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Archive for the ‘Parenting’ Category

I just came back from visiting my son, now 21. As I think about my next steps in the world—I’ve moved into my third rental space in less than two years—it seems like a good time to post this draft of a blog post I found in my files recently. I’m not sure why it never got pushed live when I wrote it over a year ago.

 

Burning Down the Room

 

Burn it all down. Room by room. Tree by tree.

I was in a trauma counseling session, trying a technique my doctor had recommended called brainspotting. It’s based on EMDR, and doesn’t seem significantly different to me. In any case, I’d been having a lot of panic attacks and my doctor thought this would help.

I had headphones on, playing music that randomly went from ear to ear, so that both sides of my brain could process the episode I was grappling with. My eyes were open and focused on a single point in the room, I think to give my mind a point of “rescue.”

I’d been cooped up all winter with a broken ankle, so it hadn’t mattered so much that whenever I had to go anywhere I had to put my head down between my knees for several minutes, maybe an hour. But now that I needed to catch up on a bunch of tasks as well as move forward in my life, this type of handicap was unacceptable.

We started by focusing on a wildfire that affected my neighborhood the previous fall. I didn’t think the fire itself was the problem. It was a metaphor for many other disasters in my life, many lovingly built structures that had been destroyed. I was having a hard time finding shelter. Believing in shelter.

The trauma specialist told me to burn the whole house down. And the entire surrounding forest. And then see what happened. In my mind’s eye, obviously, not for “real.” But when you mentally enact these scenarios with these headphones on, you’re in a slightly hypnotized state, and the affect is high. It does feel real.

house8However, it wasn’t as hard as I’d expected to burn down most of my little house. The kitchen I’d designed so carefully. The walls I’d stayed up all hours mudding and painting. The floors I’d refinished. My wonderful soaker tub. Those beautiful windows and skylights. The gleaming golden ceiling. The “spirit in the sky” turquoise paint in the hallway. Bye to the Persian rugs chosen for these spaces. I had to close my eyes, but all the bookshelves my brother built and all their contents went to house3ash without the world collapsing into a black hole.

It was harder to see the old lilacs and the monster Ponderosas go. Some of those trees are among the oldest in the canyon.

I stopped when I came to Julian’s room. I mentally stood in the doorway for twenty minutes or more, keeping the flames at my back.

What’s happening? the trauma specialist asks.

I’m trying to burn my son’s room, I say.

Oh, she says. We’d both been expecting other, older events to come up, stuff from my own childhood, as the walls of my house fell.

It wasn’t what this room was, but all the things it wasn’t. It was never sunnyhouse7 and welcoming, like the south-facing corner room Julian had in our pre-divorce home, with its warm, pine-paneled walls. I was never able to get the furniture arranged so the room in this “new” house felt right. Partly because while we lived there Julian was at an age where whatever I said wasn’t going to be received.

There were things I found in this room, over the years, things I didn’t want to find. In some cases the use was all too clear. I never figured out what some of those other things were for.

This room was empty a lot of the time. When you’re divorced, you only get to be a parent half time. If there’s a hint of conflict—and when isn’t there?—with a teenager, there’s always the other parent, promising no curfew.

Standing, in my mind, in Julian’s doorway as the flames try without success to eradicate all of that—the rap and the Sponge Bob posters with their mixed messages, the other signs I found, almost too late, of his psychic pain, I realize it’s not that I don’t want to let it go. It’s that I don’t want to let go of the hope that I can roll back time and fix it. THEN.

But how’s Julian NOW? the trauma specialist asks, gently.

I want to say he’s fine, but then I realize that’s just a statement of faith, or even hubris, like some guy from Arkansas who knows nothing of foreign policy who pontificates on Iran. Julian’s in college, and I see him once or twice per year. I had the money in savings to pay for tuition, but not much extra for travel. All I have to go on is what he tells me over the phone, and what he posts on Facebook, which isn’t much.

What’s your relationship like?

Pretty good for long distance, I say. But we don’t talk or text every day like some parents do. He tells me what he’s thinking about as a consequence of his physics seminars. I listen to his music uploads on Soundcloud. He shares his thoughts on relationships.

THEN WHAT ARE YOU WORRIED ABOUT? she asks. Do you realize how many parents don’t have this?

I don’t know, I say. I wasn’t the kind of mother I thought I’d be. I never made this room into what I imagined. In fact, I was sort of thinking this house was just the first post-divorce house, and then I’d give him a *real* home.

So it’s okay if this house burns?

In a way. If I had a better house to go to. But that never happened. And now it doesn’t matter, because he’s gone anyway. It just all seems…irrelevant… now. I didn’t finish the nest, really, and now what’s the point?

I kept trying. I kept thinking tomorrow would be another day. But it feels like we’re out of tomorrows.

So now it’s time to go build your nest, she says. What would that look like?

Good question. I never for one minute thought I’d have a tough time answering that. I’ve always been an independent person, with a strong sense of who *I* am. But maybe because I also had a strong sense of WAIT, GET BACK HERE, KID, I’M NOT DONE WITH YOU, I wasn’t quite as ready for this next step as I expected. 

I move out of the doorway and let the roof come down on the last room standing.

But I don’t feel right about it.

 

Hat tip to Andi O’Conor’s blog, Burning Down the House.

<<Please note that post draws on an exercise, a guided meditation of sorts, that took place in a therapy session. The purpose of the session was to process fear and uncover underlying issues (I’m simplifying). As those who have been following this blog know, there was a fire, but it did not reach my house. I am not literally planning to burn down my house, nor have I ever burned any structure, intentionally or otherwise.>>

 

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It took 22 years to come to this.

I never knew what to do about letting Jacob’s ashes go.

But I am taking a creative writing fellowship on the East Coast this fall. My ex-husband is also moving, and our other son is in college on the West Coast. It didn’t seem right to put Jake in storage, or to drag him around the country.

It’s pretty hard for parents to design a memorial for their own child, especially when they have no religious community. When it’s a baby it can be even more difficult, because no one else knew the person or has any memories to share.

In the last few months I’ve been getting a strong sense that it’s time. And finally some ideas for how to go about it.

Return to the source, the place where he was made. Where both our boys were made.

Eldora1

Climb to an overlook on Spencer Mountain, where I used to hike, ski, or snowshoe nearly every day. Sometimes I was alone, sometimes with a friend, sometimes pregnant with one boy or the other, and sometimes with the second son on my back or at my side. (And always with a dog or several.)

Hold up the urn, a hollowed-out piece of an aspen branch, and show Jake the view he never got to see with his eyes.

SpencerView

Point out the house he would have lived in.

Houseview2

Kiss some of the ashes, taste them on my tongue, and offer them to the wind that slips out of the jet stream to help make Eldora such a place of power.

Then lead my ex-husband and my living son back down the mountain to “the rock,” a boulder jutting into the rapids in North Boulder Creek.

P6120417

When I was depressed and drained I would lie there and draw on the heat of the rock, the roar of the water, and all that melting light from the glaciers above. I did this when pregnant with one son and then the other and after Julian was born I brought him here for picnics in the summer. I took him snowshoeing here in the winter, when the hurl of the wind supplanted the thunder of the melt. “Icy ri-ber” was one of Julian’s first concepts.

As the three of us approach the rock, there are many shared ah-ha’s and remember thises and remember thats. But also some shocks as a treasured memory turns out not to be shared by the other.

For years I’ve had a hard time revisiting this valley because its beauty pains me. I hate that I don’t still live here, that I couldn’t hold on to the magic for the sake of my living son.

And that’s part of why this ritual needs to happen, and why Jacob needs to go now. He doesn’t need to be tangled up in this confusion and regret any longer. This is a farewell to a marriage, a segment of motherhood, and a childhood, as well as to a little son and a brother.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

 

All this source water. Jake may never have seen this place, but he certainly heard and felt it.

  OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

One of the most challenging moments comes when the box is empty. We’ve talked about burying it nearby, but I’ve forgotten to bring a trowel. Julian dangles the box over the river, stroking it. Should we just drop it? his dad and I wonder. It feels right. But when we do, we all are shaken by the violence with which the water grabs it away. 

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

“I guess you’re never ready,” Julian says later.

No. You never are. Not for the final good-bye.

So I think of Charon and his boat on the River Styx, Moses and his basket of reeds. This valley was once a container for all of us, and now we’re all taking different paths. It wouldn’t be right to leave Jake behind, rooted.

Jake&John

Well, little boy. We’ve kept you close for so long. Travel far. Stay safe. Please, please check in. Our hearts are always open to you.

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Positive discipline, like going for a run, or studying, or writing a first draft—THAT I can do.

But negative discipline: NOT eating the chocolate, or having the second martini, or sleeping with the guy on the first date. That’s harder.

Then there’s accepting, moving on, whether it’s positive or negative. Integrating things I didn’t want to have happen and letting them change me and take me in new directions. The death of a child. A divorce. Like a lot of people, I’m not so good at that.

What I suck at most is allowing the good stuff to happen. What if it turns out I didn’t mess up my kid? He’s at college right now and apparently doing fine. He just got a National Science Foundation scholarship. He’s composing interesting techno music—a former perfectionist, he’s not afraid to put works-in-progress out there for the world. Not to brag; these are his achievements. However, it seems they might be at least partial evidence that he’s alive and well.

What if he’s all right in spite of the fact that I wasn’t the perfect parent, or the perfect wife?

I know. It’s a banal realization—there have been whole novels and movies on this topic—but there it is. I’ve been sitting stunned in my house since my son drove off to school last fall.

What if it’s okay for me to move on, too?

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It was an ordinary-enough grief. My son packed up his van, got in, and drove off to college.

I cried. I threw myself into my partner’s arms.

He just drove off, I said.

Yes, he said. That’s what they do.

JulianCarPacked (2)  JulianSeatBelt JulianDrivingOff

Every mother comes to this. Whatever it was you went through to bring them to this moment. Blood shit sleepless nights… Ha! Did you say sleepless nights? Infancy is nothing compared to waiting up for them when they’re teens… A Cricket of Times Square Pinocchio skiing skiing skiing hours spent by the river then beer bottles potsmoke condoms crappy grades… and then the sudden turnaround, and oh, you’re going to college after all! Whew.

Yeah, I’m proud as hell. And hell, yeah, did he turn out to be an interesting kid.

Long story short (I’m not telling the half of it; you can read the novel later), it’s complicated. I wasn’t totally sorry to be getting my life back. But one thing at a time. Just a moment, perhaps, to reflect, after that harrowing journey?

I’d run into a former neighbor not long ago, right after her complete angel of a son had been one of only a few kids selected annually into NYU’s drama program. Oh, she said. I went out and bought a ton of organic bedding and slept for six months, I was so exhausted.

You get the picture. It’s a big life transition. You may be ready to move on, but you want to be gentle with yourself about it.

He left on his grand adventure Saturday, September 4.

Two days later:

Fire2010 fireCr83(6) firecr83(5)

We were lucky. Our home didn’t burn, while 169 did. We weren’t even evacuated for as long as some were. The pictures on the right (taken by 10-year-old Russell Greene) are of the area that’s burning in the first shot, which is taken from my yard. This is the northeastern boundary of the Fourmile Canyon fire (aka #boulderfire on Twitter), along a trail where I’ve hiked and jogged several times per week since I moved to this canyon in 1999. The firefighters were able to get ahead of it here and hold it against the prevailing winds for five days. We found out later that they lost control of the blaze for a while on the final night and it was only because the winds died suddenly that it did not advance into our canyon or closer to Boulder.

Then, just one day after we returned from our five-day evac, my partner also drove off. After a long period of unemployment and soul-searching, he’d accepted a job on the other side of the state. The chaos of the fire had sure made his move come up hard and fast.

Fire is a metaphor for so many things.

In my last post, I was asking for more silence and emptiness in my life. Okay, already.

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In my day job we talk a lot about metrics and return on investment. I try not to think about things like that in the rest of my life. What does progress mean to a mother or a poet? We’d better find more poetic ways to frame it. You’re a goddess in your kid’s eyes one day, and a Nazi a few years later. Then maybe later you might turn out to know a few things after all, but it’s not like he’s ever going to snuggle up again in a thunderstorm. And this IS progress, and it’s even satisfying, but it’s not warm and fuzzy like a profit chart. Or as cool as a big-brown-eyed three-year-old with long, blond curls telling you as he writes in his journal (a small model of the same kind of sketchbook you use), “I’m writing how much I love you!”

Sometimes in marketing people discuss something called return on objective, and as a mom and a creative writer I can relate to that a little better. Or return on engagement.

Pretty much we moms and writers settle for just “return.” When I was was in Mexico visiting my son last week he fell asleep on the bus and his head wound up resting against my shoulder. SCORE! He took the time to plan our time together carefully based on the sights he guessed (accurately) I would most like to see, and these outings led to thoughtful conversations about life, history, his future, and our shared past. YES!

path skiing PatzcuaroEstribaJulian  PatzcuaroEstriba6

 

I came home to the mail, with the most recent edition of South Dakota Review, which contains a short story of mine, along with a lot of other very fine work. SDR might not have the slickest website in the world, but it’s been in print since 1963, the year I was born, and it’s one of the few print journals out there still maintaining a quarterly schedule, even if it’s a little behind this year.

When I added the journal to the little section on my shelf where I place all my published work, I could see that it’s possible I’m getting somewhere. PublishedAll the disciplined marketing people I hang out with on Twitter would want to know how many people were reading each story vs. how much time I’d spent on each piece, and even more important, how much I got paid (a total of maybe $500 so far). If I did it their way I would have to quit. A “disciplined” person would find something else to do. Which is why women bagged being housewives.

For some things, it makes no sense to measure outcome against effort.

Nevertheless, there’s a clear hockeystick graph, which I am too lazy to create right now in Excel, showing my progress since my first poem was accepted in 2001. Oh, all right, maybe it’s more like a mowed blade of grass with a slight curve to it, but it goes UP. It’s not money (yet) and it’s not fame (yet), but it’s real. This section on my shelf is populated, people.

That’s not counting the work published in online journals.

Little by little, even during all those horrible, dark years when I thought I had no time at all to write and I had possibly even murdered my soul, I’ve been getting somewhere. I’ve been saying a thing or two, and what I’ve been saying has been going out into the world, and possibly a few people have even been finding it and responding to it.

Return on investment? Objective? Engagement? I have a 19-year-old who stands up in the world and is interesting to talk to. I have a shelf of published stories and poems. There’s more in the pipeline.

I’d say that’s return. I’d say it’s progress.

I’m declaring it a metric upon which to base further investment.

 

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CWAgave1An agave getting ready to flower after 15 years. Then it will, um, die. But not after seeding the universe! Or at least the grounds of this B&B. In a small town in Mexico. Where hardly anyone goes…

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Dear little Jake,

You had your great-grandfather’s nose, or so we imagined, based on photographs of him. You were alive for only three days, and writing that phrase makes me have to stop typing and cry. You were only alive for three days, and so we can only do an age-progression in our minds.

When I was pregnant with you I had many dreams of you at various ages, and around six months after you died I dreamt of you as a young man, walking toward me across the alpine tundra, I guess during a hike we were taking together.

That is all I have, really. It’s not much.

We have the your little baby coos, echoing down these 21 years, the memory of your furrowed brow, the clench of your hand on our fingers. I have your lips nuzzling my nipples. And then your hands and feet turning so blue and cold, your terrible cries of alarm, near the end. And those last, quiet gasps.

And whatever it was that came into the room between your penultimate breath and the final one. I thought it was the nurse, but when I turned, no visible person was there.jake2

Twenty-one years, Jake. I’ve marked these years in various ways. Sometimes I’ve baked a cake. Other times I’ve returned to the place we lived when you were conceived and walked along some of the trails where I used to hike, ski, and snowshoe, pregnant with you, just the two of us, when I was still unadulteratedly happy, hopeful. This year I’ve just returned from a trip with your “younger” brother. He’s choosing a college, Jake! My nest will really be empty now. I can’t even begin to express how complicated my feelings are today, the day after returning from this tour with your beautiful brother, of whom I feel so proud, writing these words on your twenty-first birthday.

Each year the gulf between us has yawned more widely. The wonderful baby smell on your clothes began to fade. One year the lock of your hair was no longer among your “effects.” A terrible blow even today, when I long to touch you. The dreams have diminished in frequency. Even a nightmare is a treasure now.

Your brother has taught me much about the mysteries of parenting. Nothing is as I fantasized when I was carrying you. Grief experts say that when a child dies a dream is lost. But that happens in any case when a parent raises a child; it’s just that in the ordinary experience the process is more gradual. The child of one year vanishes into the child he or she becomes the next year. Your father and I divorced; we didn’t become the parents we thought we’d be. So it’s not just our dream we lost, but who you’d actually have become… somewhere along the way, we lost all sight, all way of knowing, of even being able to imagine who you might have become. And who we might have become.

Little son. We didn’t get to exchange all of the gifts we had for each other. You didn’t get to share everything you had with the world.

How I wish I were like other parents, taking things for granted. Simply sending a card, and a care package, to you……off in some college or study-abroad program… or wherever you might be…

I simply have no idea.

Happy Birthday.

Love,

Your Mother, still here, loving you

jakepreg4

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Each generation, we say, wants the best for its kids. Even before the recession became official, I gave a lot of thought to what this might mean. If you raise your kid in a 3,000-square-foot house, do you dream of him spreading out to 4,000 square feet to raise his? Will you rest easy knowing that he has three SUVs in his driveway instead of two?

So I read with interest Don Peck’s recent provocative piece in The Atlantic, which explored the many sobering dimensions of the jobless era we’re entering. Among them was the impact on Generation Y. “Many of today’s young adults seem temperamentally unprepared for the circumstances in which they now find themselves,” writes Peck. Kids these days, it seems, have been raised to believe that they could “do great things.”

Peck reports that psychology professor Jean Twenge has found that kids who graduated from high school in the aughts “dislike the idea of work for work’s sake, and expect jobs and career to be tailored to their interests and lifestyle.” Many more of them seriously express the goal of becoming artists or musicians or actors than previous generations admitted. Peck, who has one of these sorts of jobs himself, says that even without the recession, such expectations would be unrealistic.

But the idea that work should matter can’t be new. Surely this started at least with the Baby Boom and its question authority ethos. The concept of meaningful work played a big role in the women’s movement. All that upheaval wasn’t just about getting any old job.

In Generation X and many of his subsequent novels and stories, Douglas Coupland chronicles the whiplash experienced by young professionals raised to believe that the word “career” actually meant something, only to find themselves sitting in gray cubicles, breathing recirculated air. Benjamin Kunkel hilariously captures the X-Y cusp generation caught between the overwhelming task of trying to fix the world and the dull horror of the conventional workplace in Indecision. Clearly, today’s young adults are not the first to struggle with these issues.

So, excuse me if I wanted a little more for my kid. If I thought I was sweating it out in corporate America so that he wouldn’t have to. If I put the idea in his head that work for work’s sake was, well… a lot more boring than art for art’s sake.

I remember hiking with a friend some years ago, in one of the states of despair that comes over me at times, asking, So, am I really supposed to sell my soul so my kid can go to Harvard? And then what? So he can sell his soul so his kid can go to Harvard? When does it stop? When do we get to keep our souls?

(How I got in the situation of selling my soul is another story, too long a tangent to go into here; one piece of it is that for some artists, any other work is agony.)

I know I shared the values of many in my generation (X-Baby Boom cusp) when we built alternative schools and took our kids to Kindermusik and Suzuki lessons. We said to each other, The best way to change the world is to raise kids who can’t live in it. Maybe that was cruel. Perhaps the ideals of GenY are not adaptive to these times, as Peck and the people he cites suggest. Especially as it may be even harder than ever to get traditional dream jobs. There are fewer positions for journalists, for example. While enrollment in creative writing programs skyrockets, there are fewer serious readers. Musicians, thanks to MP3 technology, find it even more challenging to make a living without touring themselves to death.

One of the more terrible tensions Peck points out is that while GenY wants work that matters, it also wants money. While it may not be unrealistic to make a living in an artistic or socially conscious career, it may be true that children raised in 3,000-square-foot houses (my house, for the record, is quite a lot smaller than that) will have to settle for less space, and they might have to ride the bus. Perhaps the best thing we can do for our kids is not to discourage their impractical dreams but to empower them to be poor. To start out small and build their lives around their dreams.

Whatever else might be true of Generation Y, I think there’s something to be admired in its “hell no, we won’t go” attitude toward work that isn’t worthwhile. Because I plan on adopting this view myself as soon as my kid’s through college, I probably won’t be able to afford a house with a basement for him to live in till he gets his dream job. But he can pitch a yurt in my yard if he wants, if I have a yard. Enough is enough. I want my soul back.

I dream of him keeping his.

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