Thursday, January 29, 2009

Dear Keren

Written while flying across the Pacific, coming home for the funeral of my little granddaughter, Keren.

Dear Keren,

I first met you on a gray September afternoon six years ago. Your dad called me and said, “You have a granddaughter, Keren Elyse.” “How is she?” I asked. “She’s OK,” he said, and from the tension in his voice, I knew you were far from that.

My first glimpse of you was in the NICU of St. Joe’s, a tiny scrap of humanity stretched on a warming table, surrounded with doctors and nurses, dotted with probes, screaming bloody murder. A tiger. Those first weeks were tense but you hung on to life.

Your parents are my heroes - sweet, gentle and fiercely protective. Caring for you has never been easy but your parents are servants. Your mom comforts and soothes you and you dad, well, no task is beneath him or beyond his reach. You have been his little princess, his dance partner with him doing the steps and you the belly laughs.

I’ve learned much from you, little girl. Patience, for one. Your pushy sisters scream and yell if they are hungry, cold, or uncomfortable but you just sit and wait till someone remembers your needs. Because you couldn’t walk, you have taught me to sit still, not something I do well. Because you must be fed slowly, you have taught me that haste indeed makes waste, and things done slowly get done in due time. Because you have reached out in unconditional love to everyone around you and drawn them close, you have taught me to not be a respecter of persons.

Returning last summer after several months, your smallest sister was a little skittish of me. Your middle sister told it straight, “You’ve been gone long. It’s time you came home.” But you, my little one, just burst into sunlight grins and wrapped your arms around me. In my heart I heard you say, “Welcome home, Grammy. I knew you’d come.”

If you see me weeping, it is because I miss you, but don’t think I am sad for you. I have ached for your limitations and longed to have you tell me your thoughts. If your sisters talk too much, you were the balance, but always I knew you had much to say if you could have had words.

Yesterday I think your Heavenly Father reached down and said, “Come home, Keren. Leave that tight, stiff little body and come dance with me. I want to see you run and skip. I want you to pick flowers and hold water in your hands. I want you free.”

Your wheelchair sits in the corner. As wheelchairs go, it’s pretty slick. I love the big butterfly embroidered on the seat back in bright colors and your name, Keren - Strength, in blue.

It’s empty now. You don’t need it.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

The Little People

Our family has always called them “The Little People.” The Little People are in fact, in truth, quite short. “Small in stature, mighty in valor” says a plaque in their kitchen. Also quite true. We first knew them as students over thirty years ago, then as young marrieds, then as young parents, then as parents of teens, and somewhere along the journey we all morphed into middle age.

Like many people whose lives have intertwined with ours, our children know each other from occasional visits. In the back of my mind is a dusky memory of a summer evening years ago at their home on the hill. Looking out front I saw all six of our respective offspring ranged along the curb, in age rank: tall, short, tall, short, tall, short. Great Danes do not have Pekinese puppies, and Pekes don’t have great Danes.

Our daughters, of course, never had a ghost of a chance to be short.

In recent years the home of The Little People has become our B&B when we are visiting a college campus near them. Their kids are grown and the upstairs is all ours. We can come and go in the comfortable friendship of years.

The Little People’s home is large, but everything is designed for those who are small of stature. Brushing my teeth at a basin I look like a giraffe at a watering hole. Mirrors show a great view of my neck. Beds built for short people long ago led us to commandeer two rooms upstairs for sleeping.

We laugh at the differences.

But we recognize that size has no bearing on friendship, and minds are matched not by stature but by common goals and interests. Rousing games of Settlers depend on a cross of wills, not swords. Relishing sushi demands only a love of Asian food. Chopsticks fit any size hand. Friends are whole people.

Last weekend our tallest daughter joined us with The Little People. Great conversation and games. After she left, their second son came by for a visit. More conversation and games. One generation enjoying the next and vice versa.

Their post college daughter was home over Christmas break. When her parents mentioned that we were coming to visit, she asked a simple question.

“Do they know that we call them The Tall People?”

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

White world

The first time it snows, you notice. Everyone runs to the supermarket and buys bread and milk. Just in case. And the next few times there’s talk of closing the office or schools. Then the reality sets in that this isn’t going to stop. Get used to it. Life can’t afford to stop.

This is a different winter.

No more wondering what the weather will be tomorrow. You know. No more waking in the middle of the night to see if the predicted snow really did come. You know. You know the drill. The stuff is deep and still coming.

You wake in the dark and get ready for work in the dark. Gortex jacket, gloves, scarf, hat. Some mornings the night’s dump is a light enough drift to use the broom, but most days it’s the blower and shovel. House to car in the garage is easy, but the minute you hit the drive you hear the squeaking crunch of tires on dry powder.

Too cold to be slippery. Too cold to freeze and thaw. Yet somehow, a dash to the mailbox or across the yard in shirt sleeves doesn’t feel all that bad.

Life takes on a rhythm of black and white. Black road surfaces, white drifts. Black tree limbs, white etching. Black pine boughs, white frosting on every branch.

Some days it’s all you can do to keep ahead of the piles. The Tech, a Michigander to the core, takes on the challenge. Mikey, retired next door, also rises to the task. The blowers hit the drives simultaneously in a race to see who can clean it up fastest. Then two hours later they are back at it. Cell phone communication keeps on through the day.

“What do you think? Hit it again or wait an hour?”
“Maybe wait.”
“I don’t know. I’m heading out before then. Can’t let it get too deep.”

The guys who plow for a living are making a killing. And dropping over with exhaustion.

Sunshine eventually peeks through the drifts at some point most days, turning the world to glitter. Clouds scud across a powder blue sky tinged with pink by evening. Dark closes in early, ending the day as it began. Comfort food beckons from the kitchen.

Time will come when the temps will rise and a mere 40 degrees will feel like summer. Lawns and streets and trees will emerge and take on shape. Gingerbread houses, eaves deeply frosted, will melt into normality. The sun will rise before eight.

But for now, it’s deep and white. Cold and dark. And totally delightful.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Generations

When I got word that the very elderly mom of friends had slipped into eternity, I realized there was no way we could attend her funeral six hundred miles away. But, I thought, the Driver is close by and maybe she’d go for us. After all, this is a family that has intertwined with ours for decades and she’d see people she enjoys from around the globe.

A phone call later I encountered skepticism. “But, I never even met the woman. How can I go to her funeral?”

“I’ll email you the details,” I countered. “Just think about it.”

The next day an email came back. “Yes, I think I will go. There are so many people coming that I know and they want me to bring family pictures.” The number of friends had been mentioned on the initial call, but funeral attendance is not the habit of 20-somethings.

The phone rang again yesterday with the Driver in fine form. “Oh, it was great. There were so many multiple parts of the family there. I caught up with the kids who are now in college, and with the old grandmother on the other side, and with all the family in from far away. They all send their love.”

“Funerals are not about the dead,” I said, “But about the living.”

“I know that,” she said. “But it seemed odd to go to the funeral of someone I don’t even know.”

“You do know her,” I pursued. “You’ve known her daughter and son all your life, you took care of her grandchildren in Hong Kong, her extended family through marriage are some of your favorite people in the world. You’ve been in their homes, sat at their tables, listened to their stories. These people are part of your essential fiber.”

Part of becoming a genuine adult is learning how to add up the pieces of life into a whole. Learning when it is appropriate to show up and be counted. Learning that a small effort one day pays huge rewards in life friendship on later days. Learning that people remember that you remembered and that they appreciate your presence far more than you can imagine.

Our funerals of late have been highly peopled with young people and children. It’s all about living and building the future.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Taking it down

Tradition tells me to leave the trappings of Christmas up till Three Kings’ Day on January 6, but the calendar and time available dictate that Christmas comes down on the first Saturday after New Year’s Day.

Taking it down is a bittersweet experience. The gifts are long unwrapped and put away. The bubbling excitement in the eyes of the children has tempered into experience. The family gatherings are finished. The chocolates are eaten. The feasting has ended. Even the lights are looking a little passé despite the still dark of midwinter.

Each year I carefully dismantle what a month ago was unpacked with delight. Each piece is examined and repacked. The tree ornaments are once more tucked away as deep memories flash by my mind at each touch. The red and green and gold are packed into boxes, the lights stowed, the cookie tins tucked away. The last to go are the crèche, each one carved of wood in some distant part of the world, each one reminding me of the timeless story of Christmas.

Choosing a Galway CD as background music brings the same sort of satisfaction of a light desert after a rich and overwhelming meal. Much as I enjoy the music of Christmas, I am sated with brass and bells. A simple flute suffices.

Taking down Christmas is as much a ritual as putting it up. The snow glitters outside and the chimneys across the way steam in the late day of early January. Sun sets on Christmas but dawns on opportunities.

Time to look forward. Time to begin new projects. Armed with the life brought by Christmas, the new year begins.