Things I'm Thinking About

Year: 2015 (Page 7 of 10)

A Gift

One Christmas, I made flannel nightgowns for my four daughters. They were stair-step sizes, the oldest 9, the next 7, then 5, and the youngest 3. The girls loved them and wore them every night. On cold winter mornings, they sat on the heater vents on the floor, waiting for the heater to blow and puff their gowns into little balloons of warmth.

I had chosen an easy pattern, without any buttons or buttonholes, so the neck openings were a little big. On my littlest girl in particular, one side would always slip, falling off her shoulder.

When that littlest girl was 16, the sister closest to her age moved out to go to college. She claimed the newly-vacated room, which had more space and light. Cleaning out the cast-offs she left behind when she changed rooms, I found that little pink nightgown, wadded up in the back of her closet.

I held it up, hem to the floor, trying to picture that little girl, tugging at her pjs to cover up her tiny, soft shoulder. How could she have been so little, this woman-girl with attitude and plans big enough to fill the house? In my heart she’s still that little girl, even when my mind loses track of her in that  grown-up person standing in front of me. This time the nightgown is gift to me, a tangible memory.

I know you’ve heard it so many times–how fast they grow up. We older moms say it because we still can’t believe it. We hope maybe you can learn from our experience,  and make time keep it’s boundaries better, keep it from rushing ahead so fast. 

Signs of Life

There’s some sort of wrench on the table–a bike tool–and bike parts, frames, wheels and chains cluttering the front porch. There’s a pair of muddy cleats in the corner, and matching muddy hiking boots on the porch steps. Smelly socks and sweats hang out of the laundry basket. Text books with papers stuffed inside are stacked on the counter. Signs of a teenage son living here.

There’s so much life in it–things in process, used and about to be used again, things to fix and wash and get ready for the next event.

He’s the last kid living at home, and he does spread out. He’s taking over the space left open by the others’ absence. Maybe it’s just nice to stretch out after living with so many people. Maybe he misses the commotion, so he creates it with his own stuff.

Whatever the reason, I like it. I miss the commotion too: the coming and going, the scheduling and coordinating, the feeding and the packing up and unloading.

It is nice to have it quiet, I guess–to put my computer down and return to find it in the same spot, to not have to do laundry every day, to throw together small, easy meals. Right now, though, I relish the bother of shuffling a little clutter around–signs of life.

31 Days of Writing: Nest Half Full

Fall is here, time to get back to routine after the free-for-all days of summer. To get back into blogging, I’m taking up the 31 Days challenge to write every day in October on one topic.

I’ve been busy the past few weeks, with kids and company coming and going, and I realized that even though I am getting closer to having an “empty nest” as children graduate from high school and move on to college and life on their own, my nest is rarely empty. It’s more like a half-full nest.

There are kids coming home for events like birthdays and  holidays, or just to make cookies or pick apples for canning applesauce. There are projects that need a mom’s help, like buying and assembling a new bed from IKEA, and there are days that someone phones in for some home time and encouragement. Since our home often has free bed space, there’s also been a steady stream of people who need a place to stay coming through and keeping the nest from getting too quiet or dusty.

I have been approaching this season of life warily, afraid that I might be too lonely, certain that I would need to find something big and meaningful to fill my life when my mothering career winds down. Now that I can see this new stage of life just up ahead, I’m thinking maybe I’m not entering retirement just yet.

There still seems to be some mothering to do.

Day 1: Signs of Life

Day 2: A Gift

Day 3: Game Day

Day 4: I Sit and Think

Day 5: You Can Always Come Home

Day 6: Will I Ever Get My Laundry Done?

Day 7: Mother Worry

Day 8: Beck and Call

Day 9: Two Terrible Words

Day 10: The-Not-So Organized Mom

Day 11: Class Time

Day 12: The Come and Go Room

Day 13: Write That Stuff!

Day 14: Be The Mom

Day 15: Let’s Have Coffee

Day 16: Hold On!

Day 17: Gathering In

Day 18: Sunday Night at DIA

Day 19: Cooking for a Crowd

Day 20: The New Me

Day 21: Career Mom

Day 22: Low Honest

Day 23: Is Your Name Frank?

Day 24: Friday Night In

Day 25: Full Closets

Day 26: On the Same Page

Day 27: Four Little Notes

Day 28: The Birthday Juggle

Day 29: Taking a Step Back

Day 30: The Costume Boxes

Day 31: Yippee I made it! Nest Half Full Again

Wildflower Baby

It’s a rainy day, and I’m sitting inside with a cup of tea. Im feeling a little itchy after finding a tick in the cabin. It must have hitched a ride in here on our clothes when we took a walk to the meadow earlier.

On the way down to the meadow, we stopped to mourn a little baby deer that lay dead near our path, stretched out on its side like it was sleeping. My son had found him on an early morning walk, when he also saw a big doe with a living fawn hiding in the tall grass near by, maybe the twin of the lifeless one on the path. He felt the doe watching him, trying to distract him from her concealed fawn, whose perked ears peeked from behind a sage bush.

This boy wanted to stay behind as we continued to the meadow, outlining the fawn’s little body in purple asters, putting Mariposa lilies on his side and over his eye, and few yellow sulphur flowers over his tiny heart. I joined him on our way back up, plucking blossoms and handing them to him as he worked.

Nothing is obviously wrong with the lifeless fawn, out in the open alone. It’s a perfect little deer with bright white spots. small shiny black hooves, wide white-tufted ears, and long lashes. His open eye stares blankly, his tiny muzzle, its nostrils still, looks velvety soft. I wonder what happened? Did he get lost, separated from his mama when he ran away, startled by a noise? Was something wrong with him when he was born?

Now it’s raining so hard, soaking the little baby and the flowers around him. Sadness hovers at the edges of my mind. Just a baby, so still and sweet. It seems like a waste of a perfect little creature. I wonder if deer mothers mourn their lost fawns? It was right, I think, for us to mark his loss, even if he was just a common mule deer. Maybe his mother was watching.

A few days later, some of the kids pass by the place we’d seen the baby deer. He is gone, and they follow drag marks a few yards away, where they see a matted spot, the impression left by some large animal–a bear?–who had camped out and eaten the small deer, leaving only a few bones and a large pile of scat behind. The fawn is gone. I’m glad his life wasn’t wasted, decaying slowly in the grass. It nourished another life.

The world outside the cabin has its own rules and rhythms that seem harsh to me, but also clean and right somehow.  I am separate from that wild, natural world–but I’m also part of it.

I knew I didn’t want to look at the black, spiky forms of dead pines that dominated the view from the deck anymore. They had been green and beautiful a few years ago, but the pine beetle had destroyed many large, lush trees, reducing them to creepy, gnarled sticks scratching at the sky. I just wanted them gone, and with them, the sad memory of how many trees were killed by the pine beetle.

I felt like our beautiful mountain retreat had been ruined by the bugs; the landscape was diminished and unlikely to recover. Those trees had taken a lifetime to reach that size. One of the largest trees still had a tire swing tied to it’s branch, swaying empty in the breeze. Sitting on the deck, we knew which trees were dead, even in the dark, by the way they didn’t move in the wind. They were rigid and unresponsive to the breezes that had the living trees swaying, limbs bouncing. The last pinecones, clinging to the bare upper branches, looked like perched birds, eerie clusters of dark, still shapes.

My sister-in-law and her boyfriend came to visit for a few days, and BF was looking for a project. He may have seen this one listed on a piece of construction paper on the fridge, where I had posted some ideas for the boys to work on. He asked one of them which trees I wanted removed, and then he picked up the chainsaw and started cutting. I didn’t really notice until six trees were already down. He moved to the east side of the cabin, and took down some more large ones–now with the help of Steve and the boys–about 14 trees in all. 

They’re gone. My vision shifts to the distant wooded ridge, and down grassy draws to new stands of trees. The ridge, though it has its own share of beetle-killed trees, is still mostly green and vibrant, with more healthy trees than dead. The meadows and grassy slopes are full of wildflowers and young aspen and pine trees, some of them already 5 or 6 feet tall.

I knew what I didn’t want to see, but I hadn’t considered what I would see when the sad reminders of the plague of tree-killing insects are gone. Recovery is already happening.

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