Posts Tagged ‘celebration’

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 7: Death (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!

On Christmas Day in the year 2000, Stephanie – my stepmom – told us she was going to die.

That summer, she’d been diagnosed with Stage 4 ovarian cancer and had spent the fall fighting it to no avail. Her body was wasting, her lucidity was intermittent and the drugs were simply prolonging the suffering. In the unreliable medium of memory, her proclamation that it “was time” stands clear. She asked me to summon my father and I listened from the other room while she told him she was done fighting.

Three or four weeks prior to that, I had elected to take incompletes in all of my college course and fly home to either participate in her caretaking and unlikely recovery or to walk alongside her with family and close friends to the end of her life. It quickly became the latter.

To watch someone you love waste away and die is a certain kind of private hell. I remember fits of rage and an ache that pierced every part of my very being.

If I was writing a series on  “the events I’d change if I had a magic wand” or “the experiences that have brought the most pain,” this event would be at the top of the list. But to be honest, it truly belongs in this category, the place where I celebrate what has brought the most meaning to my life.

In part I celebrate the dying and death of Stephanie because I believe such a significant experience at such a formative and young age has enabled me to more easily tap into two significant hallmarks of the human experience: its unpredictability and its brevity. The cockiness of youth that allows us to believe we are invincible melted away and in its place I discovered empathy, openness and passion.

I also celebrate the dying and death of Stephanie because it was one of the funniest, most intimate and alive periods in my life. 24/7 caretaking makes anyone loopy as does morphine for the patient. You add a household of very funny people and suddenly the constant need for ice chips results in nothing short of a stand-up comic routine and the hearse doing a u-turn becomes a moment of hilarity.

In the end, though, I suppose this belongs as a celebration because the practice of staying awake in that private hell and taking the sacred walk with someone I loved to death’s door led me directly to the threshhold of heaven. To an unwavering belief that light always pierces the darkness, that there is no separation between us and God and that, in the end, it’s all just about love.

(This picture was taken by Stephanie of my dad, my brother and me during one of her last lucid moments shortly before she died.)

As a final note, I’d like to dedicate this post to my dear friend, Liz, who lost her mother to ovarian cancer when she was just a teenager. Liz was a necessary guide and partner through my grief following Stephanie’s death, always keeping tabs on me, providing comic relief at just the right moments and being transparent about her own life. If you were here, Liz, I’d take you out to the Olive Garden and we could do the crazy dance.

Day 6: Conrad (30th Birthday Countdown)

In the summer of 1978, when he was just 12 years old, he moved to a new town. On the first day at his new school, so the story goes, he was ridiculed for wearing purple pants. Instead of becoming a bully or shrinking away in embarrassment, he responded as most kids naturally would: he did a handstand and proceeded to walk across the school yard upside-down. He had no trouble after that.

Today, he’s an athlete. An electrician. A beer-drinking, Las Vegas-loving, deer-hunting kinda guy.

AND he’s a substitute teacher. A soccer coach. A brushing-his-daughter’s-hair, playing-with-all-the-babies, sewing-on-Girl-Scout-patches kinda guy.

He is one of the most inventive people I know and at fourteen years my senior, Conrad, a.k.a. Connie, is the oldest of my four siblings. He also happens to be one of the most slippery people I’ve ever met when it comes to putting someone in a box. I absolutely adore that about him and consider that to be one of his greatest contributions to my life.

(Me and Connie, Christmas 1992)

There have been numerous other gifts, too. Connie:

  • changed my diapers
  • showed me how to kick a soccer ball
  • came to most of games
  • paid me $50 every time a I got straight A’s in school
  • taught me how to vision my way out of a headache
  • came to see me off to my Junior prom
  • recently assembled a birthday gift I gave him 20 years ago
  • let me spend the night at his house when I was furious with my husband

I celebrate all of the love and care these acts represent. But it is truly the fact that he seems comfortable being a walking anomaly, living outside the bounds of anyone’s expectations for his life that I find so damn impressive and inspiring.

So Con, the next beer’s on me. After that, maybe we can race in the 50-yard dash and then hit up the Jo-Ann Fabrics…

Day 5: Riding Bikes (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!

If you grew up in small town America you know exactly what I’m talking about. Bike riding wasn’t just a means of transportation from point A to point B, it was an end in and of itself. As in, “Let’s ride bikes.”

To this day, I can picture myself decorating the single speed with training wheels and riding through town for the 4th of July Parade. I can feel the pain from the torn off finger nail when I fell off my first big girl bike racing a neighbor around the block. I can almost taste the exhilaration of sneaking out at midnight with a friend to ride my brother’s bike to my boyfriend’s house. And I can remember hanging out with friends atop my first 10-speed in the Cumberland Farms’ parking lot.

Even though I live in the city now and almost always wear a helmet, riding bikes still feels essentially the same to me – like freedom.

So today I celebrate not the utility of a bike, but the open air, the euphoria of coasting with no hands on the handlebars, the riskiness of riding someone’s pegs and the friends who’d call up the ol’ land line and say, “Let’s ride bikes!”

Day 4: Dream Group (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’m not talking about the reach-for-the-stars kind of dreams. I’m talking those crazy nighttime kind of dreams.

The same year I moved back East, a personal and family friend invited me to attend her dream group. This group of women, led by a Jungian therapist out of her Quaker retirement community, meets bi-monthly for two hours during which time two dreams are shared.

Five years later and I can only say that joining this small group of 50 – 80 year old women to discuss our dreams has been AMAZING! Let me say it again: AMAZING!

Some particulars worth celebrating:

  • I am not off my rocker because I have violent, creepy or disconcerting dreams
  • My subconscious is a rock star when it comes to communicating that which I cannot or do not want to see but truly need to
  • Older people have a lot of insight; younger people do, too
  • We always have the opportunity to better integrate who we are with how we live

If you haven’t explored your dreams, do yourself a favor and start. It’ll be worth the pain of rousing yourself at 3:00am and blinding your partner when you turn on the  light. My dreams have led to new business ideas, ways to move forward where I am stuck, entirely new perspectives on my problems and impactful insights into who I am at my core.

What a gift to arrive in my twenties!

Day 3: Baldness (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!

Okay, so “baldness” may be a bit misleading. That’s not exactly what I’m celebrating and as a matter of fact I have a very full head of hair. So much so that the hairdresser spends a solid 10 minutes thinning it out at each visit.

But there’s what we might call elective baldness. And that’s where I fit in.

At the tender of age of 16, I chose to shave my head. Primary motivation: why the heck not?!? Secondary motivation: I was feeling a little attached to my beautiful blonde locks. With friends doing nothing short of egging me on one summer’s day, we grabbed the nearest clippers and buzzed it all off.

(At the 1996 Olympic Games)

(At the 1996 Olympic Games)

In my 30 years thus far, I truly consider this to be a dogeared moment. Not only does it make excellent party fodder and put every hairdresser at ease when I request a funky haircut (afterall, if it was shaved once…), but it has altered the way I view myself in significant ways. Importantly, I have been able to experience myself as “okay” when running counter to cultural and even personal expectations.

So I celebrate my 16 year-old-self’s courageous act, knowing that I continue to make similar (though rarely such overtly physical) choices that require much courage. It’s incredibly helpful to have a solid role model!

Day 2: Dad (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!

It will likely come as no surprise (after yesterday’s ode to my mother) that today I celebrate my father and his role in my life for the last 29 years and 336 days!

There’s the sense of humor. A command of language. Intellectual curiosity. A love of all things woodsy (including daddy long leg spiders!). A willingness to wear tie-dye.

In 2007, prior to my Junior prom

(In 1997, prior to my Junior prom)

Today, however, when I look at who I’ve become I recognize that my dad has given me a particularly tremendous gift in the realm of story that has shaped my very being. He infused my childhood with story – from creating winding bedtime tales until I drifted off to sleep in a land of adventure, to exposing me to Shakespeare and Sweet Honey in the Rock.

But there’s another kind of story that has become dear to me that I’ve gotten to explore with my dad – the personal story. His kitchen table will always feel like home to me because it is there that I learned the art of crafting a personal tale. And the art of challenging it. Be it the story of the amazing day, the story of girl-meets-boy, the story of the crappy job…

Thanks, dad, for sharing with me your love of a good story, for that has powerfully transformed my life over and over and over.


    Get There Now


  • Schedule a consultation

  • Attend the next event

  • Comment on the blog

  • Sign up for the email newsletter and receive a free story-changing tool:
    Email:
____________________

“Jen’s coaching has been such a gift to me! I appreciated how intently Jen listened to my concerns. She asked great questions to open my mind to new possibilities. I often went into the call feeling confused or weighed down about a particular issue and after 30 minutes with Jen, I had the clarity and energy I needed to resolve my situation.”Anne Kaufman Weaver, Lancaster, PA