Saturday, July 30, 2022

High Expectations

 I'm sure it's happened to you, too.  You start out having the germination of an idea and as time goes on you nurture it and add to it and plan it and then plan it some more - right down to the nth degree.

And you know how oftentimes life will hip check us as if to say, "Slow down there... not so fast.  Life is messy and imperfect and you need a healthy dose of reality right now, so lower those expectations."  It's happened to all of us, right?  That reality quite often doesn't line up with our gauzy and romantic ideas of how we want things to turn out.  Well, my friends, that didn't happen to me. Nope, for me, one particular outing that I had invested so much time and hope into not only lived up to my expectations, but exceeded them.  

I wanted to tell you all about it right away - to share every moment as it was happening and how I felt like my heart would explode with joy, but at first I couldn't.  The reason is simple enough. I don't know that I'll be able to find the words that will convey how wonderful it was.  When I write it out you'll probably think, "Hmmm, sounds like a nice day, but I don't really get why she's waxing all poetic about it."  And I guess that's okay too, because  as long as I have the memory of this day that I can call upon and savor from time to time, that's more than good enough.

But anyway, let me tell you about it.  Many years ago I read something online about a place called Hever Castle in Kent, U.K.  It was the childhood home of Anne Boleyn which was acquired by the Astor family in 1903 and refurbished.  It is located about an hour outside of London by train.  The castle is located in a remote village called Hever (original, right?) and can be accessed in two ways.  The first is to alight at a station called Edenbridge Town and have a taxi meet you and drive you the three or four miles to the castle.  This is the way most people arrive at the castle.  The other way is to take the train to the Hever station, the next stop after Edenbridge Town and walk a little over a mile to the castle.  That, in a nutshell,  is the essence of why I had not made the trip before.  The Hever station is unmanned and there are no shops or pubs to pop into to ask directions.  You need to look for small metal medallions posted on gate posts and follow those along footpaths, meadows and then along the side of of narrow country roads with hedgerows on both sides that tower above your head.  And while you are walking along the side of this country road hoping you are going in the right direction, you have to be mindful of cars that may come careening around corners on the opposite side of the road that you're used to.  A daunting plan to be sure.

I wanted to make this trip the last two times I went to England, but I was a bit worried about getting lost out in the country and missing our train or whatever other folly my mind conjured up.  The actual trek through the country was intensely appealing to me - in fact one of the things I wanted to do most, but it was also the one thing that kept me from going.  A paradox if there ever was one.




But this time - with all of our children and grandchildren along - we were going to go there for sure!  Sunday, June 17 arrived and we all got up early and took the tube to London Bridge station to catch the train to Hever.  Unfortunately, there was minor chaos at the station as the train we were supposed to take got cancelled and we were told to board a different train and change trains in a place called Hurst Green that would get us to Hever.  Tyler had Citymapper on his phone and we realized that we would have a 40 minute layover in Hurst Green, which actually turned out to be a lovely little interlude.  Hurst Green is also out in the countryside, so the area surrounding the station was leafy and verdant.  We noticed that in the station on the opposite track there was a little coffee stand so we all crossed the bridge over the track and went to the stand for coffee and treats.  The woman and her son that were manning the shop were very friendly, assuring us that we would love Hever and that there was much to see and do there.  I got a homemade biscuit and everyone else got treats and we headed back to our outbound track.  The stop at Hurst Green had already put me in a great mood because it was so pretty and the weather was just right, so I was feeling very positive about the day.


Our walk to the castle was truly everything I had hoped for.  We were out in the midst of the bucolic English countryside, walking along a narrow footpath with brambles and wildflowers everywhere.  We passed sheep resting lazily under the canopy of old trees, bleating at us as we walked by, but mostly disinterested in us.  We passed through wooden gates and stiles and took care to close those gates behind us so the sheep wouldn't escape.  It was heavenly.  And then, suddenly, we were in a field or meadow with more sheep that seemed oblivious to not only us, but to the incredible view they were privy to.  We were all laughing and joking and trying to avoid the sheep droppings that were everywhere, but even that was fun and we all seemed full of the moment and cognizant of how special this experience was.










And then we arrived.  The castle was not overly large, maybe like an oversized manor house, but it had a moat and drawbridge which was pretty cool.  There were narrow stone stairs and leaded windows and an incredible library.  I had been a little worried that the children might be bored with the history of the castle and Anne Boleyn, but all of them, even Kiki at 4 years old, wore the headphones and did the kid version audio tour with rapt attention. I loved that part, too.


The gardens at the castle were extensive and included two hedgerow mazes and even a water maze that delighted the children as they hopped from stone to stone, pretending to avoid the water spouting out but secretly trying to get soaked.  We had a nice lunch followed by some ice cream made with Kentish cream and headed over to watch a jousting match.  At the match, the children were able to walk in a parade around the jousting area before the tournament began.  There was even a playground there with a zip line and fort that the little ones loved.  


I truly had worried a bit beforehand that the whole day might be uninteresting to not only the children, but the other adults who may not share my fervent love of the English countryside and history, but everyone appeared to be having a great time. 

A friendly fellow tourist snapped a picture of all of us in front of the castle.  Amy took a bazillion pictures too, so we are lucky to have a pretty complete memorialization of the day.  I can't begin to tell you how many times I've already revisited that day through those photographs and videos.  Mike and I were talking and we realized that even if we had made the trip there years earlier, it would not have been nearly as wonderful as it was being able to experience everything through the children's eyes.



When we left after a full day, we followed the same footpath through the meadows and past the resting sheep back to the station.  I picked up a small stone from the footpath as a sentimental small remembrance, and slipped it into my pocket.  A "piece" of Hever and of that perfect day to bring back home with me.  As we waited for our train to take us back to London, Sophie turned to me and asked, "Tell us more stories, please, about King Henry VIII and all of his wives." And I knew at that moment that this day had been one that none of us would ever forget and not just a dream fulfilled for me.


Saturday, November 20, 2021

Thankful

Thanksgiving has always been a special time of year for me.  For starters, my birthday has almost always fallen on Thanksgiving week - sometimes right on Thanksgiving day (like this year), which as a child always made things more exciting.  Birthday gifts and delicious food and a big family get-together... what more could anyone want?

We usually had Thanksgiving dinner at our house.  My mom was a flurry of activity in the days leading up to Turkey Day, deep cleaning the house and cooking up a storm.  I think my sister and I did minor chores like dusting and making sure our room was clean, but looking back, I think my mom did the majority of the preparations without complaint. We didn't have a formal dining room in our little Cape Cod house, so my parents converted one of the downstairs bedrooms into a makeshift dining room.  The main table, extended with its leaf, was supplemented with a long portable table, creating a "T" shape around which the chairs would be arranged to somehow accommodate our extended family.  Looking back it amazes me that we were able to fit everyone into that room, but somehow we did.

After dinner and the dishes were done, the adults would sit around the living room talking and laughing while the cousins would come to our room.  In the early days of my obsession with Paris, I learned that my cousin, Joanie, had begun French lessons in school.  I remember sitting on my sister's bed next to her while she patiently wrote out sentences on looseleaf paper for me like "Ma cousine est tres jolie" or "La neige est belle aujourd'hui" and I repeated every word, savoring hearing the sound of my voice speaking very broken French.  We would drift back into the living room after tiring of board games and hang onto the periphery of the adult's conversations, often gathering near the nut bowl.  Does anyone ever put a nut bowl out anymore?  I don't think I've seen one since I was a child.  Ours was a round wooden bowl filled with walnuts, pecans, and Brazil nuts, complete with a nutcracker and special picks to remove the nutmeats from the shell.  After my mom died, I found the nut bowl among her things and it is one of the things I knew I had to hold on to.  Just seeing it and possessing it was like holding a piece of my childhood in my hands. Since it was only put out at Thanksgiving and Christmas, the bowl seemed to embody the simple and complete happiness of those days.  I still have it, though it's packed away somewhere.  As I write this, I know I'll make it a priority to find it and put it out in my own house this holiday season.




Eventually, before everyone went home, it would be time to make turkey sandwiches.  I will say right here and right now that although I dearly love Publix turkey subs, nothing could compare with those slices of perfectly cooked turkey breast, mayo and lettuce on fresh white bakery bread.  Soon, everyone started packing up leftovers and heading home.  While the excitement of the day was over, there would be no school the next day, which was another treat.  Often, on that Friday (it was not considered "Black Friday" in those days), I would do some special birthday activity - maybe a movie matinee with a friend and my sister, roller skating or if I was very lucky, horseback riding.

There were only two Thanksgivings in my life that were not happy, traditional affairs.  The first was in 1963 when President Kennedy was killed on November 22nd.  That happened on the Friday before Thanksgiving week, and my birthday fell on the following Monday.  I was only 11 years old, but like everyone else, I was shocked and incredibly sad.  I remember spending my birthday watching the funeral procession on tv and having the images of the riderless horse, Jackie's black dress, hat and veil, John-John's salute and the eternal flame burned into my memory. I don't think anyone felt like celebrating in 1963 and I honestly don't even recall whether we got together for Thanksgiving dinner that year or not.

The other sad Thanksgiving happened 10 years ago, in 2011.  That year I had come up to Illinois from Florida to see my sister, who was in the hospital with end stage breast cancer.  She passed away on November 23, the day before Thanksgiving and her wake was two days later on my birthday.  While it takes my breath away to realize that ten years have passed since then, I have come to feel close to her this time of year instead of the paralyzing sadness of those earlier days.  I'm grateful that I was able to be with her when she needed me most and I try to focus on our close relationship and how blessed I was to have her as my sister.   

These days, my daughter-in-law, Melissa and son Ryan host Thanksgiving. While the family that surrounds me now is not made up of the aunts, uncles and cousins of my childhood, but my own children and grandchildren (Good God, I'm the matriarch!), we are making new memories every time we get together.  We eat too much, laugh a lot and I'm able to look around and relish the simple joy of having my family surround me, just as I did as a child. I'll hunt down the nut bowl and bring a bit of those warm, fuzzy memories of Thanksgivings past into the present and be oh so thankful that I'm here to experience it all.

Thursday, March 19, 2020

Morning

Mike and I are so grateful that we are still able to get out and enjoy the sunshine on our morning walks.  The weather here has been gorgeous - especially in the morning before it gets too hot.  We've been quite indulgent and have slept in almost every morning until almost 8:00, but still manage to be out the door by 8:30 or so.  

Each day, so far, the sky has been the most beautiful shade of blue.  Did you know that blue is considered a calming color?  We've barely stepped away from the front door when the color of the sky starts doing it's magic on my blood pressure.  Oh and the clouds!  Scant but puffy clouds in the shapes of dogs or cotton candy punctuate the sky giving it just the right amount of contrast.  When I was a little girl I used to think that clouds shaped like animals were the actual souls of animals heading to heaven, and I guess if I'm 100% honest a part of me still believes that.  The sun, rising up higher and higher in the sky, raises my spirits right along with it.

Near the corner where my street intersects with another there is a male cardinal with a very insistent song in one of the live oak trees. I've heard the adage that cardinals represent someone that we've lost in our lives but whose presence is still there.  They always seem like a good luck omen to me.  Especially when I spot one in the morning.  It's going to be a good day!  My neighborhood is about 14 years old, so the live oaks that line each side of the street have grown enough to provide a pretty canopy.  This time of year, though, the oaks are shedding leaves and pollen like crazy, so Mike isn't quite as enamored.  He's been out at our driveway and the sidewalk in front of our house every single day with the blower, a rake and garbage bags which has been a losing proposition.



There are a few regulars that we see on our walk, but we're careful to distance ourselves even as we pass.  No matter who we see, though, we're always greeted with a cheery "Good morning!", a smile or a wave.  Don't you love it when neighbors greet you like that?  We live in a large community, so I don't even know the names of most of the people we pass, but even those quick acknowledgements make us feel connected.

Though we take the same route every day, we've been closely studying the way others in our community have done their landscaping to get ideas.  Mike thinks big and dreams of  transforming our back yard into some kind of shangri-la while I look for colorful, sturdy flowers that could hopefully prevail despite my abysmal history with plants. We probably won't end up doing any more landscaping at all, but it's a fun pastime and every day we seem to find something new at one of the houses we pass.



As we step around wet sidewalks and the pfft pfft pfft of front yard sprinklers, I find myself more aware of the morning sounds.  There's a city garbage truck lumbering along, lifting the curbside cans up with metal arms and dumping the trash into it's maw.  There are mourning doves along the main street lining the golf course.  I love the sound they make - it always reminds me of our summer cottage and my childhood.  I hear garage doors opening and dads and moms ushering their little ones out into the sunshine on bikes, scooters, or pushing them in strollers.  In spite of the circumstances, it's awfully nice to see families together like that.  When families only have the weekend to be together there can often be a feeling of being rushed to finish errands and have the requisite "fun" time together.  This feels more leisurely - less forced.  Right now there are kids learning to ride two wheelers sooner than they normally would have.  2 year olds are being potty trained by their parents instead of a babysitter.  Someone is learning to bake bread for the first time. Please don't misunderstand.  There is no way I am saying this ordeal is a good thing in any way, shape or form.  After watching the TV and reading Twitter incessantly for the latest news this past week, I've just had to take a breather to calm and center myself.  I'm grasping for whatever small measures of peace I can find and trying to keep those things front and center in my life.

As we finish up our 3.3 miles and head into the blissfully cool air conditioning (it's HOT by now), I feel energized and ready to make the most of my day.  For the past two days we painted our laundry room and we have a big list of projects still to be tackled.  Walking, it seems, has put us on the right path.


Saturday, December 15, 2018

The Girl in the Backseat


To some, I suppose, I am an old woman.  My hair is white, my gait is a bit more cautious and lines criss cross my face like an often folded map.  I understand now, as the years come more swiftly, that my outward appearance doesn't begin to reflect how I feel inside.  I don't mind this newest version of myself.  I've slipped into my mid sixties like a favorite comfy sweater on a winter day - my many years of triumphs and regrets woven together into a lovely jumble of memories.  The funny thing is, though, as anyone my age can attest, on the inside, the essence of who I am feels like the same person I was at 40, at 20, at 10.

There's no time during the year that I feel this more keenly than I do at Christmastime. As I decorate my house and sing along to carols on Pandora, I always find myself thinking back to Christmases past. Of all the chapters of my life, each Christmas has added patina to my memory bank.  Somehow, though, I always find myself yearning for the Christmases of my childhood most often.  

In my family, Christmas Eve was the big celebration, always held at my aunt and uncle's home in La Grange Park.  Our dove gray Ford would be bursting with gaily wrapped gifts as we made our way from our home to theirs.  In those days, people still dressed up, even for get togethers with family.  I can picture my dad holding my hand as he led me to the car, looking handsome in his shirt and tie, overcoat and hat.  My mom always looked so festive with a red or green dress, high heels and jangly bell earrings.  My sister and I would have  new Christmas dresses along with patent leather shoes and frilly socks.

As we pulled out of the driveway to start the trip to their house, the car was still chilly - the heater had not quite warmed up the backseat.  Kim and I shivered, both from the cold and with the delicious anticipation of what we knew was going to be a wonderful night.  Nat King Cole or Perry Como's voice would fill the car with familiar carols as I pressed my nose against the window watching the familiar landmarks pass, each one bringing us closer and closer to our destination.



And then... we were there!  A flurry of excitement as we walked up the stairs to their front door, our parents arms laden with the beautiful gifts.  A rush of warm air as my uncle opened the front door to welcome us in. I can still hear his voice calling "Merry Christmas" and see him in his red cardigan sweater, smelling of pipe tobacco and love. The tree would dominate the living room, bedecked in lights, ornaments and tinsel, with an ocean of presents that grew larger and larger as each family member arrived.  My aunt, popping out momentarily from the kitchen, wore a frilly apron decorated with sprigs of holly.  My mom would disappear into the kitchen to help the other adult females with dinner preparations and my sister and I would spend time with our cousins and the men would talk, while favorite Christmas records played on the hi-fi.

We had to eat dinner first, before opening gifts, which seemed a bit like torture as a child.  It was our custom to have spaghetti for dinner each Christmas Eve.  I asked my mother how that tradition started, years later, wondering what the significance was.  In my mind, I thought it had probably begun in the Depression when budgets were tight and just continued on, but no, she said.  It was always spaghetti because it was easy to serve, especially to a big crowd, and the children all liked it.  

After dinner, the dishes had to be done before presents!  My cousins, sister and I waited patiently, hearing the adults in the kitchen talking and laughing together as they washed and towel dried the plates and silver.  It seemed to take forever, but in some ways I didn't really mind.  The enormous pile of gifts was full of possibilities.  There were no gift bags then - everything was wrapped beautifully in gorgeous paper, ribbon and poufy bows.  Those moments - awaiting the arrival of all of the grown ups from the kitchen into the living room were filled with heady emotions.  It wasn't just about hoping for a certain gift - though there was some of that - but more about the warm, secure feeling of being in what felt like the best place on earth at that particular moment in time. The sounds of laughter, the voices of people who I loved and who loved me, the scent of evergreen and the colors of the Christmas season everywhere.  It was so magical to me.  So perfect.

Opening the gifts was loud and chaotic with paper and ribbon everywhere. It's funny, I don't remember particular gifts I may have received as being highlights of those Christmas Eves so long ago.

Soon it was time to get ready to go home.  After all, Santa was making his rounds and we knew that if we weren't home in bed, fast asleep, he might pass our house by completely.  Kim and I changed into our pajamas - the flannel footed ones that would keep us toasty warm on the car ride home.  My dad repacked the car with opened gifts and finally, after hugs and kisses from my aunts, uncles and cousins, we began our ride home.

Drowsy but excited, I looked out the window at all of the beautiful lights and decorations of the homes as we passed them on our way. One year, as I was on the cusp of not believing in Santa Claus anymore, we passed a house where I saw someone dressed in a Santa suit carrying a large bag as he approached the front door.  I panicked - what if we didn't get home in time?  What if he had already gone to Tinley Park and we weren't home in bed?  My parents tried to reassure me that Santa would still come to our house, but I think I didn't fully believe it until I saw the presents under the tree on Christmas morning.

By the time we got home, Kim and I had fallen asleep in the backseat, so my dad carried us into the house and upstairs to our beds where our mom tucked us in. Christmas day was just a few hours away and it too, would be filled with tradition of church, pancakes, Santa gifts and more family visits.  It was so easy to slip into that lovely child's slumber - carefree, filled with happiness and anticipation.

Through the years I have made lovely Christmas memories in the years when my children were small and now, with my precious grandchildren. Each Christmas brings a new layer of joy and thankfulness for the birth of Our Lord which, in turn, allows us to celebrate Him with those we love.

Those childhood Christmases, though, were the gold standard for me.  As the radio stations begin playing carols and the decorations go up, I always think back to those Christmas Eves of my childhood and how they made me feel.  I often wish, just once, I could go back in time and be the little girl in the backseat of the car, nose pressed against the window, instead of being one of the adults up front.  Of course I can only be that little girl in my mind, and only for a moment or two.  After all, I have to make the spaghetti sauce and finish wrapping the gifts.

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

The Sweetest Thing

Back in my previous life, before moving to Florida and retirement, I worked as the store manager at my husband's family business - a camera store/photo studio/film processing lab in Chicago's Lakeview East neighborhood on the north side.

One of the absolute best things about working there was meeting so many nice and interesting people and having the privilege of developing relationships with them.  I was able to glean snippets of some of the best times of their lives from them as they dropped off precious rolls of film to be developed from their wedding or vacation of a lifetime.  I watched the "buggy brigade" of young moms and their little ones stop in to see us as they documented their babies as they arrived and celebrated each milestone of childhood.

Since our store was located in an urban area, we were fortunate to have a customer base of a diverse swath of people.  I loved the process of learning more from the stories of their lives with each short visit they made to our store.  While, as a business, we stayed pretty consistently busy, the mornings, especially, were a little less hectic.  That was the time I could tidy the picture frames, straighten the album display and file the packets of photos awaiting pick up.  It was also the best time to have conversations with those that were home during the day and did not rush off to jobs downtown. 

Hawthorne Place was the street one block south of where our store was situated.  It was a gorgeous block of stately homes with large, rolling lawns behind massive wrought iron gates. One of those homes belonged Mrs. E.  I only saw her infrequently, when she and her companion/housekeeper would stop in the store for a roll of film or album refills.  She was an elderly woman, always leaning on her cane and resting slightly against the counter or her companion.  Our conversations were never long and she didn't share many details of her life, but I was enchanted by the idea of her living in such a grand house on Hawthorne.  As a reader, I envisioned her as the heroine of a Dickens novel (Miss Havisham?) with a mysterious past that no doubt included debutante balls, trips abroad on ocean liners and a string of beaux from which she could choose a husband.  I had probably "known" her for 5 years or so when she stopped coming into the store and sent her companion to run her errands instead.  I missed seeing Mrs. E, missed the formal way she spoke and asked about my family.  

One day, to my surprise, her housekeeper came in and handed me a sealed envelope with my name on the front in tall, confident cursive.  It was an invitation, written on a thick vellum card, to luncheon (not lunch) at her home one afternoon in two weeks time.  I was thrilled.

I dressed carefully that day in a dress instead of my usual work clothes and carried a fresh bouquet of flowers.  I remember thinking, as I rang the bell at her home, that I almost felt as though I should have been wearing gloves and a hat with a fascinator veil to complete the illusion I had of stepping back into time. Her housekeeper answered the door, ushered me inside, and whisked the flowers away, only to have them reappear later on the dining room table in a Waterford vase.

Mrs. E was an accomplished hostess.  Though she had aged quite a bit since I had seen her last,  throughout our meal she peppered me with questions about my life and my ambitions.  I tried to ask her about her own life, particularly about her late husband and earlier days in her home, but she deftly turned the conversation back to me time and time again.  All too soon, the luncheon was over, and I found myself walking down Hawthorne again - this time back to the store.  I didn't see much of Mrs. E after that, as her health had begun to decline, though her companion relayed her good wishes each time she came into the store.  I always wondered why she had asked me.  Our relationship had always been formal and our interactions fairly brief.  Whatever the reason was, I was able to tuck the magnificent memory of that afternoon into the story of my life.

Mr. Delson was another customer who has always stayed dear to my heart. He always spoke softly with what I imagined was an Eastern European accent (I later learned it was Latvian). He, too, was in his eighties when we began to strike up conversations over the store counter. Sometimes his sister, with whom he lived, came with him, though she rarely said more than hello.  He would tip his hat in a courtly fashion, call me "Lady Linda" and tell me how much he appreciated my smile. I can't remember one time spent speaking to Mr. Delson that he was cross or complained or was short tempered. 

I knew him for years, though really, only in that casual way that a customer and shop keeper would know each other.  I knew he was a civic activist and had his very own orchestra that played at the Blackstone Hotel downtown in the evenings.  Mostly, though, instead of sharing more details about his life, he would talk about current topics or tell me how much he enjoyed visiting with me. Each time I saw Mr. Delson, I was struck by how five minutes spent sharing pleasantries would brighten my day immeasurably.

One day, I was completely surprised when his sister, Miss Delson, came by alone.  She handed me a wrapped box of Fannie May chocolates - my absolute favorites - with a note from Mr. Delson.  She told me he hadn't been feeling well which was why she had come alone, but that the candy was a token of his friendship and he wanted me to know how much he enjoyed our conversations.  I was bowled over by the unexpectedness of it all and by his generosity.  What a kind soul, I thought.  What a dear, sweet man.

The following week I learned that Mr. Delson had passed away the very day after his sister had brought the chocolates and note to me.  I was devastated, but also incredibly touched that he had reached out to me in the waning days of his life. I didn't ever want to forget this gentle man with his easy smile and old world ways, so I carefully folded the note he sent and put it into a locket in the shape of a book that I had and carefully kept it in my jewelry box.

That was 22 years ago, and though I don't wear the locket anymore, I take it out of my jewelry box from time to time, read the note and give thanks that I've been blessed knowing such lovely people in my life.

I suppose if there are any lessons to be drawn from these experiences of mine, it's that the smallest, most seemingly insignificant actions can become treasured memories for someone else.  A lunch(eon), a note and some candy, a quick smile and the genuine interest we can show one another can become the basis for a cherished memory.  And there is nothing in this world sweeter than that.



Thursday, January 11, 2018

You'll Be In My Heart

Early this morning before taking my grandson to school, he was fooling around with the Echo that Mike got for Christmas, ordering Alexa to do this and that, much to his delight. Eventually he commanded Alexa to play Disney songs and then settled in to eat his breakfast while I puttered in the kitchen with meal prep for later in the day.




Suddenly, the song I couldn't bear to hear was playing - You'll Be In My Heart by Phil Collins from the movie Tarzan.  In what felt like the worst kind of time travel, I felt myself transported back to my little sister's hospice room, a mere 7 or 8 hours before she died.  Kim loved Phil Collins and had every CD he ever put out and that song was one of her absolute favorites.  I had gotten the idea to download several of his songs onto my phone to play at her bedside, which I did.  At that point in her journey she was pretty much comatose, though we were able to rouse her partially with a lot of effort, if necessary.  My mom and I sat at her bedside, along with my daughter Amy and her husband, Tyler, trying our best to be present and uplifting for my sister but simultaneously feeling scared and trying to hold it together for Kim's sake.

I will never forget holding her hand as the song You'll Be In My Heart played from my phone.  I sang/whispered the words into her ear as I squeezed her hand, hoping on some level she could feel the energy of how much I loved her right through my fingertips.  Somehow, at that moment, that song became an anthem for us, for our sisterhood.  For the nights spent together in our shared bedroom when she would beg me to tell her a story.  For the countless Christmases and birthdays and every ordinary day in between that we played together; swam together; went to school together; navigated our parent's divorce together.  She was only sixteen months younger than me and at 57, she was far too young to die. How incredibly impossible it is to be a supporting actor in this tragedy - to watch someone who knows you better than anyone else and who you love wholly and without reservation slip away inch by inch before your eyes. What kind of a world would it be without her in it?  I couldn't begin to grasp the far reaching effects.  Looking at her, vulnerable in her hospital bed, her body wracked with the damn cancer, I knew on an intellectual level that I wanted her suffering to end.  I was being selfish, not wanting to give up one moment of my life that had her in it.  But of course, it wasn't up to me.

My mother, in her eighties, was also barely keeping it together.  The emotional toll was enormous and she had physical limitations to deal with as well.  Her grief was raw and somehow I needed to do my best to shepherd her through this.  I wanted to spend the night at the hospice center with Kim, as I sensed (and the nurses affirmed) that the end was probably near.  Earlier in the day, my mom had agreed that it was a good idea, but after nightfall, she winced with discomfort trying to find a modicum of comfort in the recliner at Kim's bedside.  "I don't think I can do this, Linda," she whispered to me, "can we go home? Let's come back early tomorrow morning."
Of course, I assured her, though inside I was devastated.  She needed me to be near her and I couldn't bring myself to refuse her knowing how fragile she was.

Outside in the parking lot as I helped my mom into the car, I looked up at Kim's window and saw the glow of the lamp that sat on the table near her bed.  "This is it," I thought.  "I don't think I'll ever see her alive again," and my heart broke into a million pieces.  There was something so both poignant and stark seeing that light burning in her window as we prepared to drive away. "Today is the anniversary of the Kennedy assassination," I said dully as I pulled the car out of the parking space.  "It's a terrible day."

A little after midnight that night the call came through from the hospice center.  Kim was gone.  Time, over the last five years, has gradually lessened the glass shards of grief that stabbed at my heart those first days and months.  One thing I was never able to do since then, though, was to listen to Phil Collins sing that song.  I deleted it from my playlist and quickly changed the station if it ever came on the radio. Even hearing a few bars of the song took me back to that sad, sad day and filled me with emotions that I thought I needed to keep locked away forever.  

Today, though, as the song I dreaded echoed through my kitchen, I forced myself to listen more closely to the words.  I realized in a sudden burst of clarity that Kim would always be in my heart, now and forever.  Instead of feeling filled with pain like an overflowing cup, I felt as if she were in the room  - her arms wrapped around me, reminding me that she's always there, always with me, in a million ways.  I'm sure there will still be times in the future when the song starts playing unexpectedly that I'll have to pause and  force myself not to turn it off out of habit. In the end, though, I will learn to embrace it as a blessing and reminder that while she isn't here in the physical sense, she is with me every moment and the bond we share as sisters can never be broken. 


Saturday, September 30, 2017

We'll Always Have Paris

When I was in fifth grade I was offered the option of learning a foreign language in school- either French or Spanish. I suppose from a practical standpoint, Spanish would have served me better, but I chose French without a moments hesitation.  I memorized our ALM dialogs faithfully, happily conjugated avoir and practiced my accent while talking to our family dog.  My teacher, Mrs. Cheney, decided to rename me Margot during class time as there was nothing French to be conjured up from "Linda."  I reveled in it all.

My hearts desire was that someway, somehow I would go to Paris one day.  It was more than a mere 4150 miles away from my little Cape Cod house in Tinley Park, Illinois - it was a different world, a different way of life.  I watched rapturously as Audrey Hepburn explained the magic of seeing the Bois de Boulogne in the rain to Humphrey Bogart in Sabrina.  As a lark I would occasionally call Air France and book a flight to Paris, knowing it would cancel 24 hours prior to flight time without payment.  But somehow just knowing there was a flight booked to Paris in my name, for however short a period of time, was intoxicating and heady.
One of my favorite Christmas gifts, the book My Paris, by Maurice Chevalier, became dog eared and worn from constant use.  I continued taking French in school every year through my first year of college...  9 years in all. I'd like to say it's because I was determined to visit Paris someday no matter what, but truthfully, in my heart of hearts, it seemed like a pipe dream.  I hoped it would happen, but I didn't really expect it to.

But then I met Mike, we fell in love and decided to get married.  As we began to discuss where to go on our honeymoon, my old dream returned front and center, and miracle of miracles, Mike was completely on board!  The mere idea that we would be honeymooning in Paris had surpassed even my wildest dreams.  I bought guidebook after guidebook and read endless reviews of small, intimate hotels in Frommer's.  Rive gauche or Rive droite?   Should we have a planned itinerary or let the spirit of the City of Light guide us through our days?  I spent hours culling my wardrobe for the trip, discarding anything that painted us as American tourists.  In those days, we were told that the French disliked Americans with their crass behavior and loud voices.  Most likely, we were advised, the French would treat us rudely and with absolute disdain.  We decided to opt for adventure, avoid taxis and use the Metro exclusively - even from the airport.  

After much consideration we chose Hotel St. Roch at 25 rue St. Roch just off of rue de Rivoli in the 1st arrondissement and kept our fingers crossed that the guidebook descriptions would prove to be accurate.  Our dollars were exchanged for francs (this was before the existence of euros), our bags were packed and the evening to leave had finally arrived.

Our Air France flight from Chicago was a dream.  Lovely, uniformed flight attendants saw to our every need and served us delicious (really!) French food on china plates.  It was a spacious aircraft with an upstairs lounge, so we never felt cramped and I fell asleep happily, my head nestled into Mike's shoulder, nearly overcome with joy and a bit of celebratory champagne.





In the morning we were there!  Bags in hand (no rolling suitcases yet), we made our way onto a bus which would in turn, take us to a central Metro station so we could catch the Metro to the closest stop to our hotel.  Once at the Metro station we found a light up route board, so we set our bags down and studied it, watching the stops on the board light up indicating the correct route.  There were other travelers and commuters darting all around us, everyone in hurry to get where they were going.  Suddenly, we both felt a bit overwhelmed.  Chicago's north side and Tinley Park never seemed so far away.  We were waiting our turn to use the board when suddenly, out of nowhere, a French woman appeared by our side, smiling and asking us in English if we needed help.  She was a retired English teacher, she told us, and loved having the opportunity to use her English whenever she could. Gratefully, we told her our destination and she deftly pressed the button to illuminate our route.  We learned that her name was Claire Plonquet and before we even had a chance to respond, she took one of our bags and insisted that she would accompany us to our hotel to make sure the check in went without a hitch.

Hotel St. Roch was indeed a small, intimate place.  When we arrived, the clerk said he didn't speak any English and while I realized my high school French was woefully inadequate, Claire got us checked in and helped carry our bags up to our third floor room.  She didn't want to intrude on our honeymoon, she said, but if we'd like, she would be happy to show us around the Left Bank in a day or two and we eagerly accepted.




Meanwhile, we filled our days drinking in Paris as if it were the last drops of water on a parched desert.  The history; the excitement of a city that never sleeps; the food that surpassed expectations even when found on a cafeteria line - it was everything and more than I had ever imagined.  Mike and I went to the Bois de Boulogne, not realizing it was a hangout for drug addicts, but still finding the inherent beauty there while managing to get nearly lost right before park closing.  How could it possibly get any better?


When we met up with Claire again, she took us on a guided tour of the Left Bank, pointing out sights and telling us stories we never saw in any guidebook.  Over lunch, she casually mentioned that she was having a small dinner party the next day and invited us to come if we'd like.  Her home was in Glaciere, the 13th arrondissement, and could easily be accessed by the Metro.  We didn't think twice before accepting, marveling at how fortunate we were to have met such a kind, generous woman.

The next evening we made our way to Glaciere and to Claire's apartment.  There were about four dinner guests besides ourselves and not one spoke English.  One gentleman was a Count from Spain, and although Claire was multilingual and spoke Spanish as well, they conversed in French out of deference to the other guests.  Little by little, my school French had been coming back into use and I found I was able to converse with them and even think in French as I was doing so.  I'm sure to them, my limited French, complete with an appalling American accent was laughable, but they were all so gracious and treated us as if we were  visiting royalty.  At the end of the evening, Claire presented us with a book on Paris and warm hugs from herself and all of her guests.  Mike and I were quite overcome.  We had not been treated as annoying, crass Americans one time.  We had, in fact, been treated like dear friends and were shown kindnesses at every turn.



That was 37 years ago.  We've been back to Paris, but sadly, Claire was gone.  Over the years we have visited many other cities and have warm, rich memories of each one.  Somehow, though, nothing will ever come close to comparing to that first trip to Paris and my childhood dream fulfilled.