Tangible moments

Posted on | June 27, 2007 | 14 Comments

We are wrapped in summer now; heat pressing in at 9 a.m., the mountains obscured by a soft haze, and the woods verdant with foliage. Along the mown paths that we’ve cut through the meadows, black-eyed-Susans and daises flutter like prayer flags. Tiny wild strawberries hide under delicate serrated trios of leaves, and we squat to gather them at the edges of the path, the juice staining our fingers red.

We watch the clouds gathering on horizon listlessly from the shade, wearing hardly anything at all, waiting for it to pour. Then we stand our faces upturned, fat raindrops speckling our cheeks.

Bean seeks out the hose, splashing cold water across my knees as I lounge in a lawn chair reading a novel. Heat stupored and languorous, I am trying to adjust to the pace of summer, recalling what life is like without urgency.

We make frosty smoothies from fresh peaches and frozen raspberries, eating them with long handled spoons from tall glasses in the shade. Mostly, we loll, Bean running naked in bright yellow Crocs and a sunhat; me in a chocolate colored bikini, wondering what sun will do the silver rivulets of stretch marks that have shimmered on my belly since his birth.

I catch myself staring. He’s so lithe and muscled, with the perfect little gibbous of a frog belly floating out in front of him. He moves with the ease of a yogi, squatting to inspect an iridescent June bug, spontaneously somersaulting down the easy slope of lawn, or racing pell-mell, with arms akimbo towards the garden where dirt and worms keep him occupied for over an hour. When he lies back on the grass, eyelids closed, I know he’s feeling the earth spin. His skin is still translucent, and I can see his veins running in intricate patterns across his ribs.

He’s my kid, and sometimes still I’m struck with disbelief. It was strange to be away for a week and then back—to watch how the warp and weft of my life separate and then entwined again. Strange to feel the familiarity of just myself: moments long on thought, late nights sipping wine and eating oysters, my pulse quickening to the tempo of the tenor sax. And then to feel the sticky sweet headlong passion of two-year old ardor, my heart thudding like a jungle drum.

Lately DH and I have been stopping each other in the midst of things to point out moments we could never have expected when we first found out we’d be parents. Like last night, the three of us in the back yard after dinner, the long rays of the evening sun falling just-so to make everything tinted with gold, DH playing guitar and Bean twirling around him in lopsided arcs. Or when all three of us were sitting on the grass, each one with a gawky chick in our lap, our uncontested favorite named “Mrs. T” for the way her orange feathers make a mohawk at the nape of her neck. Or lying naked on the bed our bodies slick in the evening heat, the fan oscillating and the moment ripe with longing, and then Bean clambering up to toss pillows on our heads, declaring, “I’m making a fort!”

It can’t really be reconciled, the way these moments merge together to make my life. Sometimes I think what would have been, might have, had June not brought the two blue lines in 2004. I wonder if I would have arrived at this point, with my writing, with my love, with all the corrosive stress that has worn thin the membrane of my heart, or if I would have veered off: painted big canvasses perhaps, or gotten a PhD in marriage and family therapy, as I once thought I wanted to do.

Listening to the stories of the people I spent a week writing with, I realized how absolutely not alone I am in the experience of my life. The odds tumble against everyone, and then turn. Life has a way of bringing us what we need, though not always when we imagine we need it. I was struck by how everyone held longing close to their hearts; how each had made major life decisions that painted the canvass of their life with bold strokes, yet every picture was as flawed as the next. No situation has it all—life with kids, or without them; partnered or flying solo; degree program or grass roots experience. Each of us had trepidation that first day; each harbored the same isolated terror before reading his or her work aloud in front of an audience (which we confided to each other later over Malbec and warm buttered bred.) Life simply is.

So here I am, somebody’s mother. Thigh deep in the decadence of summer: strawberries by the pint full; vanilla ice cream staining our lips with milky mustaches at midday. I took Bean to the lake for his first swim of the season yesterday, and like a little waterbug, he plunged right in, head high, legs churning out a steady stream of bubbles. At night I dream of four leaf clovers, which I then find when I wake up, and stories keep raining down now, like marbles spilling from a jar.

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14 Responses to “Tangible moments”

  1. Lyric
    June 27th, 2007 @ 11:23 pm

    And so tangible are your words to my heart.

    Yes – “life has a way of bringing us what we need, though not always when we imagine we need it. Little did I know how much your writings would meet a need in my life.”

    Thank you.

  2. lizardek
    June 28th, 2007 @ 1:55 am

    Oh Christina, your words are like magic. I’m awed by your ability to pull your readers into your surroundings and your emotions.

  3. Hillary
    June 28th, 2007 @ 12:29 pm

    This was the perfect day for me to read this post- serendipity! I feel very torn right now in the “life decision”- making process and you perfectly captured what I know I need to remember- that it will always be my life, no matter what shape it takes.

    Thanks.

  4. tanya
    June 28th, 2007 @ 1:01 pm

    So so so perfect. I am very happy that you have found your balance after all of the stress from the moves and the issue at school and everything else that shook you this last couple of years. I am so happy for you. This type of balance and happiness that you have written about in this entry is what we all strive for … what my family and I are working towards. It is nice to see that there really is a rainbow after the storm.

  5. Ruby
    June 28th, 2007 @ 1:17 pm

    Your words are beautiful and pure.

  6. Johanna
    June 28th, 2007 @ 2:22 pm

    Again and again, your words just .. fit! Thank you!

  7. la vie en rose
    June 28th, 2007 @ 4:52 pm

    i am always left awe struck by the power and beauty of your words and you observations on life…so glad to have found you in this great big blogging world…

  8. Sam
    June 28th, 2007 @ 5:32 pm

    Fairytale magic, storybook goodness. I love your experience of summer and all the ways you express it. (And I love the picture of that baby booty! I can’t imagine the freedom of running about naked, as a child can.) Your writing is like a slice of juicy watermelon, every time.

  9. Nina
    June 29th, 2007 @ 11:24 am

    So many of your posts touch my heart, this one especially. This past week my mind has been wandering back to all the forks I’ve encountered and I’ve been pondering how it would have been…Thanks for the gentle reminder to celebrate what is and that it’s all an important part of this spirit journey. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

  10. kelz
    June 29th, 2007 @ 5:54 pm

    you paint a beautiful picture of life.

  11. kerry
    July 1st, 2007 @ 2:02 pm

    I’m so inspired by your writing! Sometimes a sentence just attaches itself to my heart the day I read it, and today I’m clinging to yours, “Life simply is.” What a comforting mantra. Your words are so soothing. When you write about stories just raining down, it makes me take a bit deeper of a breath. The snapshots of our lives, coming and going, simply being.
    So glad to have found your blog!

  12. raquel
    July 1st, 2007 @ 4:40 pm

    it brings me such deep, inner peace to know that there’s so many others out there that think and feel the same. it delights me to no end to read your words expressing the same inner passion to…life. oh happy day!

  13. Marianne
    July 2nd, 2007 @ 11:29 am

    I’ve just discovered your blog and have quite enjoyed what I’ve read. I love how you share the pictures from your life. We are currently longing to provide the life (and chickens) that come along with having some property in the country for our boys. Your words made my heart hungry.

  14. Molly
    July 6th, 2007 @ 2:24 pm

    I love that you are able to celebrate words again… it seemed like the school year weighed down a bit, kept you so busy, and I know that feeling (and am deep in it again). Lovely images here. Little prose poems.

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  • I am Christina Rosalie

    Hello. I'm so happy you've stopped by!

    I am a multimedia storyteller, digital strategist, idea starter, stalker of wonder, finder of four leaf clovers, MFA graduate student, and mama of boys. My first book,

    will be published by SKIRT! Books in September, 2012.

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