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Mom-dern Vignettes

hopefully hilarious life outtakes and mom fails

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reflection

The Sport of Reflection

It’s been thirteen years since I picked up a stick. I mean really picked up a stick. It’s 7:30  on a Saturday morning, the only day I can squeeze in coaching without my boys. The wet on the turf glistens rainbows across the field as the moisture gently sneaks through the mesh of my shoes, chilling my toes and telling them to get moving or turn numb. Two dozen brown, black, blonde, and red heads can be seen bobbing up the hill towards the head coaches.  I breathe in the crispness of the sport, place my hands end and center, step my left foot to cage, and feel the familiar swooping movement through my arms and hips, as the ball powerfully glides to the top left corner.

It has been thirteen years since I have picked up a stick, held it with pride, and thought I missed you hockey, thank you.

Why now? I am an accomplished, highly educated 35 year old, old person. Why relish a forgotten dream? A dream, which crashed into a harsh reality.

Hockey materialized in my life as a floundering teenager; afraid of the kids at school, lost with no direction, and weak. Zero confidence. My entire plan when entering high school, was to melt into the back corner, read, don’t speak and skate through unnoticed. With one, three minute phone call, two weeks before school started from my school’s new Pakistani coach, a small dent appeared in my plan and eventually bared my world to possibilities.

For four years, I practiced seven days a week, 3 – 6 hours a day as a goal keeper. Not because I was forced, because I found my place. Not just “the” sport that I excelled in, but the place where I was comfortable. The place that brought friends to me, my most challenging aspect to this day. The place that showed me being pushed is an achievement in yourself, not in the person pushing you to be better. The place which led me around the country and clued me in to a world outside my hometown and the possibility of leaving it.

Leave it I did.  To an amazing college a top an idyllic hill with surrounding, winding river views.

All and none of this explains the pull to revitalize the past.

After the clink of the corner post and the fall of the orange ball, I turn and sprint toward the gathering crowd of young women and coaches. Each on their own journey with the sport. The muttering and laughter amidst the circle gives way to determinations, evaluations of play, and encouragement. Each tired, bed streaked face awakens with life, and though dread of conditioning is evident, they showed up for their team.

Camaraderie.

A word I rarely found in the dozens of others sports and employments through out my life. Having years away, one has time to reflect upon value beyond the surface. Beyond the obvious, tangible rewards a sport offers. Neither teaching in the school systems and working with amazing men and women in trying situations, or fostering mom friends to slug wine with and complain about the tirades of our kids, has provided such positive camaraderie as being a part of a female sports team.

It’s not the same. Pettiness always smears the way.

As old people, these opportunities for true comradeship are far an few between as our complicated busy lives shift the focus away from what we need, to what our kids need.

But as I stand, grasping my cracked wooden Grays stick, listening to these young women on their paths, I know this is what I need.  Not only to experience that overwhelming sense of place, but to ensure these young women can one day reflect on their experience and say, Thank you hockey, I missed you too.

The Rule of Law

splink… scchoooooo tunk. A blonde toddler head, with a glued wound on its forehead, springs up at the front of his giant, Tonka dump trunk. Two pale blue eyes flashing fury. His thin lips openly terse, showing clenched teeth. With inaudible babble and his cheeks puffed red, he climbs to his feet.

“No, No, NO! No rocks in dump truck!” he says with the fierceness of a teacher trying to keep control of their unruly underlings, and failing. He plants both his hands on the either side of the yellow truck, leans in, over, mean mugging, never breaking eye contact and deliberately whispers, “no rocks, in, dump truck.”

Slowly, he kneels at the front and slides beyond sight, continuing to place rocks in the tiniest dump truck I have ever seen, mumbling, “they too big, too big.”

I know!!!!  Use the gigantic dump truck! It’s more FUN!

Playing with Stewie, or any two year old, is a lesson in government oversight. Your invited in to observe the genius of their play, yet, they are always there to correct your actions in case your play is, in anyway, an overstep of their inherent parameters:

You can play with Percy, but not Toby and only on the bridge because Toby is not allowed to move.  Technically, you can’t touch Toby but looking is fine. Yes, you can “choo choo” but not too loud because then I can’t hear my chugging.  Don’t touch, or fix, the tracks without my say, for they are meant to be wrecked. 

Actually, since you can’t play as stipulated, your presence may better be served here, in the corner. With the stuffed animals.  No touching, or pretending they can talk or snuggle. Fine, if you can’t abide by my laws, punishment is inevitable.  Yes… I will give you, my least, favorite toy. YOU, are condemned to tiny blocks. Don’t tell me about their pictures and I warn you, if you build, I will knock it down. 

Oh no, no, no, you can’t leave. I don’t want to be alone!!  And if you do, I will bring all my toys to you one by one, to show you what you still, can’t have.  And, I will do you the honor of leaving them, so you don’t forget.

These are precious times. Precious years. These laws are daily reminders that he wants me around, and I want to be there. Am lucky to be.

But if I am bound to his laws, I will exercise my rights. I will protest his rigidity, one rock at a time.  Why?

splink… scchoooooo tunk

Because I love the flash of those eyes.

 

missing Home

I am
Home.
amongst the forest of
our childhood.
sitting at the base of the tree
at the base of our hill,
inhaling
the
past and present
brings me whole
again.

My sons charge
slipping on the dry, barren slate bed
defending our mountain
slashing at predators,
intruders
with their
practical sword-walking sticks.
their laughter rises
with the trees
mingling, mixing,
cunningly
deceiving my perception,
as to whether the
happiness ringing out is
theirs
or ours
absorbed, preserved
from decades
gone by.

gathering My soldiers,
and commanding
true freedom
awaits
at the top of the Mountain,
we rush the hill.

steepness soon stifles
bravery,
and encouragement
a necessity.
the same roots
we used to lunge for,
they do.
the same slate crevasse
we overcame,
they maneuver around.
the same encouragement
whispered
to usher this little sister,
she gives to them.

as hard, burnt umber ground
succumbs
to green moss
and lush ferns,
we stand
firm, at the summit.
silence except for
breaths.
this was our happiness.
no pain, no worries, no fear,
no anger.
just us and woods.
Connected.

the forest’s constancy
provides hope,
proof
of brotherly love
in silent challenging
escapades.
Surveying the treetops,
and the boy’s proud smiles,
my heart throbs,
aches,
muscling
the loneliness
of the forest
into my heart.

For nothing
can
relinquish
the crushing
sensation
of truly missing your
Home.

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