Upon becoming exactly that kind of mother

Some of you may know, because I talked to you about it excessively, that I had certain feelings about driving Nora to high school last year. The school is only a mile away, I’d say to anyone who would listen, and driving her there is an inconvenient interruption on already busy mornings. An out and back that negated the possibility of any “flow.” But I’d often do it anyway, grudgingly, with my ceramic mug of coffee along for the ride. I’d plop it down, all wobbly, right there in the console meant for non-breakable travel mugs. It was like I could not possibly emphasize enough, through words or actions, how inconvenient this was for me.

I wanted her (unless the weather was truly terrible) to walk. Or, I wanted us to make a plan concerning this repeated offense. Maybe J could drive her on his way to work, making this errant ride a purposeful one. But she never got in the habit of getting up early enough to walk and we never made a sensible plan, greeting each morning as though something - magic, or a sudden burst of willpower - might have intervened in the night, solving the issue for us without the practical matter of having to do the solving part.

This year, though, a good friend who lives a bit farther out in town transferred to Nora’s high school and, starting on the first day of school, was dropped off at our house early enough that the two of them, they could walk. Walk and enjoy each other’s company and some conversation before the day began, something I’d suggested many times, referencing other friends who live - I mean! - right on the way to school if one was - for instance! - walking there. And this habit of walking has continued, with the exception of her friend’s mom driving them both on the recent mornings too dark and cold in the very depths of winter (for which I am eternally grateful).

So, on a recent morning when Nora showed up outside our bedroom door to explain that her friend was sick and what, exactly, was she going to do because, at that point, it was “really too late to walk,” it was just like old times. But without my immediate and aggressive resentment. It had been too long! I’d grown unaccustomed. My mug three-quarters full of hot coffee, my pajamas still on, I knew my part from muscle memory. “I could take you,” I said.

I drove her like before, but now charmed at the opportunity. I used to use these drives to deliver a lecture on the reasons I should not be partaking in them, but this time I inquired about her schedule that day, chattered about politics; the attempts at eager discourse a teenager really hates first thing in the morning. Nora and I often discuss the mismatch of our energy: I’m ready to take on the world and talk out its issues upon waking, while Nora comes to life around 8:30 p.m., just as I am descending into the depths of exhaustion and the inability to talk at all. We laugh at the incongruity.

The thing about an oldest child is that you live through every stage of growing up, and of parenting, for the first time with them. Over, and over, again. It’s difficult, impossible really, to imagine what you’ll miss some day.

I think sometimes about those older, more knowledgeable moms, grandmothers, too, who tell the younger ones - who once told me - that it “goes so fast.” Such a trite phrase, such an overused maxim. And yet, I’m her now, eyeing the woman with a fussy child at the grocery store, desperate to say something, wise enough to stay quiet, because it’s the kind of point you have to come to yourself. So I attempt to impart my learned experience through osmosis, throwing brain waves across the produce section. Hold on, I think in her direction. Hold on tight.

Forty-seven things I am grateful for on my 47th birthday

  1. The way the air feels - so cold, and still and full of promise - when I head out my front door and make my way to the sidewalk to pick up the newspaper on weekends in the winter.

  2. Nora’s sense of humor and how laughing with her reminds me of the way I used to laugh with my friends in high school, once getting me and my friend Mark actually kicked out of class, as well as many other almost-instances of the same.

  3. The incredibly close knit community we have in our neighborhood, where everyone checks in, and helps out and gets together. Where we barely go anywhere without seeing someone we know, and the central hang is a video rental place that’s also a coffee shop, community center, a music and special events venue, and an after-school gathering spot.

  4. People with an irresistible, contagious love of life, who focus on the here and now.

  5. That tomorrow can be different. It just can be.

  6. That tomorrow you can lie in bed all day and watch shows.

  7. That tomorrow you can go to Scotland, or Austria, or a grocery store that is not the one you normally go to, and therefore - exciting.

  8. That the second season of “Severance” is out!

  9. Making plans to tour colleges.

  10. The bittersweet knowledge that I won’t be able to keep my travel-obsessed, adventurous boy with me forever, because the world keeps calling and calling, and he wants to go. One day he’ll be free to move about on his own, and he’ll see it all.

  11. Good, hard, invigorating exercise and, especially now in my later (fine!) forties, stretching.

  12. How Aidy writes me love notes so often, depositing them in the bedroom when I’m not looking, complete with envelope and stickers, in order to surprise me, but can’t wait, and shortly after asks, “did you see I left you a note?” And how they are always so sweet but also, every single time without fail, take it a tiny bit too far, like “I love you so much I don’t know what to do” or, “I am SO SORRY and SO SAD you are feeling tired today” or, “I’m trying not to bother you but Gabe is chasing me and I can’t handle living in this house anymore.”

  13. Long-running book clubs.

  14. Warm greenhouses on cold days.

  15. All the novels I have not read, and how I could make a very compelling stack of them.

  16. Funny Instagram reels, and that I will never learn how to use TikTok, but at least I’m not watching reels on Facebook like some very elderly-leaning people (it’s my husband).

  17. All my favorite podcasts, especially Search Engine, Smartless and The Daily.

  18. Political commentary, which I consume like it’s sports.

  19. The way the little bit of snow that fell recently made the sidewalk sparkle on the way to school.

  20. The winter farmer’s market, and all those extremely fancy mushrooms on display that I think I’m going to buy but never do.

  21. My friends. Our therapeutic discussions, and weekends away, and epic text threads. Their excellent advice and hilarious commentary and the very real, very meaningful knowledge that we are here for one another.

  22. How every time I talk on the phone to my mom she says that “nothing much is new” and I say the same and then we talk for like 45 minutes and there is lots that is new it turns out.

  23. Blank notebooks.

  24. Book proposal ideas.

  25. Sharon Salzberg’s annual February meditation challenge.

  26. All the plays to see and museums to visit and traditions to uphold.

  27. The sheer acceptance of this stage of life where diving into a home improvement project is a true thrill.

  28. Lunch hour at work when we are all in the office.

  29. IKEA.

  30. This new Ina Garten memoir I’m about to get into.

  31. That I scored the very best family and in-laws in the entirety of human history.

  32. Getting into the flow of an excellent new playlist; when each song, every note, sounds too good to be true.

  33. When my kids come home in the afternoon and the house is once-again bustling; contrasting that with how I used to drive home slowly from social nights out when they were little, savoring the quiet for a few extra moments, because little kids are so all-encompassing and I longed for a glimpse of my former self. How it all changes all the time, parenthood. And the only way to learn it is to live through it.

  34. Cough drops.

  35. All the different kinds of tea! There are, honestly, too many kinds.

  36. How New Haven is such a small but engaging, approachable city, with culture, great restaurants and the best pizza in the world, just accept it.

  37. Sitting at the bar.

  38. How Gabe made us all crepes constantly right after we returned from France, and J bought ingredients to make fondue. How trips stay with and inspire you. How they remind you that the world is so big, and you are so small.

  39. The Pomodoro technique for scheduling work days when it’s tough to get going, and how I think I am not a person susceptible to productivity hacks, but of course I so am.

  40. Nora and Gabe’s current nightly ritual of watching an episode or two of “Brooklyn 99” in the sunroom, the rest of us (affectionately) excluded, and how I was reminded recently of when they were so little, five and two-and-a-half or so, ambling along the seawall in our old neighborhood, and me thinking, “This is probably the cutest stage of my life,” but how this solidly teenage period of theirs is (in the way all the stages feel, somehow) the best one yet.

  41. A martini with olives; an ice-cold Manhattan; a Negroni to start the evening.

  42. How our house is so loud, and also having the house to myself.

  43. When Maisie won’t come in from out back and we find her in the corner of the yard with a tennis ball and her paw up, like, “GUESS WHAT I HAVE AN IDEA.”

  44. School concerts, and all the other musical events that fill up our calendars.

  45. Bathrobes, slippers.

  46. The teachers and coaches and specialists and therapists and doctors and nurses and everyone that works with young people, who are so very good at what they do.

  47. Always and forever, knowing that most nights will end watching shows and reading books with J in bed (despite the fact that when he settles in he does so in an overenthusiastic fashion, thrashing all the blankets around, every single time, J) and having coffee in bed with him to start each morning.