never enough…
by bam
dispatch from 02139 (in which we’ve returned “home” from our swoop down the eastern seaboard — a grand thanksgiving repast in new york city, in the brownstone at 94th and lex we have come to know and love for its grace (and wild rice salad, and indian corn pudding, and oven-browned brussels sprouts), followed by a zip through the lincoln tunnel to one fair haven, and my tall fellow’s ancestral home, the 1789 gardener’s cottage where, to this day, his heart ticks at its fullest, its soundest)…
i should have mastered this. should have figured this out. should have, should have, should have.
but i haven’t.
not when it comes to saying goodbye, not when the goodbye is to my firstborn, grand thump in my heart, big brother to the little guy, the one who’s been away, off at college for nearly three whole semesters now.
you’d think i could get through it without the preamble rumble down in my belly, without the pounding in my heart, without the tears welling and spilling.
but i haven’t.
each time, i swear, it feels like someone is unplugging a cord that keeps my glow up and glowing. that has something to do with how i breathe. that puts the purr in my heart.
each time, in the hours before, as i start to feel the yanking, the turning and twisting of parts deep inside, as i start to picture the hours and days ahead without him, without the unspooling of conversation that comes, unexpected, as i chop in the kitchen, as i fold laundry, as i tie my shoes and head out for a stroll, i start to see the color draining away.
i start to feel empty all over again.
i think back to the days of villages, when a mother and son would never be farther than a few cottages away, down behind a waist-high stone wall, through an arched timbered doorway, in a room where embers on the hearth burned orange, persimmon and red.
i wonder why, nowadays, mothers and children need live miles and miles, whole ZIP codes, away.
oh, of course, i settle back into my rhythms. get used to plowing through the day without the flash of his million-watt smile. without dinners fueled by his stories. (fact is, i don’t mind, not one little bit, seeing his bunk smooth and unrumpled. don’t miss the volcano of clothes he spills on the bedroom floor.)
we left the boy back in new york city. he’s a man now. my last glimpse of him was under a streetlight at the corner of 94th and lexington avenue. he filled out his shetland sweater, his chest now strikingly, breathtakingly, the shape and size and velocity of my own papa’s. a chest i always loved. a chest that made me feel safe against the world. and now that chest belongs to my son, my sweet boy, my strapping 6-foot-3 chunk of a man.
as i stepped back from his hug, from his long arms, broad shoulders, soft hands, i felt the pull like stretching of dough. i, into the distance. he, into the thick of his life. a whole weekend before him, a weekend with his beloved cousin and aunt, a weekend romping through the best of new york, a new york i’ll never see.
fact is, it’s his life he lives now. whole chapters and verse distant to me. unknown. uncharted.
as it should be. as it’s meant to be.
but that does not make the parting of mother and child one drop easier. not for this mother anyway.
it’s not that i want him tucked by my side. God, no. this is why and how i’ve raised him — to spread his arms wide as wide can be, to wrap in as much and as deep as he can, and then to soar high.
it’s just that along with that soaring comes the fact that mama bird’s back in the nest, or up on some other limb, watching the sky, watching the loop-de-loops. wings on alert, ready to spread, to enfold, in case there’s a fall, a need to harbor, to shelter again.
and that airspace between mother and child, that life space, it just seems to take — every time — getting used to.
i always think, i’ve never my fill of him. never enough of his stories. never enough of his heart. never ever enough.
and then, not long after i’d swallowed my goodbyes, i watched my own tall fellow, the one i married, say goodbye to his mama, down in fair haven, on the jersey shore. and i wondered if she too always feels it. that it’s never enough. that one more breakfast together. one more walk to the river. one more, one more, would finally fill the hole.
but truth is, i think it’s a hole that will never be filled. it’s a wanting that goes un-sated.
it’s a yearning, a hunger, a please-come-back that lies at the heart of deep love. most especially, at the heart and soul of mother love.
who in your life do you never ever get enough of?Â
photo way above is my boys, big and little, plotting their flag-football moves in a game against the cousins, played on the lot behind the tall fence at hunter college on new york’s upper east side. i can’t get enough of watching the two of them entwine the whole of their lives….Â
photo below is my firstborn at his ebullient best.
happy blessed season of thanks, and beginning of advent, the season of waiting…..and now i am off to a long day of writing….classes wrap up in the next couple weeks. where did that first semester go???
Truth is, dearest bam, it’s never enough. Whether they’re off to college, or decide to continue their lives in another state, each and every time you’re together is a true gift. Saying goodbye is the hardest thing, but there’s also the pride you can’t help feeling, knowing you’ve raised them to be successful on their own. Boy, being a mama is the toughest job in the world.
amen to that, sister! and it never ever ends. thank god.
Know that I will be sending this along to Son1, because you said it better than I ever could, the one who just visited, the one we hugged goodbye just last night. It’s a yearning gape like none other, that goodbye. I read your story aloud to his father, as we are driving through Michigan today, and we both wept. Bless you, dear bam, for giving our hearts words. Much love.
and bless you, for feeling it all right along with me. xoxox
Mine are all close at hand, for the moment. I was the one who left my mom behind so many years ago and she let me go, simply and lovingly, even though we knew we would miss each other so much. It is an unconditional love to let a loved one start a new journey that will separate souls in time and space. Maybe it helped me let her go with a full heart.
Leave taking is our ancestral experience, deep in our bones. I think most of us have great or greater grandparents who left mamas and papas in small towns and villages across the seas and all must have wondered if they would ever see those faces again, much less get news of travels or home. What courage and love that took courage. It still takes courage despite all our connective technology. Electronic images can not replace the hugs, the kiss, the light in the eye, the half smile that we miss when separated. Maybe this is why Advent has such a powerful pull for us. It is the season of longing.
Well onto the season of busy cheer! May your papers and baking and holiday preparations keep you busy until your loved ones gather again!
“leave taking is our ancestral experience….” can you imagine that pulling away from the shore? can you imagine not knowing if you’d ever see the one you love, the one you birthed, ever again?
as i sit here soaking in these wonderful comments, i find myself bowled over by the spiraling wisdom of the chair. i can never ever get enough of the hearts and the souls at the table. bless you all…
Funny that I should read this the morning after my daughter told me that she would always be angry with me because I was not her birth mother “just someone who cares for me.” It is not only parents who miss their children, but children who miss their parents — even those they never knew. I will share these sentiments with her, Babs, to let her know that her birth mother probably loves, misses and wonders about her on a daily basis — because that is what mothers do. Still having my children at home, I (foolishly?) look forward to the day when they are more independent, more self-reliant, more eager to function in the world without benefit of my labor. Fortunately, I still have a decade before they are both doing so and I am missing them on a daily basis. Did I mention I am missing YOU. Of what do I never have enough? Laughter, long walks with friends, good books, simple appreciation.
oh my blessed andrea. i am speechless. which is rare. yours is the rarest of love, of hearts, you who step in to be that mother on a day in and day out, hour-by-hour basis. one day your girl will fully understand, and her heart will swell beyond words. where mine is now. love you, darlin. i miss you too. xoxo
Oh Andrea….I am an adoptive mom too. My darlings are in their 20s’ and it has always been interesting and sometimes challenging to watch them sort out their feelings around adoption. They have all been different. I am blessed by them, but also know in my heart that a separation on the part of another made my my mom journey possible. Their birth parents are always part of my Mother Day/Father Day prayers. Their loss has been my infinitely wonderful gain. It has been really hard to listen to the occasional sadness of of my children around that separation, but that is what our mom love is about, I guess….holding their sorrow as well as joy. Parenting is one heck of a road, but boy am I glad I am able to travel it and glad to find you at the table with similar experience.
It’s so hard, saying goodbye. We had a lovely holiday here on Thursday, 2 of the 3 boys, their wives, so much laughter, love, and good food at that table. And then, they were gone. Off to their own lives, lives I am so proud of, so happy to hear about. I think of it as the curse of motherhood, all those years of teaching independence and then when it happens, the feeling of success is so bittersweet. And, it is my boys that I cannot get enough of.
So beautiful – we mothers who are close to 2our children all feel the exact same way, every time…trust me, it never abates. And some day when there are little ones, another little soul to love and worry about, you wiull feel even more so each time they leave you – unless, of course, you are lucky enough to have them living close by. So happy you had a lovely Thanksgiving…..Hug that Teddy Bear for me! Love, Laurie