My Invisible Daughter

Can you see her?  She’s there.  Right there, always.

My daughter died seven years ago, next month.  She was four.  The concept of time plays with me on all things related to her.  How is it possible that she has been gone so much longer than she was here?  How is it possible that I haven’t smelled her or stroked her soft cheek in as many years as her brother has lived?  How on earth have I managed things like groceries and laundry and vacuuming under the crushing presence of grief, a cruel master that never leaves you alone?

I walk through my days with my daughter by my side.  She is invisible to you, but not to me.  I can’t hold her or smell her or nag her to eat her vegetables and drink her milk, but she is there, always.  She is there when I talk to you on the playground.  She is there when I press the brake at the red light.  She is there as I stand in line to buy pajamas for her two younger brothers.  You can’t see her, but I can feel her.

It’s not enough, of course.  I wish she were here in a way that children are supposed to be with their parents.

invisible-daughter

My invisible daughter would be eleven years old now.  I have no freaking idea how to parent a tween girl.  I imagine, often, that it is very different than the parenting I do know how to do — the kind that seven and three year old boys need.

I have no glitter in my home.  No hair bows or Nickelodeon tween comedies.  There isn’t a lot of purple or animal prints. Sleepovers are not yet much of a thing and I will never drop a dime at PINK.  Training bras are something in my distant past, not an actual item in my laundry basket.  Do eleven year olds go trick-or-treating?  I don’t know.  I guess I’ll find out in a few more years.

These are the things I think about without sharing with others.  I haven’t figured out how to discuss my dead daughter in polite conversation.  Dead kids are kind of a buzz kill.

I miss her, my invisible daughter.  On days like this, when the light changes and pumpkins start to appear, my thoughts wander to not only the girl that was, but to the girl that never was, too.  Would she like math or history better?  Would mean girls have entered her orbit yet?  What would eleven year old rebellion look like?  Would she have started her period yet?  What kind of things would make her laugh?

My daughter is invisible, but she is here.  Always.  With me, in my thoughts and in my heart and in my mother’s memory.  You can’t see her and I can’t see her, but she is there in my tears and in my sad smiles. Science tells me that her DNA still exists deep within me on a cellular level, so, you know, there’s that, too.  It’s not the same, of course.  Not nearly.

My daughter is invisible.  I miss her.  I wish we could see her.

The Empty Backpack: a Story of Early Childhood

Our youngest started preschool earlier this month.  It’s his first formal stepping stone into the world of learning, three mornings a week for under three hours.  Because his birthday falls right after the September 1 cutoff, this little guy will have three full years of preschool before Kindergarten, so we wanted to start him off slow.  Plus, I just really dig his company and like him with me.

So three mornings a week I have been bringing him to his new school and then pick him up two hours and 45 minutes later.  Snacks and water are provided by the teachers.  Toys are discouraged to facilitate the children connecting with one another and the classroom.  In a nut shell, I have been sending my youngest kiddo off to school with just himself and a sun hat, as each day involves outdoor play and my guy hates the bright sunlight.

The kiddos each have a little cubby outside the room with hooks and small nooks for coats and boots, etc.  My boy’s has remained empty while most of the others were holding brightly colored pint sized backpacks.  I would chuckle to myself seeing the little back packs, wondering what was inside them.  My boy never seemed to notice he didn’t have a back pack of his own, so all was good.

Enter auntie and her generosity.  This weekend she came by for a visit and brought along a belated birthday bag full of treats, the favorite of which was an R2D2 back pack that both lights up and makes sounds.  My boy loves it. Of course.  I mean he loves it.  He doesn’t want to take it off.  He is so damn proud of having a back pack, being a big boy, having a place to go, and it even gives his little cubby some new swag.

back-pack

How did I miss all this?

As a mom, I was thinking practically, not developmentally.  If there is nothing to put in the back pack, why get one?  Done and done. And if it’s not even offered, how do I know if my little kiddo even wants one?  I never asked, so I never knew.

Parenting is an exercise in humility.  When I saw my little guy’s face light up at the sight of that back pack, I melted.  When our mornings became focused on where the “R2 pack pack” is and what is inside him, I see a boy learning and growing and finding his way.  Even as that back pack hangs empty in its cubby, it has taught me so many parenting lessons.

Being rooted in practicality can be a good thing, but damn, the toddler years are an immersion exercise in whimsy, creativity, and imagination.   Wonder and excitement and living in the moment are just as vital to a life well lived as maturity and responsibility.  I need to remind myself that this is my last time at the toddler rodeo, so I best enjoy it.

 

15 Women Over 40 Who Slayed At Last Night’s Emmys

A few years ago I very studiously and with great joy recorded my thoughts and opinions about award show fashion for the Oscars and the Emmys and catalogued it under “Middle Aged Mom Fashion Commentary.”  Most of you loved it, some of you hated it, finding my fashion criticism snide, mean, and too judgmental.  Truth be told, the negative reactions made the whole process less fun for me.  I could argue my position until the cows came home — that I was never body shaming in my comments, that all criticism was fashion based, which is an art form with a long history of critics following it, blah, blah, blah.  Some of you still thought I was a mean girl.  There is a difference, you see, between criticism and meanness, but that is lost on some.  Anyway.  I got tired of defending the practice, it lost its joy for me, so I stopped.

But like a bad penny, I’m back,along with my fashion commentary!

Last night I had the opportunity to watch some of the Emmy arrivals, enjoyed the show, then drooled over the post-show photos of the gowns in the fashion media. Something that kept hitting me time and time again were the gals over 40 who positively slayed last night.  The older gals brought it, sending their ingenue counterparts to the sidelines.  Ferociously.  As a 46 year old woman myself, I was impressed and inspired.

Here are my favorites.