Archive for February, 2010

Day 13: Tea (30th Birthday Countdown)

As a countdown to my 30th birthday on March 18, I’ve committed to offering 30 people, things and experiences I want to celebrate from the last 30 years. Grab a piece of cake and enjoy reading!

I love tea.

Tea for me began at my father’s house when I was  a little girl. He drank the same brand of orange pekoe tea with such unwavering consistency that it later became known as “rut tea.” To this day, that moniker is used for short hand within the family.

“What kind of tea do you have?”

“Rut, green, chamomile…”

It wasn’t until I worked at a Victorian Tea Room, however, that my love affair with tea really began. I learned about proper brewing temperatures and times, the joy of tea paired with scones and Devonshire cream and how a cup of Harney & Sons Earl Grey tea could make the stresses of the world melt away. Tea quickly became my double on the rocks.

These days, I maintain a fairly steady ritual around tea and my cabinet averages 15 varieties of bagged and looseleaf. I drink tea to celebrate feeling good, to help me feel better, to warm me up, to wake me up, to calm me down, to support my health, to cleanse my palate…

At this moment, I’m feeling a little antsy. I’ve got a big trip coming up in two weeks for which I’m grossly unprepared, I’m helping with arrangements for my grandmother’s funeral and I’m in definite need of a meal. In the scheme of things, however, all is good: I’m drinking tea at this very moment and I still have a few sips left!

(Lemon Ginger)

Day 12: An Irish Grandmother (30th Birthday Countdown)

As a countdown to my 30th birthday on March 18, I’ve committed to offering 30 people, things and experiences I want to celebrate from the last 30 years. Grab a piece of cake and enjoy reading!

My last surviving grandparent died this morning.

Of all my grandparents, I was closest to her. Mommom was the one I adored as a child; the one who loved the wind; who gave out ironed $5 bills to her grandkids so they might “buy a Coke”; who painstakingly celebrated each Christmas gift given to her; who served tea in Irish Beleek China; who would hold my teenaged hands in hers and give me some bit of advice.

(Christmas, 1996)

But I have only seen Mommom twice in the past five years even though we live fewer than 10 miles apart. Both times were during this last month while she lay dying on a hospital bed at the age of 98.

This is because Mommom had “disowned” me.  I will spare you the details and let it stand at the fact that five years ago I suggested we build a better relationship.  She has never spoken to me since.

When I got the call two weeks ago that she wanted to see me in the hospital, I obliged. I have long ago released any anger toward her and was hopeful that she would release her own toward me, perhaps offering herself some comfort at the end of this road. Alas, in the unforgiving nature of dying, she was unable to speak to me by the time I arrived at her side. Her stroke had left her partially paralyzed and in need of a ventilator, preventing her from vocalizing.

I held her hand for over 30 minutes while she struggled with great frustration to tell me something. But it was too late. For her, there could be no deathbed speech.

The life lessons learned by watching Mommom from afar have been invaluable and I have found myself celebrating them frequently in these last weeks. In particular, I celebrate the understatement that it is better to address matters of great importance in a timely fashion.  I find it easy to also celebrate the warmth and generosity I experienced with her as a child and the Depression-era Irish Catholic strength that coursed through her blood.

Today, however, on the day of her death, I  mostly celebrate what I hope is freedom for her from the suffering that clouded most of her life. To do so, I offer this:

The Lake Isle of Innisfree

by William Butler Yeats

I WILL arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made:
Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee,
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
Dropping from the veils of the mourning to where the cricket sings;
There midnight’s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
And evening full of the linnet’s wings.

I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.

May it be so.

Day 11: Flowers (30th Birthday Countdown)

As a countdown to my 30th birthday on March 18, I’ve committed to offering 30 people, things and experiences I want to celebrate from the last 30 years. Grab a piece of cake and enjoy reading!

Yup. We’re talking about the kinda flowers a boy gives a girl.

While I couldn’t count the number of times I’ve received flowers from my husband or for theatrical or choral performances, there’s only one time in my life where the act felt like a momentus occasion.

I was 20 years old and having some version of a cross-country relationship with a guy named Erik I’d met over the summer. We exchanged heartfelt letters (yes, letters!) and had the occasional phone call.

I was also in a play that semester and spending plenty of my nights in rehearsal. The day before the play opened was a long one. I’d left my apartment early for class and didn’t return home until close to midnight, when my roommate informed me that the student union had called earlier. There was a package awaiting me.

Never one to turn down a package, I turned right around and walked across campus to the student union where I found the most gorgeous bouquet of sunflowers sitting on the desk.  They were from Erik.

As I’ve said, I’ve received many bouquets of flowers. But this was first time as a woman that I encountered a man going out of his way to express affection for me. I sat up a long time that night enjoying the warm California air – unable to call Erik due to the time difference – feeling tremendously appreciative and delighted. Feeling, for the first time, overwhelmed by the simple pleasures of romance, by the joy at being celebrated by a man.

Day 10: Hindsight (30th Birthday Countdown)

As a countdown to my 30th birthday on March 18, I’ve committed to offering 30 people, things and experiences I want to celebrate from the last 30 years. Grab a piece of cake and enjoy reading!

Like most formal education, mine required knowledge of a multitude of useless facts. This showed up most significantly in history classes, in which we’d often memorize dates and names, as opposed to wrestle with motivation, ethics or patterns. To some degree, the way history was (and must still be) taught sucked the life out of me. I knew there were stories that needed to be told, ideas that needed to be explored and events that needed new eyes. I just could never see how the memorization of facts added value to my life or the contribution I might make to the world.

And so I made this known.

The movie Amistad had recently been released and after seeing it I decided – in my infinite teenaged wisdom – that my fellow students and I should be learning history in these kinds of ways. In ways that made it real, made it stick. That got at the issues.

So a good friend and I went to the school board president to plead this very case. Nada. And if I’d had a hair’s less passion I might have stopped there. Instead, I took it upon myself to draft a letter to THE ENTIRE FACULTY asserting my perspective and placing it in each teacher’s mailbox.

I might not cringe today at my assuredly bold move had I not come across this letter a few years ago at my dad’s house. I remembered this event rather positively and indeed, underneath the hyperbole existed some very valuable points. But what I wrote was patronizing. Condescending. It was painful to read.

So today I’m celebrating the hindsight that allows us to see our former selves in new ways – whether it be with pride or humiliation. And the fact that maturity breeds choice, as in “I can now generally state my opinion without degrading other people, departments or institutions.” I don’t believe hindsight is 20/20, but I believe it’s enough that we get the chance to see ourselves anew.

Day 9: My Sister Kelley (30th Birthday Countdown)

As a countdown to my 30th birthday on March 18, I’ve committed to offering 30 people, things and experiences I want to celebrate from the last 30 years. Grab a piece of cake and enjoy reading!

To some degree Kelley and I couldn’t be more different. She likes Vegas; I like the Grand Canyon. She buys a new car every few years; I passed 210,000 miles on my ‘97 Saturn just today. I tend to run cold; she tends to run hot. Her purse is from Coach; mine is from Whole Foods.

(This photo is of Kelley and my brother Sean, taken around the time I was born.)

If you were to meet Kelley for the first time, you’d likely describe her as quiet. Maybe shy. And because of that you might not expect that at every point throughout the last 30 years, my sister has been among my most ardent supporters, cheerleaders, defenders and advocates.

As a matter of fact, my earliest recollections of someone going to bat for me all involve Kelley. They’d be minor details, I suppose, if she lacked consistency, but consistency seems to be her strong suit.

Recently, I began to notice on Facebook that Kelley is always the first to comment on a link I post on my fan page or like my status update. She re-posts my blog and signs up for my workshops. And I suddenly realized that my whole life has been colored by this support, this knowledge that someone always has my back, always wants the best for me, always goes out of her way for me.

I see now how much of my courage and my drive for independence is a direct line from Kelley’s love. I go after what I want – whether its a bigger paycheck, a trip abroad, or a relationship – because she modeled that for me. Every single time she stood up for me (or for herself), I learned that I, too, could stand up for myself.

There couldn’t possibly be a better gift to receive from your big sister. And so I’m going to take this gift and put it into play for the rest of my life. And maybe, just maybe, standing up for myself will be thanks enough for all the times she’s gone to bat for me.

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