Recent history: a timeline

That first day: I helped out as usual with the Thursday rehearsal for the elementary school production of “Seussical Jr.” that never would be, which we didn’t know at the time, because, as we stood there in the hallway waiting to pick up our children and take them home and apparently not bring them back the next day, as we’d been instructed by the principal, we said things to one another like, “This will be two weeks or so, right?” and one parent said, “It’s not going to be two weeks.” She was, like, very, extremely correct.

And then: I wrote, because that is all I know how to do, it turns out (and I DEFINITELY do not know how to be a teacher). I wrote about when my friend Jack and I approached each other at the neighborhood creek with our BFF daughters and had to yell at them not to go too close to one another. Kindergartners who hadn’t seen eachother in a whopping 24 hours. It was like telling pent-up puppies to calm down, don’t play. I wrote about how much I missed school. I - what the hell - journaled. I joined the PTA board, and I wrote about that too. .

One day: I sat down to disinfect each item I’d brought home from the grocery store, leaning against the wall in the mud room (really a mud hallway) that leads from our garage door to our kitchen. I cleaned a can of chicken broth, then looked at the rest. So much. So many children (fine, only three). So hungry all the time and home was the only restaurant open. I started crying after cleaning just that one can and decided that if disinfecting groceries was going to be my undoing, it wasn’t worth being undone. We’d eat our dirty groceries and have takeout from the box it came in like normal. This decision was eventually justified and I continue to feel pretty cocky about it.

Summer: in Maine was an escape. I know it wasn’t, but it felt untouched. I wrote about the dock, which was a symbol. Everything seemed like a symbol. We were and remain lucky, lucky, lucky.

The fall of 2020: was not better although I swore I’d heard some expert on the news back when this all began telling us it would be, so, in the winter of 2020: we sat around fire pits like it was our job, toes slowly freezing past the point of feeling while our hearts swelled from the sheer joy of scrappy companionship. We hiked and we hiked, following blue diamonds and red dots and white squares and what have you, sometimes even with snowshoes, and - against all possible odds - I am a moderately experienced hiker now.

Biden won: We spent the day the news broke in Brooklyn hopping actual street parties and smiling til it hurt.

It was spring and vaccines: and it was going to be over! It was early summer: and I went to see a show in a small music venue and my friend and I took our masks off inside and had two beers, life was magic. We ate at restaurants with plans for more, much more.

Then: Delta and that was a golden, distant memory, as soon as it began.

Pandemic summer number two: felt more and less free, perhaps because we were all getting resigned to the lack of answers (and, lack of freedom, come to think of it). Maine was yet again a salve, but less untouched. We camped in New Hampshire, and I realized, having not done it for many years, how much I like camping because there isn’t a house to worry about and, hold up, I actually do love the wilderness. I sat at a picnic table with wine in a tin cup my friend gave me the minute I stepped out of the car and my sigh was part real, part metaphorical and very, very long. We climbed a mountain, those months of hikes paying off, then sat among the low clouds at the top, eating peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, most of us rejoicing and some of us, like Nora, stating resolutely that they’d never do it again, but smiling (I caught her).

And then, another academic year: and that’s now, the pandemic not past, but “still,” not, perhaps, surmountable, but live-able.

This morning: I am standing in out back with a landscaper, who we have hired to clean up our yard. The garden, so carefully curated by the previous owners, has become choked out by invasive species and we aren’t sure what’s what. Sitting on our patio, which should be an ultimate pleasure, has become a stressful enterprise as we stare at the towering, reedy white flowers that are surely weeds, easily plucked from the earth with a satisfying tug, but there are so many now. “They’re pretty!” says Aidy. And I reply that they are, but that they’re keeping the proper residents at bay…blackberry and butterfly bushes and plants we don’t yet know too well yet, don’t know the right names, but will learn, eager horticulturists that we are - and we really are!

It strikes me, standing here, chatting about the possibilities with this kind, knowledgable soul, how fortunate we are to have this option. I call to mind the narrator of the Talking Heads song, “Once In a Lifetime,” when he suggests that you might ask yourself, “Well, how did I get here?” This house. This life. Wild world, a modicum of control. It strikes me as I am standing here not three feet away from this person, who I met only recently, that we’ve all learned so very much so quickly, and that the proximity and discussion - about simple actions like redefining the flower bed - are so delightful because it was normal to miss these everyday delights. And right to celebrate them. How did I get here? Mostly I haven’t known the answer, but this history-in-real-time we’ve all been living means that, today, at least, I truly do.

Joy of seeing daughter do it her way (Philly Inquirer, 2013)

My 4-year-old daughter is accident-prone and absentminded, which, in youthful incarnations, are adorable qualities.

I watched Nora enter her pre-K classroom recently, face-plant, then quietly get up and make her way over to the breakfast table to sit with her friends. I recognized myself in the casual gracelessness of the act and felt a strange motherly pride watching her quick recovery; while many people say they're clumsy, I actually am.

Considering this side of her physical nature, I figured ballet lessons would be both good for her coordination and, also, at least mildly amusing. Having completed the spring season, I'm not sure about the first assumption, and am absolutely certain of the second.

I regularly observed her 45-minute classes with delight from behind glass-paned French doors, splitting my attention between my wayward 2-year-old son - who often accompanied me - and Nora, one of the smaller girls in class, her hair bun always askew; often smiling, often not exactly following instructions.

It wasn't mischief that motivated her. Nora's a stickler for the rules. Several eye tests earlier this year earned us a trip to the optometrist, and I've told friends that the minuscule pink glasses she wears fit my daughter's personality well. Now she's got the appropriate accessory to accentuate her judging glances. She's a bit of a tattletale and would rather inform me exactly how many times her brother has hit her ("Mommy! Gabe hit me THIRTEEN times!") than get away from the hitting in the first place.

Her penchant for obedience meant that beyond liking ballet because of its princess-related qualities, she appreciates the stringent regulations. Girls must wear leotards of a certain shade of pink. They must tuck in the strings on their slippers. She'd squirm while I did her hair, then take a step back and stand still as a statue, a slightly smug look on her face, indicating the extent and importance of her conformity.

Once inside the studio, however, under the guidance of a calm and patient teacher, she'd lose focus a bit, participating happily during the free-dancing-with-scarves portion of that day's class, but often staring at the ceiling during practice for the forthcoming recital, the culmination of a season's worth of instruction. I'd sometimes ask her afterward if she understood her role in the whole affair, if she understood that paying attention was important? She'd nod, say, "Yes, I do," and then we'd head home and make dinner.

So when the recital rolled around, I didn't tell the group of seven extended-family members attending that they'd be impressed with Nora's skills. Instead, I told them that they were "in for a treat."

Having volunteered to chaperone the young students backstage during the show, I instructed my husband to rally Nora's fans, arrive early to get good seats, and pack a bag of candy to be given to my son at the slightest hint of tantrum. I wasn't taking any chances.

Eventually, the girls were filing onto the stage, where they were supposed to stop at designated points and stand to begin their routine.

From there, the performance was a frenetic, hilarious whirl. Nora and the girl next in line - her accomplice, it seemed - stopped not at their designated spots, but right next to each other, shoulder to shoulder. Neither of them marched downstage, hands on hips, when cued, despite their teacher waving her arms and shout-whispering their names.

Nora jeté'd a beat after everyone else. She swayed her hips from side to side at one point, which I do not believe was part of the program. She looked at the ceiling.

Suppressing my laughter took almost all of my energy. But my psyche was waging another battle: trying to stand still, instead of racing onstage and joining my daughter in the correct moves; wanting to call her name, or simply go to her.

Nora didn't need me to do any of those things. She didn't care how she'd done. None of the children did. Marching offstage and resuming the games they'd been playing before being interrupted by the demands of show business, they reminded me of the fleetingness of young childhood. In several years, botched performances, harshly graded school papers, or misguided efforts directed at a myriad of chosen interests could end in tears, rather than indifference.

But Nora is only 4, and for her - for now - it's just another shining accomplishment, effervescent while it lasts.

At this age, a "big day" is big for parents. We watch as our children stumble and smile through the newness, feeling something like a gravitational pull toward where they stand - just momentarily - out of reach.


This essay originally appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer.