
Remember toys that came in cereal boxes? Decoder rings and such?
Well, our ever-hungry backyard squirrel, the one who has been raiding the bird seed bin for days came up on the porch and chewed the heck out of the beloved super-duper green plastic Toy Story cereal spoon that was left out here after one of our morning sits.
We are crying. Well, one of us is crying.
Hearing us (or her), Neighbor Tina (that’s what we call our neighbors – Neighbor Pete, Neighbor Nora, Neighbor Mark, and Neighbor Tina) came over with a handful of wrapped sticks of clay. Now we are making snakes and tiny snowmen.
The Toy Story spoon owner just went inside to put on her shoes so she could chase the squirrels who have moved on from chewing on the Toy Story spoon to hang on our bird feeders. She is now using a rubber band as a pretend slingshot and laughing loud enough to be heard downtown. The squirrels run but come back. It’s how everything is.
We work the clay with our hands to soften it up. It’s not like Play-Doh I explain. It takes more work. More commitment. We are distracted by the need to constantly chase the squirrels. Action being more fun that art at the moment.
My daughter died a month ago and her daughter is in my backyard chasing squirrels. “You want to fight?” she yells when she charges across the yard with a sand pail on her head and a shovel in her hand. I think of her mom in this moment.
She would be laughing. So are we in her honor.


What you write about and what you want to write about are two different things a lot of the time.
I want to write about how some condolences feel like diagnostic quests. How are you doing? No, how are you really doing? Is that when I tell them I scrolled through all the texts from my daughter while she was hospitalized in the month before she died to see if our back and forth was strained or relaxed? Was I remembering things the way they were? Were the hours we sat in her hospital room easy or hard? Had her old resentments been stowed away or were they lying on the thin sheet at the foot of her bed but I just didn’t see them. Do I tell them that I think all the time about when I washed her hair in the tiny hospital room sink, how reconciling and fleeting that was?
I don’t say any of these things.
Yesterday, I walked into a shop of a nonprofit group that helps trafficked women begin new lives. They sell soap and candles and notecards and hats, and the shop smells like the lightest cleanest place on earth. The program’s director met me at the door. She smiled, glad to see me, and I could tell from her eyes that she knew what had happened to our family. But she didn’t ask. And I was grateful for that. For having her silent acknowledgement of our daughter’s death and our family’s challenges but being spared the piercing look, the How are you doing? No, how are you really doing?
It’s ill-mannered to criticize well wishers of any ilk. They mean well, my mother would say. So I don’t criticize, I just buckle up when I’m around them, drive faster to get out of traffic, roll the windows down so I hear nothing but the wind and sirens in the distance.
That’s what I write about today. It’s neither here nor there.
Here.
It’s not perfect but I gave up envy for Lent. My mother who seemed to me to be more long suffering than content with her lot in life often said, “Want what you have.” This is useful advice since it can be applied to a person, place, or thing. It’s a profound kind of settling, a deep resignation that could manifest depression or serenity. Oddly, my mother had both. She was serene in her depression, almost mystical.
Anyway, about places to live. For a long time, I wanted to live on Lake Superior and I did, parttime at least. And then I fell out of love with living there because the difficulty of it overrode the beauty of it. So, I no longer wanted what I had, but I didn’t want anything else. In other words, I didn’t aspire to a better place, a more beautiful place, more exotic and lovely.
I settled for here. An old house a few blocks from Lake Michigan where lots of people walk by every day and we can have a fulfilling porch life on front and back porches depending on the time of day. I like turning the corner on our street and seeing our lovely sea green lady sitting just so in the middle of the block, arguably the prettiest house in the neighborhood. I love that our back porch has become a place for morning reflection and gentle conversation and that our front porch serves as our cocktail lounge and art studio for a budding artist. That there are smudges of purple and blue and red on the porch floor bothers me not at all – it is washable paint after all, if we ever get around to mopping the porch which seems possible but unlikely.
Here is a very strange photo of here taken by an artist friend who happened by the night we put a broken kitchen chair out at the curb.
Here.


I cancelled my trip to Paris to do a crossword puzzle.
That’s not true. I cancelled my trip to Paris to pull weeds in my side garden and then to sit for an hour on the front porch while a four-year-old told me fantastic stories about monsters that involved painting popsicle sticks red and yellow and being extremely quiet when so instructed.
Okay. I didn’t really cancel my trip to Paris. I’ve never planned a trip to Paris. What I know about Paris is Hemingway’s Moveable Feast and all the chatty, catty descriptions of Hemingway and the Fitzgeralds hanging out with Gertrude Stein, all of them drunk and talking smart until dawn. I can do that here.
It occurs to me, being of a certain age, that I ought to be more worldly, well-traveled, sophisticated. I screwed this retirement thing up, for sure.
And now. Well, now, God only knows where I’m headed. There are, after all, monsters everywhere.

“You don’t have to decide everything right now.”
It was the funeral director who said this first but since that meeting a month ago, I’ve said it to myself a hundred times.
I don’t have to have a plan. I don’t have to weigh and re-weigh alternatives. I don’t have to think of the worst-case scenario (mostly because it’s already happened). And I don’t have to be in control. That last one is the revelation. I don’t have to be in control.
Last week, I stood in the kitchen with my older son, both of us shaking our heads at what brought us to this point with a little girl racing around my kitchen as if she owns the place (she does after just two months of living here).
I asked him how he’s doing. “Just goin’ with the flow,” he answered. “Yeah, me, too,” I said. “Me, too.” He seemed surprised, knowing me as someone who always has a plan. That I was winging it, just trying to keep my arms and legs from getting sliced up by branches while I float down what? this river of life seemed to surprise him.
Me, too. But it’s working. I don’t have to decide everything right now. That’s the lesson from these past two, very hard months. I can just float for a while, maybe a good while.
____________________

She knows how to pick ‘em, don’t you think? Never mind that his gnome vibe doesn’t quite pair up with her beehive and giant earrings, not to mention the stilettos with wraparound straps. His red gnome nose might also be cause for concern, you know, all the slinging back in the woods breaks a lot of capillaries.
Never mind. What happens on the back porch stays on the back porch.
We can’t have reality messing up our little back porch lives now, can we?

I’m giving my mother’s afghan to Goodwill. It is pretty but very scratchy. Just writing that makes me feel like the afghan being scratchy is an insufficient reason to put it in the used blanket bin at Goodwill. So, I am feeling guilty about wanting to ditch the afghan, you know, after all the work my mom put into it, all the squares crocheted just so, all the Ed Sullivan that was watched, Gunsmoke, Palladin.
Things have to go.
I am oppressed by all these things. My baby shoes, a meat grinder, Thing 1 and Thing 2, a ceramic skunk, adult coloring books, jigsaw puzzles, embroidery kits, empty picture frames, Leonard Cohen’s Book of Longing, Robert’s Rules of Order, a mink hat, and Durant’s ashes. I am skimming the surface.
A week or so after my daughter died, her friend brought over bin after bin of stuff he’d agreed to store until she came back from Nicaragua. The bins sat stacked on our front porch. We’d sit for a while, collect ourselves, and then tackle a bin. Jewelry, pictures, cosmetics, books, journals, purses, satchels, so much that we told him to hold on to whatever was left which sounds crazy but made sense then and still does. The stuff, all the things, well, they were suffocating. Us. Suffocating us.
So, the afghan and all its scratchiness and effort and obligation must go. I want to picture it heaped on a massive pile of my things, the four-part DVD of Lawrence of Arabia, my sewing kit, the blue parrot the boys bought me in Key West, the mug with all the presidents’ signatures (well, not all, thank goodness), and the thank you notes, written and unwritten. In my mind’s eye, the pile becomes a funeral pyre stacked a mile high in the bed of a rusted Ford truck and someone sets it afire on the side of the road next to an abandoned dairy farm.
A fitting end – to the afghan and everything else. Don’t you think?

I’m not a wreck. I am super functional. I have to be because there is so much to do.
That said, I just spent an hour giving myself a pedicure because to not do so would have an adverse effect on my mental health. Much more so than the laundry sitting in the washer that needs to go in the dryer or the massive and very thorny weeds that have taken up residence in my side garden, but I will say this, to my credit, the hydrangeas I planted last year not only came up this year but revived themselves after I finally watered them after walking past their droopy selves for three days resenting their neediness.
Our daughter died three weeks ago yesterday. The whole day felt weird, like the two of us, her dad and I, were counting down the hours when we were sitting in the surgical waiting room eating the last of our meager snacks. We thought surgery would wrap up by dinnertime, but we were wrong. We thought a lot of things. We thought the humble but obviously insanely smart surgeon would pull off a miracle. We thought our daughter would survive the surgery and come home to rehab in our upstairs bedroom like she’d done before. We thought she’d regain a semblance of a normal life despite her busted heart and be able to work and walk her little girl to school.
So, yesterday, we were sort of reliving all those dashed hopes and I, in particular, was feeling hurt, like I had a bad sunburn and didn’t want anything, even the thinnest lightest shirt, touching my skin. So we opted out of a big event that I normally would have loved attending and went to the dog park instead and then to Meijer’s to buy my favorite coffee and red wine vinegar which we always think we have but never do.
I think that’s part of the aftermath of death, listening to when you’re telling yourself you’re too fragile to do something and then not doing it. And then not making any excuses, just saying it was too much. I can’t do this yet. It’s too much. And that being okay.
I can do the things I can do. The pedicure, the laundry, watering the plants, vacuuming and wrestling with the madness that is my office. Little one is expected back in a bit after a day spent with her aunt and uncle. I’ll be ready. I’m not a wreck. I am super functional.

This morning my husband sent me an article from New York Times Cooking entitled, “The mistake everyone makes with pancakes.”
I’m fascinated by this since I’ve always made pancakes out of the box, usually with mixes that say “Just Add Water!” as if that’s the biggest break anyone could ever experience. To me, pancakes are a platform for butter and high-end maple syrup I didn’t start buying until all the kids were out of the house. But, oops, we have a new syrup under-ager. Oh well. Back to Mrs. Butterworth’s.
It would be ridiculous to say that I’m inspired by my husband sending me cooking tips after forty-two years of marriage, but I might be.
There is hope in the mundane.
The world might be a mess but, if we wanted to, we could really level up our pancake game. The door is there. We just have to kick it open.
I’m inspired. Indeed.
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