Thursday, December 9, 2010

Finding Myself --- Again

Flashback: The year is 1981, it is evening, and I am walking on the streets of New York alone, on my was to see the movie, "The French Lieutenant's Woman". I have been sent by my new employer, the State of Connecticut Banking Department, to New York to attend a conference. In the evening between the two days of the conference I go to the movie. I am so excited. My new legal career has been launched, and I am managing as a working Mom. I love the movie beyond all proportion to how good it is.

Flashforward: It is December 8, 2010, the last night of Chanukah. I am sitting in my favorite lounge chair, surrounded by diet ginger ale, used kleenex, and empty pill containers. I have taken all my medications for the day, including my pre-bedtime dose of medication for my bronchitis and my middle of the night dose of Parkinson's Disease medicine. I've had a nice day, out with friends to a museum trip and luncheon, out with John for one last night of latkes, and a nice long chat with my sister. All this topped off with a phone call from my daughter Rachel saying that she and her husband Jon will accept my offer to accompany them on their move to Arkansas, and to stay for a week or so to help watch the kids while they settle in. John has said that maybe he can come on the weekend.

John went to bed a couple of hours ago, but I needed to unwind. Just for fun, I have just watched an old romantic movie from 1989 called "Chances Are". It's hard to watch without feeling a little sad about how good Robert Downey, Jr. used to be. During the movie, I am feeling excited, thinking about the trip to Arkansas, and our upcoming trip to Paris with Marc and Cheryl and their children. I am wondering if I can pull it all off, or will be felled by more bronchitis. But, reminding myself that both Paris and Arkansas are warmer in the winter than Connecticut, I feel optimistic. Besides, antibiotics are available both in Arkansas and Paris, just in case.

As I am about to go to bed, the television announcer states that the next movie is "The French Lieutenant's Woman". I make the motions of staying up to watch it, but knowing that I will fall asleep, I hit the DVR button so I can see the rest in the morning. I settle back in my lounge chair, and happily begin to watch the movie. I love the movie beyond all proportion to how good it is. It is a sign: my new career, as traveling Grandma, is being launched.

As life goes on, and things change, moving forward for me has not been so much a process of reinventing myself, but of finding myself again in the new surroundings. I realize now that it wasn't being a lawyer that defined me, it was being enthusiastic, and excited about what I was doing that defined me. In "The French Lieutenant's Woman" the characters are movie stars who glide back and forth between the roles they play as 19th century Londoners, and their real lives, but the story is eerily similar in both settings, and the ending uncertain. Perhaps that is why I have always loved that movie, it is a story of self transcending setting. It is also a reminder to me that there are times in life when joy happens, when difficulties only appear to be challenges, and when new doors open when we least expect it.

Do I love "The French Lieutenant's Woman" beyond proportion to how good it is? Do I love life beyond proportion to how good it is? Maybe -- or maybe sometimes, a movie, or a day, is really just that good.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Joy and Solemnity

Flashback: It is 1959, and I have been awarded a menorah as a prize for the best essay in our Sunday school class on my favorite holiday. Of course, I have written about Passover. I not only loved Passover, but was so proud of my parents for the wonderful seders they made. My father led the seder, and my mother cooked, but they both did their jobs perfectly. Every year, my father introduced a new fact about Passover, which he personally researched. He would lead us through the seder with a mix of joy and solemnity that captured the essence of the holiday.

Flashforward: It is 2010, and 18 people are around our seder table. Well, not entirely around the table. My daughter-in-law Cheryl, who is awaiting back surgery, in lying on the couch. She has made the journey from Newton to Newington, almost two hours of agony in the car, just so she and my son and grandchildren could be with us. My sister Melinda is sitting on the other couch, afraid to move. She was taken to the emergency room in an ambulance from our home the night before due to an extreme attack of vertigo, one of many she has had recently. My 10 month old grandchildren Nathaniel and Evelyn are sitting in high chairs for most of the ceremony, although my daughter Rachel and Evelyn join the group in the living room when Evelyn gets restless. My grandson Max, almost 2 and one half, is making himself at home wandering from one end of the table to the next, his own version of being around the table. Fortunately, in our home we have had to extend the tables into the living room to fit everyone in, so the ceremony is fully visible to those not exactly around the table. I have tried to find comfortable chairs for my Aunt Beryl and my friend Maxanne, both of whom are also experiencing back pain. I myself have been banned from helping to serve the Matzah Ball soup, because the tremors from my Parkinson's Disease have become sufficiently frequent that I am considered by one and all to be a danger around hot liquids. Besides that, I have not successfully fought off my cold, despite three days of bed rest, and I know that the with all of this activity I am risking another round of bronchitis.

Despite this, we are all here. As the time for the seder approaches, everyone is dressed up, and chatting gaily, watching the babies' antics, and listening to our 6 year old granddaughter Hannah report that she is prepared to do the first of the four questions in Hebrew as a solo this year. I call everyone to the table and we begin.

As the matriarch of the family, we ask our Aunt Beryl, now 81, to kindle the holiday lights. She does the English reading, and we all join in on the Hebrew prayer. My husband John leads the seder. Each year he uses the large reader's volume of the Haggadah, which was part of a gift to my parents along with the original set of eight Haggadot that my brothers and sister and I gave to my parents many years ago (as childen, we used the Maxwell House haggadot). At first, maybe we felt like John was channeling my father through that big book, with my father's penciled annotations, which John refuses to erase. Now, however, John has developed his own style, which moves me. He goes through each ritual, reads loudly enough for all to hear, but gently, and pauses enough to let me jump in with a suggestion of where to continue or what to chant in Hebrew. He smiles graciously throughout the service. As an adult convert to Judaism, John leads the basic Hebrew blessings, but where we opt to add more Hebrew chanting, John graciously turns it over to others. Thus we ask Marc, our son who had majored in Jewish and Near Eastern studies in college, to chant the kiddush, and to lead us in the Birkat Hamazon after the service. I sometimes kick of the singing of the other songs, as does our son-in-law Jon, who is good at keeping on the right page and keeping us moving along.

Soon, we are all participating in the ceremonies. It doesn't matter that some of us are not Jewish, (my sister-in-law Kathy, wife of my brother Andy, and my nephew Matt are Catholic), we all join in. My Uncle Yale, who takes pride in considering himself not to be religious, participates fully. Hannah chants the introduction to the four questions and the first of the four questions beautifully in her clear, sweet 6 year old voice. When John discusses the Matzah, the poor man's bread, Max exhibits the toy Matzah with a gleeful cry "Matzah", and we know he is paying attention. He joins in the loud and joyful choruses of Dayenu, and Nate smiles gaily and bangs his hand on the high chair tray in tune to the music. Nate is so excited that he sits in his high chair through the whole pre-meal part of the service, and, his father reports to us later, tries every dish (cut up in small pieces on the high chair tray). Evie spends some of the time reclining on her Mother's lap, but drinks it all in and stays awake for the whole pre-meal portion of the service. Hannah masterfully steals and hides the Afikomen, to be ransomed back later.

I know that my nephew Dan, who has come from New York, and makes a point of joining us whenever he can, will remember the many Seders shared with us, as part of his own history, as will my own children. Will the grandchildren? Will this be a vague memory, spoken of when cousins reunite at weddings and Bar Mitzvahs (remember when we were little and we had the Seder at Grandma and Grandpa's house), or will it only be the type of vague memory that lets them know that not a year when by without a seder?

I realize that this doesn't matter. We have fulfilled the Mitzvah, we have celebrated the Passover. All of the adults present, whether with their own children or children born to others yet raised by us all, have participated in the Mitzvah of passing on the tradition from one generation to the next. We have had our seder, lead with a mixture of joy and solemnity, which captures the essence of the holiday.

Postscript: It is now a little more than two weeks after the seder, and Cheryl has had successful back surgery, Melinda is in treatment for her vertigo, which seems to have been triggered by a virus, and appears to be slowly recovering, and my bout of bronchitis has come and gone.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

The Picture

Flashback: It is the spring of 1999, and 21 year old Rachel is graduating from American University, the last class of the century. She is about to take off to Israel, for a year of volunteer work and study. We have traveled to Washington, D.C. for the occasion with our 24 year old son Marc, and our two mothers. Marc is working in New York and going to graduate school. John and I are fully engrossed in our careers in Connecticut. There is a lot of promise on the horizon.

Flashforward:

It is January 28, 2010 and I am looking at the happy family picture that we just had taken last month. The picture includes Marc and his wife Cheryl with their two children, Max and Hannah; Rachel and her husband Jon with their two children, Nathaniel and Evelyn; and me and John. I wanted to have the picture taken to capture a moment in time when everyone in the family was happy. As I looked over the picture, I realized that while the last decade had brought us to this happy period, it was filled with the multitude of difficulties that life inevitably involves. Still, we had made it through, and grown as a family in numbers and in strength.

I guess that's why the picture was so important to me, to celebrate our collective happiness.
As Rachel put it, the picture represents a moment in time when our dreams, as a family, had come true. Whatever was in the past, whatever is in the future, I will always remember this moment in time with gratitude, and all of the wonderful people in the picture, who shared this moment with me, with love.


Monday, January 4, 2010

New Year 2010

Flashback:

It is December 31, 1968, and I am a sophomore in college. I have nothing particular to do on New Year's eve. My parents are going out, and need a babysitter for my 10 year old brother. My roommate Vickie comes over, and she and I and my kid brother Jeff have an impromptu party. Jeff plays the cello for us, he has been taking cello lessons. It turns out to be a surprisingly fun way to see in the new year.

Flashforward:

It is almost any New Year's even in the 1980's, and we are celebrating with our friends Bonnie and David. Bonnie and I have been friends since we were 14. Some years we see each other more than others, but we almost always get together on New Year's eve. Sometimes she cooks, sometimes I do, sometimes we both spring for babysitters and go out for dinner. But we always come back to one of our homes or the other for "coffee and..." and to have a glass of champagne as we turn on the TV to watch the ball drop at Times Square at midgnight.

Flashforward:

It is December 2009, a few days before New Years, and I get the urge to call Vicky, whom I haven't spoken to for over 10 years. I find her listed in the telephone book, and I call. She is, of course, surprised to hear from me, but states that her brother is there and they are about to go to the festival of trees at the Wadsworth Anthaeneum in Hartford. I tell her I will call her back, but I haven't yet.

I get another call around that time from Bonnie. We had made plans for New Year's Eve dinner at a restaurant. Because David's mother had just died, however, we decided to skip the champagne and dessert part of the evening. Now Bonnie is letting me know that her father is dying. He dies just before New Year's eve, and we spend New Year's eve afternoon and early evening at his funeral.

I had invited a friend for Shabbat dinner on New Year's day, but I was exhausted, and didn't enjoy myself as much as I had hoped to. My exhaustion was due not only to the funeral, but to the busy week we had had. The week started with Christmas Eve at my Sister-in-law's, then hosting my son Marc and his family overnight. We then babysat for his children, so Marc and his wife Cheryl could get away for a night. They returned before lunch on Saturday, so we could all have a family portrait taken along with my daughter Rachel and her husband Jon and their twin babies. This was my idea, because I wanted to record this moment in time when everyone was happy for a 60th birthday present to myself. Before Marc and his family left on Sunday, we went to my sister's for a belated family Chanukah party, because the party originally scheduled during Chanukah had been cancelled due to in impending snow storm.

Marc was back for dinner on Tuesday to drop off Hannah, his almost 6 year old daughter. We had invited Hannah to come to New York to see Mary Poppins on Broadway as her Chanukah present. Seeing the play with Hannah was wonderful, we all enjoyed the day immensely. But Hannah had been so excited that she woke up and got dressed at 4:30 am, and New York was crowded, so we were all tired by the end of the day.

The next day, John drove as we brought Hannah safely back home, stopping for breakfast on the way. Hannah was relieved that after a good night's sleep, John and I had overcome our crankiness and were back to normal. At breakfast, she reviewed the pictures of the actors on the Mary Poppins program, carefully marking them with the initials of the character each played, which she sounded out for herself. She was anxious to share this with her Mom. For a souvenir, she had bought a snow globe music box, her first, also to help her share the experience with her Mom. I was delighted that she had chosen this, and hoped that she would always keep it to remember our special day together. We dropped her off with her souvenirs, all smiles as she usually was. Then John drove us straight to the funeral, with only a brief stop for lunch.

Although I was not well acquainted with Bonnie's father, I felt as if I knew him from hearing her speak of him all of these years, and I cried throughout the funeral service. After the internment, a Shivah service was held at a small synagogue in Wethersfield, followed by the funeral meal. I was glad we attended because, although there had been a good number of Jewish friends at the service, by evening, most of the remaining people in attendance were not Jewish, and we were needed to make a minion. I was also glad I attended because most of those that stayed for the meal were friends of Bonnie's brother, and I wanted to be there for Bonnie.

Bonnie is my oldest "continuous" friend. I say "continuous" because I have reconnected with another friend from high school, but I had been out of touch with that other friend for about 15 years at one point. I feel bad for Bonnie and David, because when our last parent died (John's mother had died about 18 months earlier), we had two grandchildren, and Rachel was married and hoping to be able to have children soon. Neither of Bonnie's two children are married yet, and I thought it must be hard to officially become the older generation when there is not yet a third generation, nor one on the horizon.

After resting thoroughly on Saturday and Sunday, I was feeling pretty cheerful, and I had had an epiphany. I decided to give in to my illness, and to take it easier. If would no longer make the effort to keep up with John, but would send him off to work and to his book club and Torah study, Bar association meetings, and study groups more graciously. I would let him live as a healthy person, and I would live as a sick person. It was a relief to realize that it would be okay to lay down the effort of trying to live more normally. I am still a happy person, and I have realized that there are a lot of quiet activities that I can enjoy. Watching old movies, reflecting on life, finding and cooking new recipes that I can prepare in the morning before I am too tired, reading, babysitting the twins early in the day, visits with friends and family, and attending book and discussion groups that meet in the morning. Among the attendees of these groups are others who are tired, due to age or circumstance, and I can enjoy their company.

That evening, I received a call from yet another old friend with whom I had recently reconnected. She was part of our Junior Year in France group, but had missed our 40th year reunion due to illness. She is extremely ill with cancer that has metasticized to her liver, and has been in a nursing home for over a year. Her children are young (16, 18, and 20), and her marriage is not strong. John and I started visiting occasionally, and had given a luncheon at our home in her honor for local JYA alumni, to cheer her a little. Last night she called with fear in her voice. Today would be the test to see if her tumors were shrinking or at least stable, her youngest child was in the emergency room as we spoke with fever and severe neck pain, and her elderly Mother had fallen the day before. Although the problems of my illness seem small compared to hers, I have been able to bond with sick people since my illness. I felt good that she felt comfortable enough to call me to share her problems. Although we had been out of touch for 40 years, we now relate in a number of ways, such as our shared love of classic movies, and I now genuinely care about what is happening to her.

It has been a bitter sweet New Year, but it has left me feeling calm and happy. I myself am not even sure why. Perhaps it is because this New Year has brought with it the gift of acceptance. I can accept my age and my illness. I can accept that death comes to all, but that only premature death is a tragedy. I can accept laying down the struggle, with the realization that I have had my turn, and I must not interfere with the people in my life who are now living fully to the best of their ability, whether my age or younger. I can accept that for me, life is still beautiful, if a little slower. As I enter 2010, I rejoice in these blessings.