She developed a fever on Thanksgiving, and the congestion was so awful that she had a hard time breathing. All she wanted to do was nurse, and it was impossible, which was terribly frustrating. The fever worsened, and the two of us were up most of the night. My poor sweaty, snotty little girl. Every time I resettled her in the portable crib at the foot of our bed, I would lie there, staring at the ceiling, listening to her awful breathing noises and coughs, torn between exhaustion and wanting to pick her right back up again.
That little conflict never lasted long because within minutes she'd begin crying again, asking for me. And really, who wouldn't? If I felt like she sounded and my mother was a few feet away, I would call for her too.
Luckily my mom was, in fact, a few feet away! The next day as I talked with Mike about leaving a day early because Beatrice was so sick, it suddenly occurred to me that that was utter insanity. My mama was here, making us popcorn while we watched movies and offering to bring me tea. She was taking my big kids out to lunch and sharing her big fluffy dog with them. When my kids are sick and want me all the time, I often dream of my mom's caring presence. Caregivers are in serious need caregiving.
So in the scheme of things, the timing couldn't have been better. No work/child care scrambling, no neglecting the other children, just enforced down time with a hot little monkey who wrapped her sticky hands around my neck and could not bear to be parted from me.
Usually visits to Lancaster are full of visiting friends, trips to Central Market, knocking on neighbor's doors, and stops in my favorite shops, cafes, and galleries. I'm so happy to be there; I want to soak it all in. Oh yes, I tend to overdo. So to spend three days on my mother's couch, pinned beneath my flushed-face little one, watching the snow fall, snuggling with my family, talking with my aunt - it was different.
All that sitting and holding and sleep deprivation inspired a meditative mood. I kept noticing. (One of the perks of the stillness and singletasking children sometimes demand, especially as newborns). I kept noticing little things - everyday things - and sometimes, as I noticed, I felt awe before them. Wonder. Maybe, even, gratitude. Here are a few of the things that beckoned to me during the long weekend:
-the vertiginous sight, up through the bay window, of heavy white snowflakes falling through the gray sky
-miniature marvel: a perfect, smooth, shiny acorn
-my husband's clear eyes (true windows if ever there were a pair)
-the sunburst pattern of melted snow on the windshield, water beading out in every direction as we drove home, and the pleasure of anticipating Gabriel describing it to me, knowing he would also notice (and he did, within moments)
-the fast-paced drama of the East coast late autumn sky
-listening to the Beattles, those prolific wonders who supply my children with seemingly endless favorite songs, watching all three of their faces
-wily, wonderful, irrepressible squirrels
-Frances playing the piano with pride and pleasure
-a photograph in a large frame tucked behind my mother's armoire, discovered on one of my lingering visits to her sanctuary of a bedroom: a portrait of my great-grandmother Viola. In her face I saw my mother, my aunt, my sister. Maybe even myself. It was arresting.
-my children's growing bodies, ever longer and leaner
-my mother's profile
and finally,
-creamy pumpkin pie with a gingersnap crust.
I hope you also had a beautiful Thanksgiving.
xoxo