I’ve had one or two major relationships built on the
foundation of the written word.
When I put words on paper, I’m forced to think about what I
want to say. I am faced with the fact that, in most cases, whatever it is I
want to communicate will be out there, forever. And, if it’s out there, that
means it can be re-read.
I’ve got a macramé trunk in the attic that my mother
nicknamed my dead boyfriend box. It
is filled to the brim with every meaningful note I’ve received over the course
of every relationship I’ve ever had.
Not just boyfriend notes. (Though they are in there, too.)
Friends.
Family.
Colleagues.
Not every letter, either. Only the musings that are
particularly well-written or significant make the cut.
My first love letter is in there. 8th grade. From
a boy who asked me to a dance and then, later, gave me my first kiss. 12th
grade, an email from the guy who first broke my heart. College, a computer
print out from my father telling me how much he loves me. A beautiful embossed postcard
from my mother thanking me for organizing her surprise party.
Scrap paper I love you’s from my son.
A scribble from my daughter.
They are all living in the memory box in the attic.
I have given Zachary and Zoe their own memory boxes that sit on the top shelves of their closets.
Until they get older, I am assuming responsibility for filling their containers
with their firsts and lasts. I’ve wrapped up the outfits they wore when I
brought them home from the hospital. I tucked away their first Converse sneakers.
There are Ziploc bags containing locks of hair. Wrinkled finger paint pictures.
Zoe’s 1st birthday dress. Zachary’s last onesie.
I close my eyes and picture my children as teenagers, as
adults, as new parents, opening their boxes and discovering the treasures I
have hidden away inside. There aren’t any photographs, though. Over the years I
have accumulated thousands of pictures of my family. I have promised myself
countless times that I will organize these images in dated albums.
I’ve yet to get to it.
What I have done
is written letters. I’ve written letters describing to my children how I feel
when they reach certain milestones. When Zachary graduated from nursery school
in his blue seersucker pants. When Zoe flew, by herself, on the trapeze.
I sit, often late at night, on the evening of the day these
important events have taken place, and I write them down. On paper. With a pen.
The old fashioned way.
I tell my babies how proud they have made their mommy. How I
can’t believe how my heart could dance itself right out of my chest and beat on
the floor with pride and love. How
they are everything. Everything. And
how they teach me to breathe.
They show this mommy how to laugh.
To loosen up.
To calm down.
I describe to my children what they were wearing.
How they were feeling.
Who they were with.
But, most importantly, I tell my children that I love them
and I make sure to be very clear, at that exact
moment in time, to tell them why.
Because even though the love that I have for my children
will never go away, the reasons for that love evolve. I know that I love my 6-year-old-Zachary
differently than I love my 3-year-old-Zoe. And, I am sure I will love the 17
year old version of my son for different reasons than I love him now. Same is
true, of course, for my daughter.
And if, God forbid, I am ever driving anywhere and a truck
swerves into my lane; if I am walking and I take a wrong step; if something
should ever take me away from my children before I am old and gray and wrinkled:
I want them to have my words frozen in time.
I want to be so clear
with my writing that the letters I pen late at night have the power to wrap
their arms around the shoulders of my babies, and rock them to sleep.
If you are careful with what you write-and if you give that
writing to someone else-you give them eternity.
It is why, when you summarize a novel, you must always
summarize in the present tense.
Because, if you open that book, Charlotte is still speaking with Wilbur.
George is still mourning Lennie.
The quiet old lady will always
be whispering, “hush”.
5 comments:
And, perhaps for the first time, after reading this I simply have no words.
Tears. Well done, my friend.
Of course you get the irony, Karen. But this blog will have to do...for now. Thanks for your kind words!
Well said, MamaZee. Very, very well said!
Love,
Rose
Love this one!
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