Be Bold

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I have 15 cassette tapes and they've been neatly stacked on top of my dresser for years. There are tapes from radio shows I did in college, from concerts that I gave on campus, and even a demo tape I made when I first moved to Minneapolis. Mixed in with those, there are tapes my mother and I exchanged in 1988, during during my first months at Grinnell College. I have been vaguely and intermittently aware of these tapes but they weren't part of my everyday thoughts and blurred with the others until they were simply My Pile of Tapes. But one day recently, I thought of those tapes from my mother and felt a sense of urgency to listen to them. I ran down to the basement to get our old tape player and ran back upstairs, plugged it in and put the first tape inside and pushed play. It didn't work. I called one friend and then another--one could bring me an old Walkman the following day, one had a cassette player in her basement but found it didn't work either. I then I realized that Zeca had a CD/Tape player in her room and I grabbed that one and brought it into my room and put the tape in and pushed play again. Nothing. I texted Luisa who was at a meeting and she thought she might still have her Walkman and I briefly considered running out to by a cassette player or a digital converter.

I needed to listen to the tapes immediately but I waited.

When Luisa got home, she realized that she didn't have her Walkman anymore but she looked at Zeca's tape player and realized that I had both the play and pause buttons pushed down. It turns out that I had forgotten how to use a tape player. She released the pause button and suddenly, my mother's voice filled my ears, "I miss you so much and I hope you're doing ok up there."

The tapes are 27 years old but her voice sounded just as I remember it. She told me about going to the State Fair and things they'd done to the house. She talked about the weather and told me she was getting over pneumonia. She was charming and funny which I expected but I was surprised because she also sounded like a mother. I know that's an odd thing to say but my mother was never one to encourage or nurture. Good behavior and success was expected. We never talked about feelings or things that were hard. That was not how we related to each other. But that tape showed a different side to my mother, one I'd forgotten. Maybe she could say things on a tape that she could never say to me face to face or on the phone, things like, "I miss you," and "I love you," and "I have faith in you." The first tape ends with my mother saying, "Not a day goes by I don't think of about you. You just hang in there, work hard, have fun, and just be bold." I burst into tears because of the beauty and love in those words, because it felt like she was sending me a present day message too but also because the sentiment was so inconsistent with the kind of mother she was. Even now, a few weeks later, I am confused and wonder what I have right and wrong about the past.

I listened to the first tape I sent her and can hardly believe I was ever that young--an 18 year old girl with a southern twang that has long since faded, telling her mother about parties and dances and opening a checking account for the first time.

I haven't listened to the rest though I'm not sure why the urgency has passed. Maybe it was enough to hear the voice of the woman who played both hero and villain in my life. Maybe it's too hard or weird or creepy to listen to the words of a woman who has been dead for six years. Or maybe on some level, I want those words to be her last, a reminder I didn't even know I needed--work hard, have fun, be bold.

Endeavor

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I repaired the knob on my desk drawer today. After two weeks away from my desk, I sat down to work but felt the need to clean my desk first and, as I reached to grab the exposed screw to pull open the drawer to organize my pens, I had the radical thought, "I'm going to fix that drawer." I've been opening that drawer by grabbing that screw for two years now. Obviously, I'd felt no urgency to fix it until this morning.

I grabbed the wooden knob, went down to the basement, filled the hole with wood filler and returned to my desk. I pressed the knob onto the screw and was able to properly open drawer about 15 minutes later.

You could read that story and think of it as procrastination - a year ago, that's how I would have interpreted it. But, now, I can marvel at the sense of accomplishment I felt from this simple task and it reminds me of the greatest lesson I learned from the writing I did in November - there is value in the work.

I've often joked that I don't want to write; I want to have written. I want my words to have an impact. I want to be published. I want to make money from doing something I love. I have always had a tendency to focus on the end, rather than the steps along the way.

But I am learning that putting words on the page is worthwhile even if nothing else happens.

I don't make resolutions but I do believe in the power of setting goals. My goal this year is to endeavor, to settle into the process without needing to know how it will end. Maybe each time I open my desk drawer for a pen I'll remember that the thrill of repairing it exceeded the joy of it having been repaired.

With A Little Help from My Kids

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I woke up at 5:18 this morning and reset my alarm from 5:30 to 6:30. The house was cold and I was nestled beneath blankets and warm and I just couldn't get out of bed, though 6:30 felt only marginally better. The kids couldn't seem to get up either. Usually, they are downstairs by 7:50 but at 8:05, I was still yelling for them to come down. It was one of those mornings.

Somehow, we managed to get ready for school and leave the house on time. We all got settled in the car, Miguel turned on the radio and I put the car in first to pull out and the tires spun on the ice. The car wouldn't move enough to even allow me to rock it back and forth to get traction. Wheels spinning.

I went into the house and got our ice chopper and tried to break the ice around the front tires, cursing winter the entire time. The kids positioned themselves behind the car and we tried again...and again...and again...but the care wouldn't move at all. Zeca pointed to the left tire and said, "It's that one. That's the problem." So, I chopped and chopped and chopped and hoped the tire could get traction on the two inches of asphalt I'd exposed.

I got back in the car and the kids got behind it and we finally got the car out of the icy ruts but it had taken so long that I knew we were going to be a few minutes late for school. I'm learning to let go of things beyond my control and this was one.

I thought back to when the kids were small and wondered what I would have done. I would have tried calling a friend or waited for a neighbor or switched to our other car with the hope it wasn't stuck or I would have taken them back inside until I figured out a plan. Both kids pushing the car out in the winter--another milestone.

These are the things that make me realize how slowly life changes with kids. One day, you are trying to shove tiny thumbs into mittens and the next, they are pushing your car when it's stuck.

I noticed other things this week that caught me by surprise. Someone put a new roll of toilet paper on the holder rather than just setting it on the top of the toilet. Zeca helped me put all the groceries away without being asked. Miguel cleaned his room last night because he had decided it needed to be cleaned. These are small things but they feel like miracles.

Luisa comes home in a couple of hours and there are baskets of laundry to fold and dishes in the sink. I'll get to those. But right this moment, I'm feeling grateful for my kids. The past couple of weeks of solo parenting have been challenging but not in the ways they have been in the past. The challenges have had little to do with the kids and everything to do with the responsibilities of daily life and even in those, I'm starting to realize that I'm really not "solo" anymore.