For the first 50 years of my life, my perfectionist self mistakenly believed it was all about knowing more, getting it right, planning, attempting to prevent bad things from happening, and keeping all of my chicks in a row. It took me this long to discover that the JOURNEY is all that matters. This quote from Gilda Radner sums it all up:

"I wanted a perfect ending. Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next.
"


Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Grief

Grief is a funny thing.

My mother passed away 11 years ago.
My father passed away 9 years ago.


I grieved deeply in the days, weeks, and months afterward.

I have always believed that grief is something that
lessens over time.  Life goes on.  As you continue without
your loved ones, you build more and more memories 
of times that do not include them anymore.
Old memories fade.

Life has a way of proving you wrong.

My aunt passed away last week, so I drove home 
to Burlington for her wake and funeral.  I now have only
one aunt and one uncle left, so my family consists of
cousins, their husbands and wives, and their children.

Funerals are an important time for me, 
not only to grieve the loss of a family member,
but to reconnect with the family that is remaining.

My parents, of course, were not there physically,
but there were photos of them on the memory boards,
and stories told about them by my uncle and cousins.
I was in the town where I grew up which in itself
floods me with happy memories.

I started feeling it during the funeral mass.  
The priest was a childhood friend.  We were in
an older Catholic church with old wooden pews 
and kneelers.  There were those little clips in the pews
that I remember so well.  I have clipped many pairs
of mittens gloves to them during mass.  The rituals 
of the mass, although different at times, 
were comfortably
the same.

The funeral service ended and I began the walk to
the neighboring cemetery where another aunt, uncle,
and cousin are buried.  

It was at this point that I was flooded with a very
intense feeling of yearning for my parents. 

I could visualize them walking with us, among my family
members, arm in arm, my father's white hair gleaming
in the sunshine.

I was grieving my parents, but this was definitely nothing 
like the grief I felt during the days and months following
their deaths.  Then, my grief was tempered by the knowledge
that they were no longer in pain, or distracted by my concern
for the surviving parent.

Now, I was just missing them.
Intensely.  
I cried, but it actually felt good.
I welcomed it.
I felt close to them.

It's so easy living in Connecticut to go through my days
without many reminders of my parents.  There are times
that I get the urge to pick up the phone and call my Mom.
Or times that I wish I could call my Dad and get his
advice on how to fix little things around the house.

But I have never experienced grief like this before.

My life continues without them,
but they are not only with me still,
they are inside me:

My mother's sense of humor and compassion.
My father's creativity and patience.


I expected to reconnect with family at this funeral.
And I did reconnect, but in ways I never expected.

Grief is just like love.
It evolves over time,
and 
it never goes away.









Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Joy

Recently, while spending a few hours at the beach,
I listened to something that made a 
huge 
impression on me.


It was a TED talk by Ingrid Fetel Lee entitled
 "Where Joy Hides and How to Find It". 

She began by discussing the difference between 
happiness and joy.

Happiness is more of an "overall longer-term feeling". 

Joy is something that happens "in the moment". 
Things that bring joy are passing pleasures,
yet extremely important to our lives.

Bubbles.
Rainbows.
Fireworks.
Hot Air Balloons.
Kittens.

Feeding a chipmunk.

The last one is actually something that happened on our
vacation in Lake George this summer, and I have photos
to illustrate it.


On the 3rd day of our vacation,  my daughter, Kerry, noticed
a chipmunk scrounging in the grass for the crumbs of our
s'mores the night before.


Kerry walked slowly toward the chipmunk and held out
a piece of cracker for him.  She waited patiently and it paid off.


She named him Chester.


Chester demonstrated where the term
"chipmunk cheeks" 
comes from.


Three days later,  we noticed a chipmunk eating leftover yogurt
on the breakfast table on the deck.  It ran off to the rock wall 
when people arrived, but kept an eye on us nonetheless.


I grabbed my camera, and the girls went to work to entice
the chipmunk to eat out of their hands.  Kerry said it was Chester,
but we didn't believe her (there were hundreds of chipmunks
running around).


It didn't take long for "Chester" to come closer.




He first took a cracker from Kerry,




and carried it away to eat it.


Then he was back for a cracker with peanut butter.


The peanut butter made him linger a little longer
and even put his little hand on Annie's finger to steady himself!


This time, when he got back to his perch, 
he busied himself cleaning the peanut butter 
off his little hands.




But he wasn't done yet.


The next time he came back was to eat some yogurt 
from a spoon.


Joy.

For a brief time,  we were privileged to 
gain the trust of this small creature.

It brought us joy.

The idea that little things in life can make a big difference
is something that intrigues me a great deal.

I'll be posting more about what brings "joy" to my life.

I also want to note that Kerry was right. 
This was "Chester".
How do I know?
When I zoomed into the pictures, 
Chester had an identifying cut in his right ear.