January 18th

I made a truly awesome New Year’s Resolution this year, but for the life of me I can’t remember what it is.  Which really sucks, because I have nothing much to say in those moments, like one I had today, when someone I was chatting with laughed, and admitted they just weren’t capable of keeping one, and isn’t it just one of those things that is beyond stupid anyway, since we then promptly do not follow through on whatever promise we’ve made to ourselves to be better human beings?

And I’m all:  what even was that thing I was so excited about committing my life to doing?

Welcome 2014.  It’s working itself into being a real doozy.

When the Questions are Also the Answers

Zora Neale Hurston once wrote, “there are years that ask questions and years that  answer”; ten words that took my breath away.

As I pondered them, the cocoon that exists in my heart, the one that holds inside it the need for connection to meaning in this life in the midst of the daily chaos that is full-time work, marriage and motherhood, began to crack open, and stir.  I recognized in someone else a knowing that is also in me, and I felt a deep connection, so big and so encompassing, I started to cry.

It was just a moment. They say I’ll be having more of them as I close in on menopause.

But, as I reflected on my 41st year of life, and all of 2013, I thought, well, clearly, that was a year for questions.  And it was. I questioned every little and big decision I made for and about my children (usually between the hours of 1 and 3am).  I questioned whether I want to remain in teaching.  I questioned how to reconcile who I’ve been up to now with who I am becoming, and balancing the things I want to do and accomplish with the things my family needs.

It never felt like I had answers, but the questions, my god, they sometimes consumed me.

Do you remember the classic ‘Who’s On First’ skit?  I have always hated it.  One spring when I was a teenager, my dad drove us to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.  The only thing I remember about it was a screen the size of a whole room playing the recording of Abbott and Costello performing it.  I stood there, arms folded, thinking idiots.

The line we all remember Costello asking was misinterpreted as a question – “Who’s on first?”  – while Abbott heard “Who’s on first.” So he answered “yes,” because Who was, in fact, playing first base.  Once the audience gets the miscommunication, we want everyone’s misery to end.  But no.  Who.  What.  I Don’t Know.  They’re all there, and they each get their long, drawn out turn.  Who’s on first:  is it a question or is it an answer?  Let’s go ahead and hash it out for 7 minutes 53 seconds and when we finish, let’s just go ahead and start again.  Until the end of time.

I spent 2013 in Costello’s role, frustratedly asking my questions every different way imaginable, trying to get at an answer that made sense.  In fury, I’m sure I even stomped around in a tantrum once or twice, red-faced and twitching.  If I’d’ve had a hat, I’d have thrown it.

2013 was about asking questions. That isn’t less true just because 2013 was also very busy answering questions I’d asked years ago, questions like should I have a family?  How many children?  Should I go to work full time?  Doing what?  Can we afford to buy a house?  If so, where?  My life has been answering those questions for quite some time now.

It’s silly to think that because our calendar slid from December into January that suddenly my life’s fraying loose ends are going to get neatly tied up in a pretty pink bow.  Because this little skit of questions that runs unceasingly in my head?  It’s going to keep on playing itself out.  It’s called life.

Abbott’s character seemed to get that.  Even tempered, he simply answered the questions he was asked, very matter of fact, very knowing.  It is his steadiness, his sureness, that moves the skit forward.

2013.   My questions included:  Is it time?  Is it time to apply to graduate school?  Is it time to begin to build a scaffold so that I won’t have to teach school for the next 25 years?

“It’s time?”  Is it a question?

It’s time.  Is it an answer?

Yes.

And yes again.

One Year Later

“If what they say, what they say, what they say is true/ that a spirit up above watches over you/ then I wanna know, what’s His cue?/ And who is God praying to?…If what they say, what they say, what they say is true/ that a spirit down below watches under you/ then I wanna know – when his fame begins to fade/ what makes the devil afraid?”

-Bronze Radio Return

I can’t be the only one who needed no reminder of the anniversary of the tragedy at Newtown.  December 14, 2012 changed my life; the way I parent, teach and see the world. I have thought often about what happened that day, and of the mothers of those little souls lost.  More than once I have let my mind explore the dark alley of what if and had to switch on the floodlights and run like fire out of there.

On December 13th of this year, I read the messages my brother and sister-in-law wrote to their first born daughter on her birthday; breathtaking words of how much joy and light she has brought into their lives.  On December 15th, I read the ones they wrote to their second-born girl on her birthday; beautiful words about her amazing determination and grit. To both they renewed their pledge of unending love and support.  A pledge we all make to our children, every day.

Unless they have left us behind in the world; a notion I can barely fathom, and only from this distant ledge on which I stand, honoring other families’ pain, suffering and grief on that day, and over this entire year.

This week I was captivated by an interview on NPR with Nelba Marquez-Greene, the mother of six year old victim Ana Marquez-Greene, who spoke so eloquently she moved me to tears.  In essence, she said she feels empowered to choose love every day since her daughter died, and to raise her son in a way that allows him to give and receive love throughout his life, despite their loss, and to choose compassion for every single person – including those who hurt us, sometimes irrevocably.  Her motto?  Love wins.

I could not help but hear her message as one with unending value and application in a world I’m not always proud to learn about on the evening news.

Do I think it’s mere coincidence that two of my niece’s birthdays surround the date of the events at Sandy Hook Elementary School?  Believe me, I do not. For me, very personally, this is the voice of the universe I hear. It’s a whisper, and it lets me know I’m not alone.  It doesn’t promise that horrible, terrifying, paralyzing things won’t happen – and make me feel like I’m drowning, but that, in the tiniest of places, hope floats.

So.  What makes the devil afraid?   Love. Generosity. Empathy. Benevolence. Faith. Sincerity. Honor.

Forgiveness.