so, totally, high school

Nora was recently in a musical produced by a local community theater program. It was funny, and sweet and mildly irreverent, and the schedule leading up to the show dates was increasingly busy; a schedule I am now familiar with due to her penchant for the performing arts, and Aidy’s miniature version of the same, right on Nora’s heels. You practice, and again, then more, then every day, then it’s the opening night and the next performance and the next. A whirlwind and when it’s over there’s an expected letdown although, to be honest with you, Nora does really well with a letdown. It’s like she was born with the ability to experience peace, to succumb to a deserved state of rest, without all the emotions that get in the way of fully enjoying it. The sadness or regret or wondering what’s coming. I’m not saying she doesn’t feel those things at all, but she’s much better at navigating transitions like these than I ever have been, and likely ever will be.

After the last performance and the cast party, she and a few fellow cast members went to see yet another show at a high school a couple towns away. I think they knew someone in the cast, I didn’t get all the details really, but it resonated with my memories of that carefree teenage way, going from one thing to another, and then what? All that prolonging. Time, effervescent.

I drove her and a friend, listening to them chatter about the previous few days, laughing over photos they’d taken, texting others who’d be meeting them there. I remained contentedly quiet, hands on the wheel, eyes on the directions. It’s like an observational tower, really, the front seat of a minivan.

The part of parenting I can’t get over at this juncture is remembering exactly how it felt to be Nora’s age - exactly how - and not mentioning it every other second. Holding myself back, at least for the most part, from uttering that truth, which would undoubtedly be met with quick dismissal, total disbelief. Letting her moments take their own shape. What I can’t get over is how hard it is not to foist my current or former emotions, my wants and my know-how on her unique experience, as though the teen-now-adult me knows better, because lord knows, I do not. I don’t know better, I just know. And teenagers, the thing about them is that they don’t think anybody does. I realize this because I have and was one. The latter, it seems like yesterday, I swear to christ.

It’s what makes that age so glorious and terrifying, I think. That feeling of being the first person to experience a particular feeling ever is what makes the friendships so intense, and the heartbreak so unbearable. It’s what makes the fun next-level.

I can feel that next level fun still, can pull it so easily from the depths. The time my friends and I tore the silly poems we’d been writing for each other all year from our lockers and submitted them to our high school’s literary magazine five minutes before their deadline. The time we got the cartilage of our ears pierced, all together, all giddy and on display in the middle of the mall (I removed my earring days later; it hurt when I slept on it and I was a full wimp in the presence of that relatively minor pain). Sleepovers, Sunkist, meetups at the square. So much running. So much urgency. There’s plenty of urgency in my grown up life as a parent and a professional. Not the same, though, not the same in the slightest.

(important disclaimer: not my car, omg)

When I dropped Nora and her friend off for that show, they tumbled out of the car and said goodbye, but otherwise, as they scouted the scene for friends, made last minute calls, I was invisible. As it should be. I think about this all the time these days. How present, loving and sometimes invisible my parents were to me when I was Nora’s age. Not in a negative way. Not that they weren’t there, every step of the way, when I needed them. But that they let the harmless teenage glory be. They let me have it.

And driving home, some deep emotional trench opened up. Not the kind where you’re longing or clinging or sad. But like I could feel that part of my life again, and be grateful for it, full stop. Like I could be both ok with and deeply moved by it, having had it. Witnessing it again now. It’s so rare, that feeling. A deep alright-ness with the ways of this world, and your world, where you don’t want it different. I let that feeling carry me home, where I’d soon be summoned to deliver or pick a child up from another location, them lost in the singularity of their days, me contentedly tethered to the logistics that make it possible.

I think, I mean, I am probably right in guessing, considering the usual patterns of our family life, that Taylor Swift was playing in the car, the ultimate soundtrack for days gone by tied to these days now. I settled into the comforting role of chauffeur, keeper of many secrets, like the fact that I, too, was once very young.

No tremors or totality, but still lots of wonder

Two unique events shaped our lives recently: a rare earthquake that hit the northeast, and last week's solar eclipse.

I experienced neither event fully. In fact, I didn't feel the earthquake, or the aftershock that followed, at all, despite the fact that where I live in Connecticut, plenty did. “Was that an earthquake?” they wrote on my neighborhood Facebook group and in the texts I received. “My whole house just shook!”

My house, well, did not. Did it? I doubted myself immediately — my very ability to feel — as the reports rolled in. I’d been scurrying around in a typical weekday morning rush. Finishing an email, grabbing a load of clothes from the dryer, hightailing it to the car to go to an appointment. Had I been driving when it happened? That would make me feel much better, but the timing didn’t work. Had I been too in motion myself to feel the non-proverbial earth move under my feet? Or was this something deeper? An innate lack of awareness; an unfixable character flaw.

I did a lot of soul-searching. I retraced my steps. Had I experienced, but not registered this tectonic shift? I developed a complex, having missed out on the collective fear —the drama! I had no earthquake story to tell.

"Everybody's getting over-excited about this," my 15-year-old daughter declared when she got home from school, 15-year-old daughters being really excellent at disdain. "You all have earthquake FOMO!"

I think that my — fine — FOMO, contributed to my already uncertain, and increasingly defensive, feelings about the total solar eclipse on Monday, particularly our decision to stay home and watch it where we live in Connecticut, rather than drive the three hours to Vermont for totality. My adventure-seeking son questioned our plan, or lack thereof, repeatedly and I couldn’t argue. All reasoning in the face of such a decision — work, three kids with three intricate daily schedules, other upcoming trips — are lame in the face of missing the most extraordinary version of a planetary event.

So, I settled into my uneasy resignation and talked to fellow parents about pulling our fourth graders out of school a little early. We’d gather on the playground with our families for our state’s far inferior — according to literally every commentary I ingested on the topic — version of the eclipse.

I joked with my friends over text about my feelings as we made our plans, our giddy jealousy (because come on, we got it) yielding faux contempt towards our traveling counterparts. "NEVER totality!" wrote one. Another: "Those totality people are going to be spending a lot of time on 95 today standing still. Or 91. Whatever. I don't pay attention to totality routes."

Despite our less dramatic environs, I found the whole thing quite dramatic. The temperature dropped and the air got dusky as we parents screamed at our children to, “Look, now! This is the most important part!” They did, but seemed far more impressed that they’d been dismissed early, and the playground was theirs for the taking. My nine-year-old, Aidy, pressed the eclipse glasses to her eyes. “It’s a sliver!” she declared, before sprinting to the slide where her classmates were gathered.

As the crescent sun slowly returned to its normal shape, and we all worried that we’d accidentally “looked right at it” with our bare eyes as we placed and removed our glasses throughout the afternoon, I felt, admittedly, a little relieved that the moment, with all its anticipation, all that expectation, had passed.

We walked home, the afternoon light back to normal, setting the early spring forsythia ablaze all along the sidewalks of our neighborhood. Already — already! — the major events of the past few days seemed like foreign things, impossible to imagine in this suburban landscape.

I thought about my non-earthquake, our semi eclipse, and the strange joy of feeling so small in this ruthless world, this infinite cosmos. Even half-marvels, it turns out, are a reminder of our collective humanity. My daughter skipped ahead, far too young to be worried by the lack or intensity of such thrills. There are, she reminds me, wonders every day. Some so subtle, you could easily miss them.

This piece was originally posted on the Erma Bombeck Writers’ Workshop blog.