Moss and Lichen

I stood over my daughter’s open grave and thought to myself, “It will be okay.”  The calm and peace I felt was so ill placed, but undeniable.  I remember thinking that the peace was welcome, but it was tinged with guilt, because what kind of mother experiences peace in that moment?  Sigh, always with the guilt.

Grief is hard and mysterious and layered and nuanced, knowable and unknowable all at once.  It is the ocean of my feelings about motherhood, swallowing the rivers and tributaries of love and fear and tenderness and fatigue and frustration that are commonplace for all mothers.  Grief overshadows everything, all of it, always.

In the early years after Donna died, in those first seasons of grief, I tended to my girl’s grave like I tended to my living child.  I fussed over it, nurtured it, tried to make a home for what would become my girl’s bones.  I planted bulbs, hoping beautiful things would grow from our sorrow.

Allium and hyacinth and daffodils and astilbes and iris.  There was research and nursery visits and awkward conversations with well intentioned folks in dirt covered smocks who didn’t quite know what to say when I told them I wanted to make a garden for my daughter’s grave.  Nothing worked, nothing grew.  Well, that’s not entirely true.  A few feisty allium grew, but the deer made a meal out of them.

Donna’s grave is marked with a slab of limestone that juts out from the earth and rests atop a small ridge.  It had to be rooted deep into the ground to ensure it would not move or topple.  Whatever was used to keep that stone secure did something to the soil around it.  It’s clay-like now, not like other soil or dirt you use to plant, and it doesn’t take kindly to hosting pretty spring blooms.

We chose a natural cemetery for Donna and it’s about 90 minutes from our home.  It was the only green cemetery in Illinois at the time.  I think there are a few others now.  There was no embalming and no concrete vault.  Sometimes I wonder if she is bones yet.  Donna was four when she died and bones is what she knew of death.  When you die, you become bones.  A green burial in a natural setting made sense for Donna.

After a few years, I gave up on the idea of a garden for Donna.  We bring flowers when we visit and leave pumpkins in the fall.  I choose tulips, generally, as deer like tulips.  They are delicious, apparently.  I try and remember to bring a small rake when we visit so I can clear off dead leaves and debris.

We visited on Easter, which seemed fitting, somehow.  He rises, but Donna won’t.  I was mad at myself for forgetting the rake.  I’ll need to get back soon to clear off the winter.  There were lots of dead oak leaves.  Easter Sunday was chilly this year.  It fell on April Fool’s Day.  Jokes on us, though, as there was snow and ice this morning.

Our youngest boy is four, the age Donna was when she died.  He is all about death and dying right now, his natural curiosity about it in high gear.  He was chatty during our visit, touching the limestone slab and walking around Donna’s grave.  My boys are comfortable in cemeteries, which is what happens when your older sister dies of cancer.

At one point, my sweet boy said, “The next time Donna is alive, I will teach her to practice not dying,” then he meandered away, looking at the graves of others he doesn’t know.  I keep thinking about his words, his naive, unknowing solution to something that makes his parents so very sad.  

In those early days after Donna’s death, we would walk around the woods that surrounded her grave and find rocks.  We collected enough that we were able to make a border.  The rocks are satisfying, weighty pieces of granite with smooth contours that fit in the palm of your hand, a few more are jagged limestones.

When we had work done on the front entrance of our home, I rescued two old pieces of manicured limestone that used to flank our front door.  They are cracked in half and felt like a fitting offering for Donna — bringing her a piece of home.  They now sit at the foot of Donna’s grave, one on each side.  We did with stones what we couldn’t do with plants, making a home for Donna’s bones.

The moss and lichen on Donna's gravestone, 4.1.18.
The moss and lichen on Donna’s gravestone, 4.1.18.

Moss grows on a few of those stones now and in these early days of spring, the moss is greening up.  It’s beautiful, really.  Some of the smaller stones have a lot of moss, others none at all, some just tiny little precious explosions of green no bigger than a thumb tack.  I love moss.  When you Google it, you will learn that moss is a flowerless green plant that lacks roots.  It grows in damp and shaded areas.  It is simultaneously ecologically strong and fragile.  You do nothing, and it grows.  It requires nothing from us humans to do its thing.  It just is.  It is beautiful and soft and delicate, like nature’s blanket, like Donna was.

Lichen, I’ve learned, is not a plant at all, but an organism, a living thing.  It is gray or green and crusty.  A bit like paint flakes.  Like the moss, it has made its way onto Donna’s gravestone with no effort or intention from the humans who love and remember her.  There is more there this spring than there was last fall.  The lichen is less comforting to me than the moss, but it is fascinating.

Walt Whitman wrote in Song of Myself, “The smallest sprout shows there is really no death, and if ever there was it led forward life . . .” Those are the words I think of when I see that moss and that lichen, those living things that cling to my girl’s grave.  “All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses, and to die is different from what anyone supposes, and luckier.”

Nothing is as it was before our girl was diagnosed with cancer.  We are a different family, I am a different mother, but here we are, our sorrow existing amongst the moss and the lichen, growing, present, the closest to natural we will ever be.

My Life Is In Plastic Pieces

It comes with the territory, I know, and I can hear, as if on cue, parents of older children telling me, “You will miss it.  Blink, and your young boys will be grown men.”  Yes, yes, I get it, but right here, right now, in these days where my boys are young and untidy, it feels like my life is being overrun by plastic.

Plastic pieces, large and small, are everywhere in my home.  I feel overrun with the stuff.  Legos, Playmobile people, Star Wars ships, ping pong balls, Nerf darts and blasters and bump stocks (oh my!).  It does not matter how much time is spent trying to contain the plastic, the attempts are futile.

plastic

I know my Mom used to complain of the same thing.  The difference, I think, for my generation of moms is that I can’t just scoop up the stuff and throw it out.  Nope.  Anytime I move to dump a piece of plastic, a forlorn piece of Mr. Potato Head, a set of legs from a Lego minifigure, or its decapitated head, that flame from the Playmobile pirate ship — I have to hold the guilt of knowing that plastic is going to end up in a landfill somewhere, sitting, and decidedly not decomposing, harming our planet.

Oy, the guilt is real.

A solution escapes me.  I could go hard core and start putting all errant plastic pieces in a bin that gets donated when full.  That makes me wonder if I keep the bin out of sight, would the kiddos even miss the stuff?  And how do you donate a bin of random plastic pieces that are basically of no use to anyone without their mates?

“Nothing on this earth lasts forever.  Except maybe plastic.”  Patricia Dunn

Some parents, I know, don’t allow new toys into the home until old toys go out.  Pfft.  That sounds like a lot of effort.  Do I really want to spend that much time thinking and arguing and wrangling over bits and pieces of plastic with two boys who legitimately believe that each and every piece is necessary to their very existence?  I’m too lazy for that ish.

Layered on top of all of this frustration is the reality I live with every day that having healthy children is a miracle that I take for granted.  I know that kids get sick and sometimes die.  Little pieces of plastic should be nothing to me.  I should feel lucky to have those errant environmental hazards in my home.  And it is never, ever lost on me that I have pieces of plastic in my home that have been here three times as long as my dear girl.

The voices inside my head, influenced by a lot of Catholic guilt, tell me that those plastic pieces that drive me mad are a sign of my truly blessed life.  How dare I not cherish each and every single piece of plastic that crosses my path roughly 1,397 times a day?  And, yes, it can be pretty exhausting inside my head.

So, long story short, school me.  Or, pun intended, Playskool me.  How do you manage the plastic in your life?  What are your tried and true tactics to live harmoniously with the plastic?  Teach me your ways, oh mother better at this stuff than I am, cause I need help.

Thank You, President Trump!

I am not the same person I was on November 7, 2016.  I’ve changed, and I owe it all to you, POTUS.  Thanks for that.  It’s easy to get caught up in the frenzy of your Tweets and your lies and your hateful bigotry and the chaos that surrounds your administration, but the mantra I have chosen to live my life by is “choose hope,” so I write these words from a place of hope and optimism.

After the initial shock of you winning the election wore off (Pffft, who am I kidding?  I will never get over the shock of having a reality TV star sitting in the Oval Office.), something inside me woke up.  I understand the awesome task of what it means to be a citizen now.  Not simply a good citizen, but an active and engaged and appreciative citizen.

Because of you, I no longer take this country I live in for granted.  My Dad taught his children that America was the “greatest nation on earth.”  I think for him and for intermittent periods in our young nation’s history, that was true.  He was born the son of two Irish immigrants in the midst of the Great Depression and was just a young boy as America fought bravely and worked hard to liberate the world from the vice grip of one Adolph Hitler.  You know him, right?  Short man, odd moustache, killed millions of Jews — I’m keeping it simple for you.

I believed my Dad when he said those words.  Now I am a grown woman and I know more.  I have a context that I did not have as a child.  Your presidency has encouraged me to read more, learn more, seek out primary sources.  My naivete about America’s greatness has been replaced by a grittier, messier, conflicted and complicated appreciation for the noble experiment that our country is.  I see better where we fall short and have failed as a nation and where we soar and achieve and nurture greatness and possibility.

Sign from the Women's March, Chicago, 21 January, 2017.
Sign from the Women’s March, Chicago, 21 January, 2017.

You, Sir, are supremely flawed, but I have learned that you are but a mere reflection of America’s deeply ingrained flaws.  You are a living, breathing representation of our ugliness, our greed, our racism, our tendency to bully and manipulate other countries to our own powerful will.  I’ve come to embrace that you lack any sense of humanity.  You are hollow and full at the same time.

Despite your flaws, or because of them, so many things have been clarified for me and many other Americans.  More than a few say, “He is not my President.  He does not represent me.  I will never claim him.”  To them, I say, “You must.”  Every American, whether we voted for you or not, must own you as our president.  How can we vanquish you if we do not first own you, claim you as our own?

So, President Trump, oh president of mine, I am grateful for what I have gained under your administration.  Here are just a few of the things I’ve been gifted with in the past twelve months:

  • I learned how to march in community with others and hold signs that reflect my beliefs.  Protest is a verb that requires a lot of Sharpies, supportive shoes, and dressing in layers.
  • I discovered not just Twitter, but Black Twitter and I am a much better person for it.  The platform provides the opportunity to eavesdrop and learn and absorb lessons that a nice, white, middle aged lady should have learned well before having to color her hair or buy her first jar of Pond’s Cream.  I am late to the party, but I am here.
  • My white boys with their blue eyes will learn, compliments of their increasingly woke mama, that life will be easier for them than that of their classmates that have different colored skin or vaginas.  And for those classmates with different colored skin and a vagina — we salute you!  “With great power comes great responsibility” is a lesson for more than superheroes.
  • When someone I used to know in high school refers to my diverse, integrated Chicago neighborhood as a “fairy tale,” I speak up.  All the nope.  My life and my life’s choices are no less valid than his.  I respect myself, my neighbors, and my family more than ever now.  You can choose to live a segregated life and I can choose not to.  I like my neighborhoods like I like my Skittles, with all the colors of the rainbow.
  • My understanding of our government is probably as honed as it has been since watching Schoolhouse Rocks! shorts on Saturday mornings as a kid.  The process of legislation, committee work, judicial appointments, grassroots organizing — the nuts and bolts of governing is fascinating stuff, man.  You should look into it.
  • Science!  Scientists!.  Modern days heroes, all of them.  Because of you, I have added NASA to my list of regularly visited web sites.  You and the GOP have politicized climate change and the world will pay.  We are already paying.  Mudslides, raging fires, hurricanes, polar vortexes, starving polar bears — these things are now commonplace, but their cost, both social and economic, is adding up.  The military knows this.  Every nation on earth knows this.  It’s not nice to fool Mother Nature.
  • My appetite for news and commentary has grown, but I no longer rely on the talking heads of cable TV to provide it.  Sadly, too many Americans do.  I crave more detail, more nuance, a more thoughtful approach.  Critical thinking is alive and well, but you have to search for it and it’s not always very evident in the places you would expect.
  • An awareness that you can’t lump all Republicans together.  For every Ann Coulter and Rush Limbaugh, there is an Ana Navarro and Matthew Dowd.  I have gained an unexpected admiration for those few conservatives, big and small in stature, that speak up and challenge the extremists that have hijacked the GOP.  Those who support you and those who remain silent are equally complicit.

There is a right side of history, Mr. Trump, and you are not on it.  You are a sad, raging, incurious embarrassment, full of hate and devoid of compassion.  You are not worthy to lead America or call yourself leader of the free world.  And yet, somehow, because of your flaws, I am learning, growing, stretching, flexing my American muscle in a way I never have before.

Sure, I’ve always voted, but, quite honestly, that was pretty much it.  No more.  Because of you, I now march, protest, read, research, donate, speak up, sign petitions, volunteer to help refugees, and make certain my sons are on the front lines for all of it.  On Monday, for the first time, I will meaningfully celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. Day with my boys.  That makes me so proud and so happy.

I am a better American because of you, President Trump.  Me and all the other folks like me, learning to channel our outrage in productive and measurable ways, are not going anywhere.  We are here.  Patriots, all of us.  We are black and white and everything in between.  We are gay and straight and transgender and Muslim and Jewish and atheists and Mexican and Haitian and African.  We are immigrants, and not just from Norway.  We are poor and we are rich and we are everything in between.  We are mighty.

The greatest irony, I hope, is that in the end, you would have succeeded in making America great again, just not in the way you intended.  So, yes, thanks for that.