My Daily Miracle: Merry
At Scenic Beach, with shell ears |
I should have been thrilled to have the house to myself, but there was laundry to put away, dishes to do and a grey sky hanging around outside. Blah.
With the uncanny ability she's shown since she was tiny, Merry sensed my mood and went about doing what she could. "Mommy," she said with a strong strain of authority in her 11-year old voice, "I'll take care of the kitchen. You go upstairs, take a shower, have some quiet time."
Half-heartedly, I offered to stay and help her clean, but she shooed me upstairs. As I was showering and Merry clinked around in the kitchen, I realized that once again, I was acting like a fool. How could I have not seen a morning alone with Merry as a wonderful opportunity? I dressed quickly and ran downstairs. "Let's walk somewhere," I said. "How about we head downtown to the coffee shop?"
She ran off to wash her face and then we set off together. "Do you want to take books or just talk?" I asked as we pulled on our shoes. "Just talk," she replied, and we headed out into the cloudy day. She easily kept up with me as we cut through the park, scooted down a heavily wooded trail, and made our way through neighborhoods and down the main street downtown to the little coffee shop built on a hill overlooking the harbor. We ordered a big mug of chai and a pumpkin spice biscotti and then we sat in the corner of the shop, right next to the huge windows that frame the smooth waters of the Sound; dozens of diving seabirds; sailboats with anchors thrown.
When Merry was in preschool, I used to pick her up at noon every Friday and take her across the street to the Victorian Tea Room. She always got the same iridescent teapot with the pink herbal tea and we shared a basket of bread or a piece of pie. Now it seems ludicrous that I used to bring along my writing from the morning and read it to her--was she really just four years old? But that's Merry--Martin and I often reflect that one of the best things we've ever done together was to have Merry. An old soul from the very beginning. And now such a grown-up, lovely companion. We talked all morning and continued talking on the longish walk uphill back to our house, didn't stop talking until we opened the door to our little red house.
with "Texas" Grandma, sipping cafe au laits at Port Townsend's uptown bakery |
Now I've moved back close enough to take tea with my mother again on a fairly regular basis. Somewhere over the years she stopped taking a teaspoon of sugar, and that really threw me for a loop. It was back in those days in Kenya when I began associating tea with intimate, cozy conversation. Much later, I knew I'd found a real community in Pennsylvania when I knew, without asking, how each of my friends took her tea. When you change something as significant as whether or not you take sugar . .well, it shows that the relationship needs some nurturing.
at school |
I know how each of my daughters takes her tea: with a lot of milk and a lot of sugar. But over the years, that will change. And I want to to be around--I want to intentionally carve out that sacred space with each of my daughters--so that I will always be attuned to the changes.
deep in a sisterly conversation at Foul Weather Bluff |
Comments
Ah. I may cry if I say more.
xoxo
Rachel
xoxo
T
I feel as if we took so much of MCOB with us--the deep, quiet strains still sound so often in my daily life. Soon I will write a letter and say as much. I didn't realize how much I had taken in until we left.
Give big kisses to the kiddos.
Kim
K
Love,
Catherine Thompson