Month: December 2023

Hilton Head Day 2

We’ve had that model plane for — I don’t even know how long. Over a year. Maybe more.

“At some point, we’ll put it together,” I assured E, and myself.

And so as we were packing for this end-of-the-year trip, we had the idea that we could take the model and put it together here, in Hilton Head. Most of it, though, the Boy did himself. I wanted to be involved, but I also wanted him to have the experience of assembling it alone. I helped when he requested it.

This morning, he finished it.

In the afternoon, a stop at Piggly Wiggly — they still exist!

And in the evening, a walk on the beach,

some time in the hot tub,

and games in the condo.

Hilton Head Day 1

We started the day with a long sleep — not a single alarm clock set in the entire condominium. None. Not a FitBit set to gently jingle one awake; not a phone set to start chirping, screaming, or whatever alarms various family members use to drag themselves out of bed. Nothing.

First up, a walk on the beach just beside our complex. It’s technically not on the ocean but rather on the sound that separates Hilton Head from St. Helena Island and Parris Island just to the northeast of us.

The plan was to have an afternoon walk on Hilton Head’s main beach in the afternoon after exploring the downtown area, but K so fell in love with the marshy beach that she wanted to return after a short walk on the main tourist beach.

But we’ll get to that later.

One of the things Hilton Head is famous for is its wealth, and there’s no lack of that around us. The house just to the south of our complex is a 10,000 square foot beast that is valued, according to Zillow, at $4.5 million. Probably someone’s second home at that.

This kind of conspicuous wealth — I just don’t understand it. It screams lack of confidence in one’s own being. The only way I can feel great about myself is by showing off how much wealth I have. That’s how I’ve already seen it.

But that was neither here nor there as the Boy explored the shoreline (with the Girl still asleep in the condo), discovering at least a dozen horseshoe crab shells.

The place we’re renting is in a somewhat-dated but still lovely complex that, according to one resident we spoke with, is 50% owned and 50% rented. There are tennis courts (used, as far as we can tell, primarily for pickleball), an outdoor pool, an indoor pool, a jacuzzi, a sauna — a regular spa.

There’s even an odd, enclosed but unheated porch area. Not sure how comfortable that might be in the heat of the summer, but in the winter, all one needs is a blanket or jacket and it’s fine out there.

After our post-walk coffee and cake, we went downtown to do a little shopping. Not what I love doing, but I made it through the whole afternoon without even a peep of protest at the suggestion, “Let’s go into this store!”

The Girl was shopping for a birthday present for one of her friends; K was shopping for a dress for the Girl.

In the end, they both walked away happy, and I even got something: a bottle of Ghost Pepper and garlic hot sauce, locally made.

“Is it hot?” the Boy asked after I sampled a bit in the store.

“It’s definitely warm.”

After shopping, it was time for lunch: Babcia’s first time having sushi. The meal came with miso soup — another first — which Babcia liked but suggested: “it could use some potatoes.”

After lunch, we headed to the main beach. At first, K was in love with it: “The changing rooms, the showers — so charming!” But the beach itself — nothing much, she proclaimed.

So in the end, we just headed back to our little beach to see the sunset colors.

Cracker Stop

On the way to Hilton Head this evening, we stopped for dinner at Cracker Barrel. It’s not a place we ever go to on our own, but when someone from Poland is here—well, they have to try good old fashioned greens.

Ride

Christmas 2023

Previous Years

Wigilia 2023

First times almost never go unnoticed. When we’re experiencing something novel, we’re rarely not aware that it’s new. Our first kiss — we all remember that. The first time we saw our first child — no one could fail to realize the significance of the moment.

Sometimes, those firsts surprise us: my first Christmas was something I never thought I would experience, and while I doubt many people can remember their first Christmas, I clearly remember mine.

Family in Poland

But lasts? We often don’t even realize we’re in the midst of some last, and we don’t realize it was a last until so much later. Our last Wigilia with Nana and Papa together in 2018 — we didn’t realize it was the last. Our final Wigilia with Dziadek in 2007 — we had no idea it would be our last. Our last Wigilia with Papa in 2020 — no idea. 

W. S. Merwin hints at this in “For the Anniversary of My Death”

Every year without knowing it I have passed the day  
When the last fires will wave to me
And the silence will set out
Tireless traveler
Like the beam of a lightless star

Then I will no longer
Find myself in life as in a strange garment
Surprised at the earth
And the love of one woman
And the shamelessness of men
As today writing after three days of rain
Hearing the wren sing and the falling cease
And bowing not knowing to what

We move through these lasts without even thinking about them, without even realizing their presence. 

But some lasts approach. They haunt or taunt us from far off: our last day of duty for the year hangs tauntingly in front of us teachers every year. Our last time in a classroom in a given school — we know it’s coming, and it haunts us. At least it did me both times I left Poland.

We’re approaching a last in our family: L is now seventeen, a junior in high school. Next year will be the last time she’s here for Wigilia for certain. Sure, she’ll be here for most of them in the years in college, maybe even all of them. But there will come a time when she decides to spend Wigilia with the family of someone she’s fallen for.

Then there will be the same situation for E five years later. He’ll move out, probably come to Wigilia with us more regularly than L (but who knows?), and we’ll never be certain like we are now that we’ll be spending the next Wigilia together.

And at some point, K and I will have our final Wigilia together, and we most likely won’t even know it.

So this all raises the obvious question: is it good to know that last has arrived or not? I think it depends on the event itself. In the end, though, it’s a moot point: we often don’t know our lasts when we happen across them.

But what if we tried to live each moment as if it were our last time doing whatever mundane task was at hand? What if we washed dishes as if we’d never get to do it again? Such a simple mundane task that has marked our lives with such regularity that we don’t even think about it. Putting it in the context of a potential last seems to imbue it with some sparkle it lacked before. And I guess that sparkle really comes from us — and we can dispense them wherever we choose. We can make a conscious choice to live our lives as if ever single event were the last time we do that, or even the last thing we do on earth. It seems like it could be the ultimate life lived in the now.

Waiting

“This is fucking bullshit!” It’s not often one hears such language in a doctor’s waiting room, but the man sitting by the reception desk had clearly had enough from his perspective. When the nurse who was calling in patients came to the door, he pointed out that his appointment was for 8:45 and not 9:00.

”Okay,” she smiled. “We’re a little behind right now.”

”Well, when it gets to 9:00, I’m leaving,” he growled.

”Okay,” she repeated. “If you need to reschedule your appointment, you can certainly do that.”

He’d been mumbling to his wife since L and I had arrived, but by that point, she’d had enough. She got up and walked calmly out of the waiting room, clearly embarrassed with her husband’s outbursts.

When 9:00 arrived, I watched to see if he would go through with his threat, although I struggled to see much of a threat in it. He sat with his foot in a boot cast and had crutches by him: clearly, if someone was in need, it was he and not anyone working at the doctor’s office. At 9:05 he grabbed his crutches, banged them on the ground a few times in front of him, muttered, “This place! This place,” and crossed his legs over his crutches.

Five minutes later, a young man with a prosthetic leg to the knee entered and checked in with the receptionist. Our guy watched him, staring at his prosthetic, then banged his crutches together again.

When the nurse came back to call the next patient, he accosted her: “I’ve been here for an hour. I’m about ready to walk out of here.” To this, the nurse smiled again and said, “Okay.”

As the door closed, he said to no one in particular and therefore to everyone in the waiting room, “My appointment was for 8:45, not 9:15,” and after a few more moments, he muttered, “Okay,” and tried his best to storm out. It as kind of tough to rush out angrily on crutches, but he made a valiant effort.

I was certain that just after he left, the nurse would come call him, but instead, after five minutes, he hobbled back in and sat down in a different chair.

After a few more moments, the nurse called us back. “He’s going to be angry,” I laughed as we walked back, and on hearing that, our nurse mentioned to the others his behavior: “He’s making a scene in the lobby,” explained the smiling nurse to another before adding for my benefit, “He’s always like that.”

If he’d been my child, I’d have explained to him that no one was doing that to him intentionally, but realizing that the nurses put up with his behavior somewhat regularly, I realized it might very well have been intentionally, or at the least with some degree of satisfaction.

As we sat waiting for a technician to prepare the machine for L’s x-ray, the kind nurse brought our petulant hero back, indicating where he could wait for the x-ray technician.

”Great, now I can wait here three hours,” he grumbled.

Unrelated Photo

Single Picture

A walk with the dog gave us the single picture from the day — a day of doctor visits and yard work.

Game 2

The Boy’s team is now 0-2, a depressing start.

Today’s game was rough: it wasn’t that we were outplayed, but none of the boys could buy a basket.

17

Party today.

Actual birthday tomorrow.