muddled at the end…
by bam
dispatch from 02139 (in which this year of thinking sumptuously is slipping through our fingertips, certificates of completion are now collecting dust atop the dresser, and we are due to turn back into pumpkins any minute now….)
so, at last it’s come, and now it’s gone.
may 22. that once-distant spot on the horizon, that date we magically hoped might never come near, the date when all the fellows and their co-vivants would gather one last ceremonial time, circle around the astounding historian and president of veritas U, drew faust gilpin.
she would stand behind the podium, all 5-foot-8 of towering intellect, and she’d sprinkle us with final words of wisdom and blessing, deal out certificates as if a deck of holy cards, and then we’d file out.
finished.
the year of thinking sumptuously come to a sorry close.
if no mortar boards were tossed in the air (the suggestion was nixed, opting instead for dignified closing benediction), there were exhales all around: sighs of relief, whoops of joy. and there were inhales: disbelief. oh-no-what-now? how’d that happen quite so swiftly?
i, for one, am clearly in the camp of the muddled.
so topsy turvy are my insides, are the thoughts rumbling through my brain, it’s a miracle these sentences aren’t flowing out in parabolas and circles.
i am one big gunny sack of contradiction.
i am deeply grateful — and i mean prostrate, belly-flopped, on the cobbled lanes, for crying out loud — for having had this wollop of a whirl drop into our laps in the first place. and i am oh-so-sick that i didn’t lick a few more morsels off my plate, didn’t break out of a few of the ties that bind me, always bind me.
i am more than sated, yes, but hungry for so much more — in the book department, for starters. i am lugging home a 10-pound box of syllabi that i intend to read my way through, even if i need to live to 210 to do so.
i ache for home, for the friends who know me through and through and who understand the hills and valleys of my soul. i ache to be back in my not-so-secret garden, perched on the birdhouse bench tucked along the bluestone path. i imagine tiptoeing down my creaky stairs, turning the corner into my farmhouse kitchen, letting the cat in from his midnight prowl.
and yet, last night at fenway (the final final outing of the year, a trek to the green monster, washed down with a belly-ache of cotton candy, cracker jack, and a triple cracked off the bat of the reigning mr. red sox, dave ortiz), i was looking a few rows down at my beloved friend from south africa and i thought i heard my own heart crack at the thought of being an ocean and a continent away from her.
and what about the great white clapboard clubhouse that’s been the beehive of this blessed bustling nieman year? every time i round the bend, come through that white picket gate (past the nostril-packing lilac and the korean spice viburnum in recent weeks), charge up the brick walk and bound through the brass-knockered front door, i’ve felt more embraced than a girl should be allowed to feel (by the old floorboards and colonial panes of glass, i mean, a place that echoes with three-quarters of a century of journalism heavyweights).
and leaving behind the curator — the great good friend who somehow believed in me this year, even when i was quivering with self-doubt — i cannot stand the thought of not having her in my every day.
can’t stand the thought of days not populated with seminars and masterclasses, with shoptalks and round tables, with spontaneous eruptions of big ideas and wacky antics down in the clubhouse basement where the computers always whir and the fridge is forever stocked with cranberry-lime fizzy water, my emblematic drink of the year.
one marvelous fellow-friend told me yesterday that she felt only one thing the other night, after the certificates and the lovely dinner and the curator’s jaw-dropping act of handing out, one at a time, the perfect book she had deeply picked for each and every one of the 24 fellows. she felt “complete,” my fellow-friend said.
how odd, i thought, that i feel quite the opposite. i feel rather incomplete.
is it some quirk in my wiring that has me looking at this whole thing upside down? or is it simply, as i’ve said all year, that i’ve been catapulted into a somewhere i always imagined was here, but i’d not tread before: i am learning my way through the landscape of slow-acquired wisdom, and i see so long and winding a trail ahead.
there are volumes to be inhaled and boundaries to be toppled. there are trapezes i aim to grab, and training wheels i might take off.
i am, in a million ways, so very much a beginner.
and it’s a slow road, mustering courage and backbone.
and there are miles and miles to go before i finally sleep.
and all along the way, i’ll be whispering my vespers of deep and everlasting thanks…for this most glorious and forever year of thinking so very sumptuously.
photo above is my mate, “the professor,” ambling into loeb house for the lovely and heartfelt final dinner. once the home of the president of veritas U, the brick colonial manse is now reserved for truly special occasions — when funders gather with their pocketbooks, or, in the case of the empty-pocketed nieman fellows, for the final push out of harvard yard.
all things nieman now have ended, but we’ll haunt cambridge for another month as little mr. sixth grader winds up his school year, and we slowly say goodbye to this city where a good chunk of our hearts will forever dwell.
do you often find endings a whirl of up, down and sideways?
Maybe it’s good that you’ll have this month still there, still sort-of-not-there. Maybe it will help with the “parabolas” — such a perfect word. Maybe it’s good that you don’t have to leave-take of your little cocoon as soon as the nieman-ing ended. Hopefully it will ease the spirit a bit.
How wonderful that you thought to take that photo of your hubby — it’s a great one that says so very much, his posture as straight as the columns.
Thank you for taking all of us around the table on this magnificent journey of learning with you. When you come home, we’ll all still be gathered here, waiting to hear what’s next …
thank YOU, and you and you and you, for merrily ambling beside me through this year. you have no idea how your “being here” got me through a few tight spots and dim-lit places. i can’t tell you how many times i wish i’d had you beside me in a classroom or a lecture hall, to sigh aloud together, or cast raised eyebrows across the aisle. and i look so very forward to a real — and not a virtual –gathering of great good souls….
a hundred thousand blessings, my beautiful journey fellow…
My dear, who totally deserved this year of wonder, this post sounds like something Milo might write on he return from The Lands Beyond after his Tollbooth adventure. Except I know you didn’t start out like Milo. It’s just that your senses are now so much more wide-opened, which scarcely seems possible.
You will be able to continue this trajectory of learning. Read those syllabi, take a few courses at some local ivy-covered joints, and hold a salon in your home. We’d all be there. 🙂
love you for this promise, and for bringing milo to the table. milo, milo, one of my all-time favorites. salon with cookies, coming soon to a summer porch near you!
an apt bit of wisdom from david foster wallace:
“The real value of a real education has almost nothing to do with knowledge, and everything to do with simple awareness; awareness of what is so real and essential, so hidden in plain sight all around us, all the time, that we have to keep reminding ourselves over and over: ‘This is water. This is water.'”
i find this a fine something to tuck in my pocket as i point myself toward the middlelands and get ready to amble home sweet home….
I cannot believe that this year has ended for you! I have lived part of it with you through your pull up a chair columns!! How does Teddy feel about coming home? You are probably all feeling a mix of emotions..Anyway, Chicago will be happy to have all of you back on home turf, and I, for one, expect a lunch date!!!!! Love, Laurie (:
After I read your wisdom questions, I wait. Most times the corresponding thought comes from somewhere and today I read this in a post from someone far from you, but also wandering and experiencing the world. I thought of you all. She posted this quote….
“Trying to remember, I have learned, is like trying to clutch a handful of fog. Trying to forget, like trying to hold back the monsoon.” – Patricia McCormick
And it sort of simply summed up the full living and leaving of so many life experiences…camp as a child, neighborhood childhood summers, vacations with family, college ending, journeys with friends, ordinary days a mom, adventures a wife, as a sister or daughter.
I think we are blessed to even have the luxury to open our hearts to the moment and experience the passing of the moments.
Have a fabulous month…