My wife tires of all my regretting, but maybe it's one of those grief stages I'm stuck in. Regardless, much of my rumination of late revolves around how do I make the most of my limited time? At the end of the day (when all is said and done) family remains. We grow up in one, we leave one, we create one and we grow up all over again in our new one.
Our families know us (for better or worse) all too well, it's hard to fool them for long. But they also know us well enough to be able to give us really good advice. Our memories and our past will always connect us deeply, no matter how far away we go. Our sorrows are shared sorrows, our joys, shared joys.
As we cycle through the years, as new faces emerge and others disappear, I hope for moments of connection - moments of beholding ourselves within each other and true caring. I hope our arguments and tiffs dissolve more quickly than the times we've hiked in the rain, discovered old pipelines in need of repair, taught Dad a new strategy game, played "beat the Landlord", ate salty crab and cheese salad, and got yelled at by the prickly couple walking their poodle.
5 comments:
my favorite picture is the last with lyric and grandma in bed. so great. and i think you have one stellar family. i hate to see you hurting. would love to see you all soon. oh, and congrats. :)
thank you so much for posting those pictures! it is nice to see Jon interacting with Dawn and her family! may God bless you all!
I think you might be taking it too easy on the camouflaged bathroom.
Otherwise, you make me think of Rilke in the Duino Elegies -- praise walks in the land of lamentation. elegy and praise/affirmation and despair. or paraphrasing Roethke: despite the dark and drek, the muck and mire of this life, I want to be one of the happy people.
Great post, Matt.
I LOVE the picture of Lyric with her grandma. Warm fuzzies!
A grandma, also,
Ada
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