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"..THOSE WE LOVE MOST and it grabbed me from the first page.."
—Gayle King,
O, The Oprah Magazine,
September 2012 

 

Lee Woodruff's 'real life" touches 'Those We Love Most'-USA Today, 9/5/12
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Entries from April 1, 2011 - April 30, 2011

Thursday
Apr282011

THE PROPOSAL

As mothers — we want to make it all perfect.  And so when my daughter started looking at prom dresses before she had the date, well, I was a nervous nellie.  What if she didn’t get asked?  It wouldn’t be the end of the world, she could go with a group as they all seem to do today.  But it’s her senior year.   As a Mom you want everything to be just so.  And yet with matters of the heart, you really don’t have any control. Ok, I suppose I could pay some boy to ask her, advertise on Facebook and offer $100 in I-tunes certificates for someone to be her escort.  But that one aint gonna stay secret for long. That kind of subversive activity could go south pretty quick.

I’m just about to head to the airport with my little girl as I finish writing this.  I’m taking her away with me for the weekend— just Mom and daughter.  It’s my graduation present to her.  She doesn’t need clothes or stuff or one more gadget.  The girl who could be a little more forthcoming in the communications department is going to make some memories with her Mama.  And I can’t wait.

So imagine my surprise today, while packing for what I hope will be a perfect four-day weekend, to get a phone call from my daughter’s girlfriend.

She wanted to drop off a letter that she has been helping a young Romeo polish.  It’s an invitation to the prom.  She need to come up with a ruse about why she would be dropping an envelope at the house for me.

But this Romeo doesn’t just want to give her the letter.  He wants me to give it to the pilot to read on the plane.  And he wants it all to happen before they take off so she can text him her answer.

Even my old, jaded 50-plus-year-old heart skipped a beat.  Not only was my baby girl going to go to the prom, she was getting a “Fantasy island” proposal.  Complete with da plane…..  who says all these kids want to do is find friends with benefits?

“Is she going to be happy that this guy is asking her?” I said, displaying my ignorance at my daughter’s social life and inner workings.

“Oh yeah,” said her friend.  And I smiled.  A big, long wide, Cheshire cat smile.   Don’t you remember the heart thumping sweetness and thrill of a boy you liked asking you to something.  Well I do.  I may be old, but I’m not senile.  There are no words to accurately describe that kind of emotion.  It’s all gut-feeling and tingling nerve endings and blushing capillaries.

So sometime in the next few hours, a little girl (who is now taller than me) will be smiling.  And her Mom will be smiling too.  Not just because she is happy. But because I am happy that I’m with her, that I get to be with her like this, like the days when she was little and she was all mine.  And I’m so happy that she gets to be on the receiving end of a proposal from a boy who thought this out- who wanted to make it special for her.  Thank you God up in heaven that YOU are still making boys like that for our little girls. Can you go into mass production please on that model number?

We’re only as happy as our happiest child—wasn’t that the famous Jackie O quote?  Or maybe I got that backwards.  In any case, I couldn’t have scripted this better.  Just keep your fingers crossed it all goes right!

Sunday
Apr032011

A FUNERAL, A BIRTHDAY AND A DOG

 

I had one of those days yesterday where I bumped up against the goal posts of life.  One announcement of the sudden death of a little boy, another old friend’s funeral and then I capped it off with a friend’s 50th birthday party. 

The vicissitudes of life.  I like that particular word, not only because it is chock full of consonants and sibilant sounds, but it captures exactly what it means to be in this middle place in life.   The dictionary defines it this way -- “of constant change or alternation, as a natural process, unpredictable changes or variations that keep occurring in life.”

I didn’t know the little boy.  I only know his grandparents and I know that kind of pain has no words attached to it.  There are no dictionary definitions that can accurately describe the loss of a child.  It’s not the natural progression of life.  No parent should ever outlive his or her children.

As I watched the elderly mother of my friend Jeff, whose funeral was yesterday, I saw the pain etched there too.  He was 52, had made it through the better part of his life presumably, the parts where he’d filled in most of the blanks.  He had wonderful friends, a successful career, had married a great gal and been the father to three beautiful and generous daughters.  But there was so much he wouldn’t get to do now.  And that pain was just as fresh and as real for that mother as it was for the mother of the 11 year old.  A child is a child.  And a mother’s job is to protect, even though none of us can fashion armor against the randomness of cancer or a drunk driver, a blood clot or an accidental fall.

As we all remembered Jeff yesterday, some of us who had not seen one another in too many years, it was really what all good funerals are supposed to be – that clichéd celebration of life.  And so it was. He touched many lives.  He seized it by the neck and left his mark.

Later that night at the birthday of my friend David, we raised a glass to his life.  A birthday is less about looking back than it is about looking forward.  Yes, we celebrated his three beautiful sons, his wise choice in a wife, his accomplishments.  We roasted and jabbed, poked at self-confessed weaknesses.  But a birthday says, “I made it this far and I’m still going strong.”   It was hard not to see the juxtaposition as I thought of Jeff’s family, sitting, I imagined, with the left-over’s from the funeral reception.

There is no takeaway from a day like yesterday other than the old chestnut about living life in the moment.  It’s a lot harder to do it than to say it.   But those of us who’ve made it this far have to give it the old college try.  Loss is something we get more comfortable with over time.  We respect it.  And if we’re good and wise, we let it remind us to live a little lighter, worry a little less about the silly things and tell the ones we cherish how much we love them.  Whenever we get the chance.

Today will be another day with both a birthday and a funeral.  I'm about to head out to the disco bowling alley for my twin's 11th birthday party.  As they move into "tween-hood," this might be our last goodie bag gathering.  Next year they will be in middle school and they are already needing me in different ways than they did eight months ago.

Our little dog Tucker was hit by a car three weeks ago.  It was very traumatic for everyone and it happened in front of my eyes.  I had to wake my girls that morning and tell them.  At 10, they haven’t really experienced much loss.  They have all four grandparents and all of their aunts and uncles.  They were too young to remember the scary parts of their Dad’s injury.  They only see the recovery.  Today we will plant a bush in the yard to remember Tucker and his absolute zest for life and unconditional love.  My girls will each read things they’ve written about how much they loved him.

Today will be a lesson in celebration, like all rites and passages are.  They are one year older.  And they have also lost their puppy.  Today will be an opportunity to remind them that they, too, can survive the vicissitudes of life.