footsteps straight to my heart
by bam
four years ago, it was the sound of his footsteps i knew i would miss more than nearly anything.
the thud of his footfall onto the floor of the room up above, the footfall that signaled to me, down below, that the boy i love had clomped out of bed, or trundled down the stairs, that he soon would be rounding the bend, showing his face, his radiant face, at the old kitchen door.
his footsteps are back.
and my heart couldn’t be more tickled, delighted, dancing its own little jig.
the thud of the footfall is one of those percussive refrains woven into the rhythms of this old house, of any old house, and it’s a sound you might take for granted — it belongs with the particular click of the doorknob, or the way the car door slams off in the distance, and your heart knows before you know that someone you love is now home. you might take it for granted until suddenly, without forethought, it’s silenced, it’s absent. until all you hear is the hollow emptiness of no more footsteps — or door clicks, or car door slamming in the not-so-far distance.
it’s a quiet that crushes you. the unspoken sonic abyss of the someone who’s gone.
and now, with the thuds and the clomps and the rushing of water from the tap in his bathroom once again punctuating the soundtrack of this old house, i find my old heart quickening, picking up its rhythm, pounding just a wee bit harder, as once again — in that way that happens to mothers — i wrap my whole self — body and mind and heart and soul — around this interlude of pure wonder and blessing.
indeed, it’s way more chaotic around here than just one week ago, when this old house contained only three peoples plus a crotchety cat. and the lumbering fellow we’ve added to the equation, once he and his papa pulled down the alley, unloaded the mountains of boxes and lamps and speakers and papers, he’s set this old house percolating once again with his particular cacophonies. yes, there was a hammer pounding a wee bit late into the night. and the avalanche of stuff hauled out of his room and into the upstairs hall, it could tangle you into a knot, and snuff out your breath if you happened to trip and tumble deep down in its clutches.
but a bit of a miracle’s unfolding. i’d call it the answer to a prayer, except that i never dared to pray for it.
the boy i love, the boy who graduated in a cloud of glories at his college on the hill, he moved back to chicago thinking he’d rent a studio apartment, try to pay rent while teaching in an inner-city classroom, before he heads back off to law school and PhD school, before he spends a life trying to right wrongs and carving out justice. but then, as he pulled his duffle bags and moving boxes back into his boyhood room, as he perused the websites of apartment listings, as he realized the rent for a space not much bigger than his room at the bend in the stairs might be tough to afford, he started to rearrange his thinking — and his old room that bore the totems of middle and high school and selves long past.
he pulled posters off the wall, peeled campaign stickers off his closet door. took down the little boy bulletin board i’d bought the day we moved into this old house. he cleared his book shelves of boyhood favorites, took down the hobbit and twain and j.k. rowling; slid in hobbes and kant and aristotle. hung his hard-won college diploma just above his old desk, the desk where he calculated his way through fifth-grade math, and where he typed his junior theme. he must have measured the proximity between the door of his old room and that of his little brother, the one he says he came home to be close to.
he’s decided to stay.
he’s perched his french press coffee pot next to my gurgling electric one. he’s added his paltry few spices onto the shelf next to mine. he’s plugged in his speakers, and asked if we could pull up the old navy carpet so he can stride on the birds-eye maple that’s too long been shrouded. he’s decided, for now, that home will be in the place with a room all his own, and a sprawling kitchen just down the stairs (the commercial-grade six-burner cookstove and his mother’s built-in grocery service might have helped tip the scales in the refueling department).
for now, he’s sticking nearby.
for now, he and i are sitting down to breakfast, lunch and dinner. we’re taking long walks. we’re holding our breath — together — as he puts muscle to hammer and tries to sink nails into plaster. we’re sitting out in the summer porch, listening to night sounds. we’re backfilling all of the stories that hadn’t had time to be told.
sure, my days are topsy-turvy. and this house feels certain to burst. and the washing machine moans from over-exertion.
but for four long years i could only wish for such chaos. i didn’t dare to hope that the day would come that we’d once again breathe the same air, inhale the same sounds, delight in shared and unscripted hilarities, ones unfolding in real time, and in the same time zone.
i’m practically giddy at the truth that this kid is wise enough, and tender enough of heart, to buck the prevailing post-graduation currents, to simply and humbly move back home, for the sheer gift of deepening the bonds with his little brother, and his grandmother who is now 84, and who every tuesday of his growing up years devoted her days and attentions to him. he is seizing the days before they are gone.
he didn’t take a job in DC, didn’t post himself in the heart of manhattan. all that might come. but for now, he’s taking a pause, taking time for what matters.
back in december he told me that he was looking to do the most meaningful work in the years between college and law school, “and, honestly, mommo,” he said, via long distance, “i can’t think of anything more meaningful than being there for tedd,” his little kid brother, now on the cusp of going off to high school.
as poignant as anything this week, and pulsing too very near the surface, is my knowledge — keen knowledge — that not too many miles away i have a very dear and deeply beloved friend who is in a hospital, suffering unimaginable devastations, and she might be robbed of the chance to whirl in this very dear thing, in her children’s sweet presence, in days that tumble lazily one to the next. please God, i beg, down on my knees, let my beautiful friend and her most blessed children share in this, the holiest dance.
for me — a girl who preaches deep-breathing the blessing of each and every framed moment of time — the unanticipated gift, the knowledge that we might grab a few years we’d not known were coming our way, this feels to me like the gift of a lifetime, this sweet holy homecoming.
and it comes with its very own soundtrack: the sound of a particular footfall, sinking deep and deeper into my heart.
bless you, sweet will, and welcome back home.
worry not about the tomes slid off the boyhood book shelf, they are safe and sound with me, and will soon find a home on yet another shelf, one of the many that line the walls of this old house. a prayer request: for my beautiful friend in the hospital, for gentle soft hours to come her way.
and a question: what are the sounds of your heart’s dearest soundtrack, the ones that tell you someone you love is heading toward home? or the ones that make your heart tick as mighty as ever could be?
How very, very wonderful! Such a smart boy of the heart. Must get it from his mama. Yes, prayers for your friend and her family and you. Your story reminds me of a counted cross stitch which hangs just inside our front door. Not sure who wrote the words originally, but it says, “I hear your footsteps down the hall. You are home again and safe. All the burdens of the day are lightened and all the night noises are music to my ears.” I was just looking at it the other day while pulling the drapes and thinking how very true it is. How nice that you once again have a full house. It will likely come with challenges, but you are connected well enough that those will be worked through with conversation and love, as they’ve ever been. Blessings be upon all of you!
oh my goodness gracious. i LOVE that you have that cross-stitchery in your front hall. that’s so gloriously wonderful, and it tells me that there must be a long line of folks who fall in love with the sound of particular footfalls….
Ah, I am envious…my big boy turned into a European after living there since the age of 7 and I don’t think he will ever come back. Your writing hits all the notes of my local tune…even sounds like our boys would be friends. I will add another thing that my empty nest misses…his friends. Many of them were eating in my kitchen from age 10 and camping on the floor to get away from boarding school to where someone made pancakes for breakfast. I feel friendship for these young men and women too, a blessing to hear about their paths at 25 years old. Thanks Barb and Will.
ohhhhhhh yes, i too always missed the full kitchens. the little one, who through junior high has filled the kitchen with his friends, he’s been my solace. bless you and all of those who come to fill your kitchen…
Congratulations to your wonderful son on his college graduation! And I ever so much admire his future aspirations as well as his current idea of returning to the security of home. I’m certain his future will be very bright! And that brotherly bond amazes me! Both of your sons will benefit from this time together, as you well know. . . The sound of any of my grand daughters’ voices grounds me more than anything else. At this time in my life, they are my main focus, my joy, my purpose. None of them live that close to me, but through the miracle of technology, I watch videos of them every day, just to see those smiling faces and hear those precious voices.
so so beautiful that you find ways to stay tied to the heart, and the voice! we have beloved sweethearts far off in maine and their mama and papa do the same, send almost daily missives — videos or pictures — that allow us to grow up side by side, even though more than a thousand miles try to get between us…..
Congratulations to the graduate and his proud family! As I eagerly await my 2 boys’ homecomings, you once again nailed my feelings. Mine will leave after a week, unlike yours. I am envious! One to NH and another to the wilds of midtown Manhattan. Who knows what danger lurks there instead of his trusty upstairs bedroom? Enjoy the baking again, the pancakes, and all the togetherness. It is a do-over of the sweetest kind! Prayers for your friend also. I must now run and make a poster of that needlepoint quote.
a do-over indeed, only this time with the lightness of being that comes with a short reprieve from exams and papers and impending due dates. much love and huge congrats to your wonderful grad, too.
by the way, tomorrow is family school graduation — our last — and that means our record-setting 17 years there is drawing quickly to a close…..
Ah–a wonderful piece, BAM! Great midnight reading as I await the footfalls of the boy coming home from the big city on the train.
well, isn’t this a delight and a surprise. you lurking around in the middles of the night and deciding to pull up a chair. yes, indeed, listening for footfall never seems to end. although i will gladly report that i fell deeply sound asleep and didn’t really listen. though i did make sure to check to see if his door was closed when i got up in the wee hours to let out mr. cat. xoxo
The best gift EVER! MDP
amen! sweet sister!
His footsteps are back. . . He’s decided to stay. . . And I couldn’t be happier for all of you, a happy family, reunited once more! I know how much you’ll relish this special time of togetherness!
Congratulations again to your fine young graduate! Blessings and love to each of you, and many, many prayers for your beloved friend~ xoxo
and now if i can find my way through the laundry piles, and get in sync with the new rate of groceries disappearing from the fridge and the shelves, i’ll be in great good stead. it’s a bit chaotic around here, but it’s the joyful chaos i didn’t think i’d get to indulge in ever again. so i’m a bit turned around at the moment, but my heart will lead the way…..
carpet-ripper-uppers and bathroom re-painters come tomorrow!
AHHHH so so so beautiful. all of it. your boys together. XOXOXOXO
you sweet angel! what a joy to find you here! huge hug. xoxox
a big inhale while i was reading….and a bigger exhale as i finished the reading…in mid sentence…because i felt the unsaid … our 6 ft plus footsteps lives on his own…16-20 hours drive from pappa and mamma…
…a beautiful post, Barbara…
thank you, dear sonja. i know the footsteps in this old house won’t last for too long. and that makes them all the sweeter. i feel myself deep-breathing them, storing them deep down inside, knowing there will too soon come the day when they are but faint echo, only a memory deep in my heart. i am on full savor these days. xoxox