A long winter and the art of quitting

It was a bit of a rough winter, and not only because of the snow - which was, it must be noted - excessive. Although it also meant days off, lazy mornings, dead-quiet walks around a blanketed neighborhood and one snowshoeing excursion.

It was rough for other reasons though, too hard-to-define, too-evasive-to-pin down, and not quite monumental enough overall to go into. Like: the kids were kind of fighting a lot. Like: I decided to apply for a new job (and did, in fact, just start a new job!) which was a positive development, but also emotional and a little scary. Like: I felt too entrenched in and also too removed from multiple aspects of my life. I got overly involved in my kids’ squabbles but didn’t write or read as much as I wanted. I don’t know if this makes sense, but the point is that it, and I, felt off.

The fall, in comparison, had been a whirlwind of excitement (college tours and soccer games, cross country meets and homecoming). It was one of the best seasons of parenting I’ve ever experienced. But it gave way to something much less “best.” What happened? I think, for one thing, an anticlimactic morass can follow a period of great expectation if you let it. My dad and I used to talk about this a lot. Like you are working and working for something and then you get it! Afterwards, you come down from all that swirling energy…and it can be challenging to summon much energy again at all.

I also think, following the Occam’s razor principle, that certain periods of parenting are difficult due to the most obvious things: your children’s ages, including everyone just about being teenagers (or at least acting like them, am I right fellow sixth grade parents?); that the winter is always harder, which is both understandable and ok; that big life shifts like one-fifth of your five-person family preparing to leave for college (meaning the remaining four - who have never, in this combination, been just four before!- will have to learn to navigate this new, uncertain dynamic) and leaving the comfort of a a known-entity job for the uncertainty of a new one, doesn’t exactly calm it all down.

Despite all that or more likely because of it, I had some good, thoughtful moments this winter, including one snowy afternoon when I took Aidy across the street to the lawn of our neighborhood pool club where she wanted to sled on the small hill in the back. I waded through yet untouched drifts, clumsily forging a path to the edge of this particular scene, watching her march to the top, slide to the bottom and repeat the action again and again, just us and all the silence. Aidy, at 11 is, yes, knocking at the door of teenagehood, but still, often (so thankfully) a little kid like this: snowpants, the reckless pursuit of fun.

And speaking of my dad, I thought about him when I was standing there watching her. I think because I was acting as an invisible observer, which is how I sometimes imagine him now. I was just far away enough (tired from climbing through so many snow piles, resting before attempting more) that it wasn’t worth yelling to try and communicate, tell her that her last run down the hill looked particularly thrilling. I could only watch.

The thing that’s good about having a parent who has died - maybe not good, that sounds crazy, but which, several years out, I really appreciate, and have told a few people as much - is that I can summon him whenever needed, like a guardian angel. You can’t do that with a living person, and I did it then, standing knee deep, watching Aidy sled. You’re here I thought, in the falling flakes, in the universe, however it works. That’s one way you can take beautiful comfort in someone who has passed on from this life and is now, if you believe in this sort of general spiritualism anyway, everywhere.

I decided to go closer and surprised Aidy - who immediately asked if I was ok - by dropping down into onto my back like I was going to make a snow angel. But instead just lying there, quietly, while the snow drifted down and touched my face.

I looked over a few minutes later and Aidy had stopped her sledding and was doing the same. On her back, half on her sled, half off, lifting her gloved hands to catch snowflakes, or try or to bat them away like a cat. She was absolutely quiet, incredibly still, like children so frequently are not. The world stops like this so rarely. These days, at least.

When I ran the New York City Marathon in 2016, my father wrote me an email that I absolutely loved. Very him, and the complete opposite of the many (much appreciated), “You’ve got this!”-type communications I’d been receiving all weekend. Respect for spelling and grammar abandoned, as usual. The subject line read: “Mom and I have told dozens of folk we are goi g to NY cuz our daughter is in the marathon.”

The body of the email, short yet to the point:

“We are so proud of you!
But remember, if you feel even s little tired
   Stop!
Dad”

Even a little tired, he said. To someone about to run her first marathon. All his anxiety about his daughter - a full grownup with three children, but still - running so many miles for no apparent reason, wrapped up in one concise message: you don’t have to finish. It’s fine, perhaps even preferable, to give up.

I think about this email all the time, especially in the can-do, get-through-it-ness that befalls our more challenging periods. Because it is comforting to think about how we can quit things, walk out, even right in the middle of them. You can lay down. You can say, “I’ve changed my mind.” I think about this at times like the one this winter has been. Wondering: Is this how it goes? The exquisite waiting followed by the satisfaction of knowing followed by the plateau? Accented by - and I know we chose living here and I do love experiencing all four seasons - dirty snow piles?

And then, you know! You don’t! We don’t. Most of the time. But my father - who was busy and accomplished, who was social and adventurous - was so good at giving that permission, good at abiding by it in non-detrimental ways. He left a party whenever he felt (“even a little!”) tired, the promise of his bed and a good TV show the reward.

So often I find that the permission alone is enough to deflate all that expectation, a joyous reminder that YOU DON’T HAVE TO DO ANY OF THIS! That this is voluntary for the most part. That, and this is perhaps the magic, you don’t have to, but you get to.

Now that the snow has melted and life, and the season itself, feels like it’s turned a corner, I find myself amped in ways that are probably kind of annoying. Dictating potential weekend plans to my family like a cruise ship operator…“Spring is coming, you guys!” The momentum will pick up, different than the fall - soccer and graduation and summer plans - in ways that could feel like too much, and will certainly be emotional. But I’ll call my dad in for his unique brand of pep talk whenever necessary. If you get even a little bit tired. You know the drill.

2026/48

Because of how the holidays fell this year, we had an extraordinarily long break from school, and decided to spend a lot of it with my family and friends in Maryland and the D.C. area, staying at my mom’s, where we took the art of charcuterie-board making and nightly presentations of the too-many-treats that were in the house to an extreme degree. I think a lot of you can relate coming out of the post-holiday daze, and perhaps agree there is a sort-of unconscious method to this madness. At first it’s all about enjoyment. But by the 8th plate of snacks, you don’t really see a way out. “So, let’s ride this all the way to oblivion!” you think, “Let’s see how much we can take.” Finally, making the dreary return to reality possible - even slightly welcome - you regain sense, and are ready to go home.

Home, where it is, oh dear, January. Where the living room is full of all the things we left there upon our escape south. Yesterday was a pleasantly sunny, if cool, day, and Aidy and Gabe played basketball outside without coats, Aidy getting all the way down to her short sleeves at one point, the whole scene tricking me into saying, “It feels like spring!” Because with the cleaning up and out we were doing, the readying for the week ahead, it really did. Then this morning came and it was 29 degrees and the beginning of a real, uninterrupted work and school week, the kind we nearly forgot existed; the sign of a good vacation.

I wasn’t in a particularly good mood coming back to it all, to be honest, and I immediately, aggressively really, leaned into a behavior pattern that I always tell my children and friends is not a good idea. And that is trying to convince yourself you are not feeling the way you are feeling. I tried particularly hard to convince myself of this because I made a casual goal - a deal with myself following my recent 48th birthday and ringing in 2026 - that I would try to have as much fun as possible this year.

I find that I’m sort of allergic to the modern idea of “having fun,” not because I don’t believe in it, god no, but because I tend assign that phrase this juvenile air. Like that when people launch campaigns to have more fun, what they mean is that they will, as a full grown adult, start going to the trampoline park or something. And I think about how I tried, not too long ago, to do a cartwheel, which seemed to dislodge my entire sense of inner ear balance and I almost needed medical attention. I can’t be expected to have fun like that.

But that’s not what fun has to mean, right? It can mean - and what I mean - approaching life, when it is appropriate, with a sense of curiosity and light-heartedness. A spirit of facing the world with a sense of openness, like no matter what mood you are in…what might happen?! Getting on with it, instead of getting mired in it.

That’s what I did with my bad mood this week: I got stuck in fighting those totally understandable feelings following our extended holiday adventures, when the truth is about these moods (and this is another thing I always remind my children) is that, most of the time? They pass on their own. If you can remember that you aren’t the feeling, and the feeling is just a feeling, they usually do. And pretty quickly! Like the eventual understanding that the charcuterie plates have served their purpose and it is time to move on, rest assured that the proverbial gray clouds, if not the gray January days (not yet), will pass. And when I remembered to get myself out of my head and the house, to write it all down here and let this be a communal experience instead of a solitary one, I felt it all lighten right up. No cartwheels required! Here’s to a new year.