark was made concerning my research topic, I would fall apart right there on the spot.
Fortunately my turn came and went quickly with only a few reassuring and positive comments, and tears were held back. I left the class, attended the graduation ceremony for finishing students, ate a quick lunch, helped clean up the campus, and then found myself again in the same room with my classmates for our final farewell...an event that could be said to stir emotions, but decidedly, for me, did not. I sat in the room with my eyes glazed over, barely present as I said goodbye (sang, really) to people I had lived with closely and come to care about dearly in our time together.
What is wrong with me? The thought again flooded my mind, but I had reasons: I hadn't slept well the past few nights, my body was tired, my mind was tired. It had been a long three weeks. I was ready to go home.
But that wasn't it--this I realized as I was finally in my car, en route home and crying uncontrollably. I am quite often tired, quite often mentally spent, but this having a complete emotional breakdown for no reason...this was new. Frightening, really.
As I entered my house after three weeks away, everything seemed dark and surreal in the evening light. Although my family was sitting around the table eating dinner, happily chatting, excited to see me, something seemed off, and rather than feeling the urge to sit down and join them--to hug them and kiss them like I had dreamed of those past three weeks--I wanted to retreat to the bedroom, pull the shades and go to sleep.
Then I knew. I had felt this way before. It was on this day, one year ago, that my father died.
One year ago, I walked into my house after having spent three days in a hospital, making decisions no one should have to make and ultimately watching one of the people I loved most in the world perish. I hadn't left the hospital at all except to get a few hours of sleep at a nearby hotel room in the wee hours of the morning. I had stayed up all night with my father in a dark room, eaten all my meals in the hospital cafeteria, made a community out of the doctors and nurses in our company. As I drove home the day after my father died--in fact, for months after my father died, every time I drove past the exit for the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center--I had to fight the urge to turn my car around and drive back to the hospital.
If only I could move into the room where my father had been, with my books and my computer. I could spend my time with the third-shift nurses and the quiet hours of the night. I would spend the days sitting in the hospital atrium in the comfy chairs, eating chocolate croissants from the hospital's Au Bon Pain, dozing intermittently, and crying. In the hospital people don't judge you when you're crying--in fact, it's expected.
The hospital--that biosphere that somehow suspends reality and lets you live instead in a world that is cloudy and cushioned; a place where pain is held--by people walking by, by cafeteria workers, by nurses and especially by doctors--especially my father's doctor--the tall, lean Scandinavian looking neurosurgeon, the man of few words with clear emotion in his eyes, the one who was sure, who was in charge--a pillar in his blue-green scrubs. (If only I could go live with him there would never be any questions, everything would always be clear...) The hospital to which I had become habitualized--the rotating shifts of the nurses, the busyness of days and silence of nights, the sounds of footsteps, monitors, my father breathing...
But then this last sound stopped...and it was okay while I was still in the hospital--still in that bubble that had become my world. It was still okay while I sat on that precipice where I had made myself at home--with my chair and my ottoman, my table, lamp and books, my blanket and my pillow. But with the first step I took into the outside world (because what else was there for me to do?), this haze lifted. Suddenly everything was clear and raw. The light of day in the world outside seemed harsh and unnatural. When I walked into my house, all I wanted was to retreat to my bedroom, pull the shades and go to sleep...
...but I didn't. I curled up with my little girl, who was reading on the couch, and squeezed her tightly. It was her birthday. She was six years old.
I didn't slink into the bedroom this year either--at least not right away. I sat down with my family and laughed--albeit a bit half-heartily--and told them stories about my three weeks "on the hill," and listened to their tales of three weeks without mommy. I knew I would truly be back home soon, but at that moment there was still a part of me existing someplace far away.
I find it uncanny that one year later I am also re-entering the world, albeit from a different dream. This latest retreat included days of color and verse, singing and music; evening swims to cool me off before I sat down at my desk to work, uninterrupted by children; a warm breeze blowing in my window through which I had an uninterrupted view of the sun sinking behind Mt. Monadnock and spraying its colors--oranges and violets--throughout the summer sky.
At no moment during the last three weeks did I compare Dartmouth-Hitchcock with the High Mowing campus. At no point did I correlate my classmates and friends with the hospital staff. But as I sit here now, with a small amount of perspective, I wonder how different these two worlds are? Is there really a finite line between the sound of my father's last breaths in the dead of night and the sound of twenty people singing in a room of windows? Is one less powerful than the other? Less beautiful?
The day after I arrived home from school, we celebrated Emerson's seventh birthday. There was still something unreal about the day (maybe it was all the seven-year-old pirates running to and fro), something a bit foggy, but it was then that I realized the similarity between these two places, between these two times. Both of them were powerful...yes. And transformative. But the real transformation occurred not within the bubbles--not during my times away--but upon my return. The real transformation happened, as it always does, in the doorway leading from one world to the next, when for a moment you are not living in one world, but in both.
As I watched my daughter lead her friends in a search for buried treasure--she in the front of the pack, the one holding the map bringing up the rear--I understood that in this rawness, in this naked space that I temporarily inhabited, I was given the gift of lucidity. Not only was I able to experience pure pain, but pure joy as well. Authentic beauty, unadulterated love. My goal, my job, as I step more fully into my everyday life, is to grab hold of this beauty--this force; to bring it with me as I step through that doorway. I need to embody it--to live it--lest it slips away.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Early Summer with Elsa Beskow
It's no secret that Elsa Beskow is one of my favorite writers and illustrators of children's books. We read these two a lot last month in anticipation of flowers, shearing season, and summer!
Pelle's New Suit is a simple story about a boy who outgrows his clothes and uses wool from his sheep to make new ones. As the story takes us through the stages of shearing, carding, spinning, dying, weaving, and sewing required to make a suit, we also follow Pelle as his displays the ingeniousness, responsibility, independence and perseverance required to grow from a little boy (or girl) into a bigger one.
It is also a book about reciprocity--Pelle asks for help with the steps (most of them) he cannot complete himself, and in return helps those who are helping him. At the end of the story, Pelle stands tall in his new blue suit, and behind him stands the community that made it possible. All great stuff, beautifully illustrated and packed into a book suitable for two and three-year-olds! (Although almost seven-year-olds have been known to linger around to listen too...)
Elsa Beskow has many, many seasonal books about different children being given temporary ability to see and converse with fruit bushes, flowers, and trees, and I love each and every one for its ability to imbue children (and adults) with the life that goes on all around us. With all her anecdotes of the relations between the vegetables and flowers, Beskow magnifies the qualities of all the plants, letting us feel the shyness of the wintergreen, or the hidden beauty of vetch. We walk out into the world feeling like we know these flowers--not only their names (which she lists as the flowers walk out in there processions...first the meadow flowers, then the forest flowers, then the lake flowers...), but their essence. And we love them.
Pelle's New Suit is a simple story about a boy who outgrows his clothes and uses wool from his sheep to make new ones. As the story takes us through the stages of shearing, carding, spinning, dying, weaving, and sewing required to make a suit, we also follow Pelle as his displays the ingeniousness, responsibility, independence and perseverance required to grow from a little boy (or girl) into a bigger one.
It is also a book about reciprocity--Pelle asks for help with the steps (most of them) he cannot complete himself, and in return helps those who are helping him. At the end of the story, Pelle stands tall in his new blue suit, and behind him stands the community that made it possible. All great stuff, beautifully illustrated and packed into a book suitable for two and three-year-olds! (Although almost seven-year-olds have been known to linger around to listen too...)
Another one of our favorite Elsa Beskow books for summer is The Flowers' Festival. In this book, a little girl named Lisa sits alone in the garden, wishing she could go to the Midsummer festival, when a flower fairy invites her to the flowers' Midsummer party instead. The flower fairy makes Lisa invisible and she spends her Midsummer's eve listening to songs and stories of flowers, birds, and bees.
Elsa Beskow has many, many seasonal books about different children being given temporary ability to see and converse with fruit bushes, flowers, and trees, and I love each and every one for its ability to imbue children (and adults) with the life that goes on all around us. With all her anecdotes of the relations between the vegetables and flowers, Beskow magnifies the qualities of all the plants, letting us feel the shyness of the wintergreen, or the hidden beauty of vetch. We walk out into the world feeling like we know these flowers--not only their names (which she lists as the flowers walk out in there processions...first the meadow flowers, then the forest flowers, then the lake flowers...), but their essence. And we love them.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Something New
This year was the first Fourth of July in our (admittedly shortish) family history that we haven't been at the beach. (And one of the very few times I haven't been at the beach in my thirty-something years on earth). Being that Independence Day fell in the middle of the week, and we are feeling, lately, like we want to be close to home (more on that soon, I hope), we opted for something a little more...traditional.
I'm certain that next year will find us on the beach again, running back and forth between the waves and the BBQ, the fireworks and the fried clams, but there is something to be said about a quiet day, in a simpler time, when we can sit in the village common with a fresh mug of Sam Adams in our hand and listen--in between the fife, drums, and muskets--to an orator speak the words of the Declaration old Sam signed so many years ago.
I'm certain that next year will find us on the beach again, running back and forth between the waves and the BBQ, the fireworks and the fried clams, but there is something to be said about a quiet day, in a simpler time, when we can sit in the village common with a fresh mug of Sam Adams in our hand and listen--in between the fife, drums, and muskets--to an orator speak the words of the Declaration old Sam signed so many years ago.
Happy Independence Day!
Monday, June 11, 2012
Signs of Summer
Friday:
Ringing of the Bells to mark the end of the school year. There are times when I think I've seen it all at Emerson's school, and there is nothing more that can surprise me or exceed my expectations. And then a door opens, and I find something amazing.
Watching all the classes (1st grade through high school) perform during the last assembly (under a tent, on a gorgeous sunny day) I felt nothing short of astounded at the talent, charisma and apparent community of each grade and the school as a whole. As the grades took the stage, one by one, their growing confidence and presence was palpable. Watching the progression, I could almost see my little girl grow up before my eyes. As we said goodbye to the year just past, I found myself growing excited for the future.
The assembly ended with the first-graders giving their eighth-grade "buddies" a rose and their twelfth-grade "buddies" a lily. Again, I accelerated time for just a moment, picturing Emerson--looking so tiny next to these budding women--as an eighth-grader, standing with her first-grader, and me reminiscing about this very moment...and then my excitement for the future was coupled by a voice saying enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
The assembly was great, but really nothing could top a bunch of emlementary kids walking around the yard asking each other to sign their yearbooks afterward, as parents picnicked. Because many of the kids are so young, there was no rhyme nor reason to it. Just anyone...you, will you sign my yearbook? Or in the case of two first-graders, just sign all the names you can think of yourself.
The last thing Emerson yelled to her friend as we left was "I have to go...but you keep walking around and asking people to sign!" What a plan...
and when we got home I found this:
For clarity sake, this is Emerson's note to herself in her own yearbook. Emerson, I love first grade. I hope I love second grade too. Emerson. Classic. (Underneath is my note! Even moms get to sign yearbooks in the first grade!)
enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
Licking ice-cream cones to celebrate our second-grader. (Sure we've had plenty of ice-cream so far this year, but this one tasted like freedom...)
Climbing trees, revisiting old friends, and riding through the river in a horse drawn wagon, down to the lower fields to see the farmers cutting hay. Fresh cut hay, fresh vegetables growing, the delighted squels of children, a huge white dog following close behind. There is nothing like the early days on the farm. (Except maybe the later days...)
These photos were taken at the farm last year (from a blog never written), yet they invoke the anticipation welling up inside me on the eve of summer.
Grilling fresh fish and vegetables.
Picking the first radishes from our garden, brushing the dirt off, and eating them, right then. Right there.
Staying up late looking at my eighth-grade yearbook--laughing at the thirteen-year-old versions of the people we still know, at my hair, and at my math teacher who used to spit on people in the front row. Sharing old stories and loving how they became alive again in the eyes of my girls. Remebering how much I loved eighth grade.
enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
Saturday:
Baseball. (Or in our case, softball)
Splitting wood.
Staying up late to go to a party I wasn't able to attend (work), but I hear from my family it had everything summer has to offer: bbq, wiffle-ball, croquet, kids running in packs through fields...
Sunday:
Strawberries. Enough said.
Planting the rest of our garden.
Meeting friends in the park for some refreshments, Hide and Seek, Tag, and a little froggin' thrown in for good measure.
Grilling fresh pork and asparagus from the farm.
Staying up late reading, because the days are long and we have nowhere to be tomorrow...
enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
Ahhh, summer...I will.
Ringing of the Bells to mark the end of the school year. There are times when I think I've seen it all at Emerson's school, and there is nothing more that can surprise me or exceed my expectations. And then a door opens, and I find something amazing.
Watching all the classes (1st grade through high school) perform during the last assembly (under a tent, on a gorgeous sunny day) I felt nothing short of astounded at the talent, charisma and apparent community of each grade and the school as a whole. As the grades took the stage, one by one, their growing confidence and presence was palpable. Watching the progression, I could almost see my little girl grow up before my eyes. As we said goodbye to the year just past, I found myself growing excited for the future.
The assembly ended with the first-graders giving their eighth-grade "buddies" a rose and their twelfth-grade "buddies" a lily. Again, I accelerated time for just a moment, picturing Emerson--looking so tiny next to these budding women--as an eighth-grader, standing with her first-grader, and me reminiscing about this very moment...and then my excitement for the future was coupled by a voice saying enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
The assembly was great, but really nothing could top a bunch of emlementary kids walking around the yard asking each other to sign their yearbooks afterward, as parents picnicked. Because many of the kids are so young, there was no rhyme nor reason to it. Just anyone...you, will you sign my yearbook? Or in the case of two first-graders, just sign all the names you can think of yourself.
The last thing Emerson yelled to her friend as we left was "I have to go...but you keep walking around and asking people to sign!" What a plan...
and when we got home I found this:
For clarity sake, this is Emerson's note to herself in her own yearbook. Emerson, I love first grade. I hope I love second grade too. Emerson. Classic. (Underneath is my note! Even moms get to sign yearbooks in the first grade!)
enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
Licking ice-cream cones to celebrate our second-grader. (Sure we've had plenty of ice-cream so far this year, but this one tasted like freedom...)
Climbing trees, revisiting old friends, and riding through the river in a horse drawn wagon, down to the lower fields to see the farmers cutting hay. Fresh cut hay, fresh vegetables growing, the delighted squels of children, a huge white dog following close behind. There is nothing like the early days on the farm. (Except maybe the later days...)
These photos were taken at the farm last year (from a blog never written), yet they invoke the anticipation welling up inside me on the eve of summer.
Grilling fresh fish and vegetables.
Picking the first radishes from our garden, brushing the dirt off, and eating them, right then. Right there.
Staying up late looking at my eighth-grade yearbook--laughing at the thirteen-year-old versions of the people we still know, at my hair, and at my math teacher who used to spit on people in the front row. Sharing old stories and loving how they became alive again in the eyes of my girls. Remebering how much I loved eighth grade.
enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
Saturday:
Baseball. (Or in our case, softball)
Splitting wood.
Staying up late to go to a party I wasn't able to attend (work), but I hear from my family it had everything summer has to offer: bbq, wiffle-ball, croquet, kids running in packs through fields...
Sunday:
Strawberries. Enough said.
Planting the rest of our garden.
Meeting friends in the park for some refreshments, Hide and Seek, Tag, and a little froggin' thrown in for good measure.
Grilling fresh pork and asparagus from the farm.
Staying up late reading, because the days are long and we have nowhere to be tomorrow...
enjoy this moment; enjoy this time...
Ahhh, summer...I will.
Monday, June 4, 2012
Goodbye Ben Smith
Ophelia had her last day of "school" Friday--another moment in a long list of moments that marks the bittersweet taste of my children growing older and of saying goodbye to wonderful phases and places I will never visit again as a parent. This most recent parting was especially poignant due to the fact that we truly were leaving the building, never again to return.
The Ben Smith Campus, as it is known today (it is, in fact, one building--albeit a very special one--and its yard) used to house the entire school in it's nascent stage, and, over time, many, many people have played here, taught here, smelled the aromas of oatmeal, applesauce, and homemade bread coming from the kitchen, held a child up high to look at a bird's nest in the eaves of the roof, climbed trees, swung, sledded, rolled hoops down the grassy hill...
In it's later stages, Ben Smith became home to the Early Childhood programs (although the first and second graders could be heard jumping and singing upstairs until just two years ago) and it was then that our family entered the scene--first in the parent-toddler program Ophelia is just finishing, then in the nursery (for Emerson) and as a teacher's assistant (for me). It was Emerson's first leap into the world without me, even though I was just one classroom over. It was where Ophelia sat on the kitchen floor and later practiced walking up and down the ramps that led to the two abutting classrooms, while I washed dishes and looked out the window into a yard of playing children. It was where my passion for Waldorf Education and Anthroposophy took root and was nourished. It was a place where all of us formed friendships and community that will carry us far into the future.
Earlier this year, in the spirit of integrating the entire school community on one campus, The Ben Smith Campus was sold. Next year, as the youngest nursery students play in their temporary play-yard, they will be able to watch high-school students move between classes. It is a wonderful step towards the future, but sad at the same time.
There are many people--some who have spent entire careers or childhoods at Ben Smith--whose memories out date and outnumber mine. But I feel I speak for every person, everywhere, who has ever--even for a moment--stepped foot in this magical space when I say, Thank You Ben Smith. You will be missed.
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