anniversary

20

Twenty years ago this all started. Nineteen years ago we moved to America. Almost eighteen years ago we became three. Twelve years ago, four. Along the way we’ve added a cat, a dog, and a frog. We’ve added a house, and some cars came into our lives and then exited. We’ve moved a time or two. We’ve changed jobs a time or three. We’ve renovated a bathroom, then a kitchen, then a carport, then another bathroom, then a basement. We’ve pulled up shrubs and planted trees, added a shed and a smoker to the backyard along with swings, a trampoline, and some hammocks. We’ve fought yellow jackets in the yard and battled roaches in the house. We’ve turned a mixed surface parking area into a lovely concrete parking lot. We’ve planted blueberries, tomatoes, zucchini, raspberries, peas, elderberries, radishes, figs, cucumbers, blackberries, and more that I can’t even begin to recall. We’ve cut down trees in the backyard and let bushes grow into trees in the front. We’ve been to countless volleyball games, soccer games, and basketball games. We’ve had a leaking roof, a flooding basement, various electrical mysteries. We’ve lost parents and gained friends, lost touch with friends and turned friends into new family. Uncles, aunts, cousins, and grandparents have passed away. We’ve amassed a wealth of Christmas decorations and gone through passing periods of Halloween decor. We’ve walked around these blocks in our neighborhood more times than we care to recall, ridden our bikes together miles upon miles, played boardgames, card games, and video games until we’re tired of them and they become permanent closet inhabitants. We’ve cooked thousands of pierogies, traveled thousands of miles, spent thousands of dollars on things that later turned out to be less than important. We’ve been to the emergency room, to family care physicians, dermatologists, gastroenterologists, dentists, and orthodontists. We’ve had surgeries and celebrations, baptisms and funerals, and quiet evenings looking at the Christmas tree and drinking tea. We’ve had ups, downs, lateral and diagonal movements. We’ve laughed, cried, and sat bewildered. We’ve hoped and regretted. We’ve planned, failed, and succeeded.

Through it all, this has been the one, stable constant. And that’s all I need to look to the next twenty years with a smile on my slowly-wrinkling face.

18

Today is our eighteenth wedding anniversary. Eighteen years of putting up with me — I don’t know how she does it. We decided to spend the day at Biltmore since we have season passes, but this time, we didn’t even go into the house. Instead, we wandered the gardens, sat on benches, and ate a tasty lunch.

Seventeen and Twenty

The images don’t look all that old. The faces don’t look so very different than ours now. The memories of that day are just as vivid as the experience itself. Yet somehow, here we are, our seventeenth anniversary just behind us, closing in on the twentieth anniversary, with two kids, a dog, a cat, a frog, a full schedule, and an entire pile of commitments in tow.

Yet even today, “twenty years ago” has a certain significance: twenty years ago, I was about to head back to Poland after two years in Boston. Having dropped out of graduate school (philosophy of religion is fascinating but of little practical value) and spent a year working at an internet startup, I realized I missed my life in Poland enough to give everything up and return, and so I did just that: packed a few clothes, a lot of music and books, and returned to the life I’d left in Lipnica Wielka.

One artist I took with me was a relatively new find: when I left for Poland the first time in 1996, I’d only just become completely enamored with the music of Nanci Griffith. She’d released her best album, Other Rooms, Other Voices, a few years earlier which I’d bought about a year before I left for Poland, and that album and her 1994 Flyer were among my favorite albums. At heart, Griffith was a folk singer, but she always had a parade of influences and guest artists in her work that it always seems more than simple folk. She sang about missed chances, the fleeting nature of now, the nostalgia of lost love and lost childhood — all the things I think about and write about. She’d begin a blog entry with things like “twenty years ago.” She wrote a song about it, in fact:

On Grafton Street at Christmas time
The elbows push you ’round
This is not my place of memories
I’m a stranger in this town
The faces seem familiar
And I know those songs they’re playin’
But I close my eyes and find myself
Five thousand miles away

It’s funny how my world goes round without you
You’re the one thing I never thought
I could live without
And I just found this smile to think about you
You’re a Saturday night
Far from the madding crowd

The buskers sing by candle light
In front of Bewleys Store
A young nun offers me a chair
At a table by the door
And I feel compelled to tell her
Of the sisters that we knew
How when they lit their candles
I’d say a prayer for you

It’s funny how my world goes round without you
You’re the one thing I never thought
I could live without
And I just found this smile to think about you
You’re a Saturday night
Far from the madding crowd

The church bells ring for holy hour
And I’m back out in the rain
It’s been twenty years or more
Since I last said your name
I hear you live near Dallas now
In a house out on the plains
Why Grafton Street brought you to mind
I really can’t explain

It’s funny how my world goes round without you
You’re the one thing I never thought
I could live without
And I just found this smile to think about you
You’re a Saturday night
Far from the madding crowd

On Grafton Street at Christmas time
The elbows push you round
All I carry now are memories
I’m a stranger in this town

She died last week at the young age of 68, and I have been revisiting her catalog, wondering why have been ignoring her music for the last decade. In part, it’s K’s fault: when she was exploring my our CDs, she discovered and fell in love with Griffith, and she wanted to play her music a lot. A lot. I got a little tired of it, I guess, and that’s why I didn’t listen to it for years.

So thinking about our wedding seventeen years ago (yesterday) on a walk tonight, I listened Griffith’s music and found myself drifting further back, further back, further and further, thinking about events of twenty-five, thirty years ago, knowing full well that soon enough, I’ll be writing about our thirtieth anniversary wondering where all the time went. It’s a favorite theme of Griffth’s and mine. Maybe our only theme.

16

It doesn’t seem like that long ago. Yet it does. Worlds away.

Happy 16th anniversary to my one and only love — I have no idea how you’ve put up with me this long.

Routines

Having children necessitates it, one would think. Perhaps they’re not so much necessary as inevitable, for even the worst parents I would imagine fall into some kind of routine partially dictated by their children, even it if it is simply to neglect them cruelly. That of course is not our story. Our family runs on routines, pure and simple. We don’t even question them; the only question is who will do what, and habit has largely answered that question for us. There are morning routines: the Boy, for instance, must — simply must — have his Cheerios before all else. He will insist on wearing a soggy diaper from the full night’s sleep if there’s any question of putting him on the potty chair before his first bowl of Cheerios. As for the Girl, she has to have a blanket wrapped around her to keep off the morning chill, even when it’s summer and there is no morning chill. There are afternoon routines involving snacks. There are the standard evening routines, who puts which child to bed, who supervises the bath, who straighten’s up the day’s messes. There are travel routines, fussing routines, play routines, shoe routines, bathroom routines. We even fall into meal preparation routines.

The thought of abandoning all those routines for a weekend would be tantamount to suggesting that we try not to breathe through all of Thursday morning or not get up on a November Monday morning. And yet, in celebration of ten years of marriage, we decided, with a little help from Nana and Papa, to drop all the routines and just breath for a weekend.

A small cabin on the banks of the French Broad River in Hot Springs, North Carolina (Population, according to one resident, about “Oh, I don’t know, six-twenty, six-thirty”) was just the place to do just that. To walk on the banks of the river,

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to stroll by the railroad tracks looking for spikes to take home to our train-obsessed little boy.

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This was the plan. And this was, it seemed, what all the stars in the heavens aligned against — if one believes in such things — as we tried to make our way there. First, there was the flood. It was supposed to keep raining all weekend, and Friday morning at four, as I was trying desperately to keep the water from spilling from the storage half of the basement to the living half of the basement, it seemed unlikely that we would be able to make it.

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On the way to the cabin — about a two-hour drive — we encountered an accident in the road that stopped traffic from going both directions. Not an insurmountable obstacle, but we both joked about it. After a few minutes of waiting and checking the GPS for alternate routes, we decided to try what so many other cars were trying and do a U-turn in the median. We got all four wheels in the median, wet with two days’ rain, and the front wheels started spinning. Visions of what it might take to get us out were just forming as I shifted into reverse, caught enough traction to back up to the pavement, then tried again, successfully, after gaining a bit more momentum. Three efforts to stop us, all failed. Still, what else might be waiting, we wondered.

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Granted, an incredible, modern cabin made from wood of a hundred-year-old cabin brought from deep in the mountains awaited us. A cabin so perfect that we found ourselves saying things like, “This is what we need we retire.”

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That little slice of perfection waited, but there were a few more obstacles first. Like being unable to find the cabin despite following instructions that matched both the GPS’s monotone directions and Google Maps. When you head down a narrow mountain road that soon becomes a gravel road, which crosses a railroad track — all according to direction — and leads to an enormous abandoned house that looks like something from the horror story William Faulkner never wrote (granted, from a certain point of view, that’s all he wrote, but that’s another literary argument). When you get through all this and overcome the visions of mindless zombie hordes flooding out of the abandoned structure and manage to pull away, when you make it this far and decide that, despite the late hour, you must call the owner, there’s only one possible outcome: no bars. None. T-Mobile has been the object of my hatred and vitriol from the start (why did we switch? but that’s another horror story), but now my hatred became white-hot. We drive back to town, found an open shop, and asked for directions.

“I know where the road is,” the attendant said, “but I don’t know that exact address.” He looked back at the slip of paper I’d given him and then said, “Come on.” We went out to the young man sitting in front of the store and the attendant asked, “Hey, do you know where Harold has his cabins?” Small town — they know the owner by name. We didn’t yet know just how small and just how inevitable such an exchange would be.

He gave me directions; I replied, “That’s where we went.”

“Yeah, but you’ve got to turn before the tracks. Did you see that little gravel road beside the tracks?”

We had indeed seen that road, and started down it before deciding it couldn’t be right.

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And so back we went, down the the rail-side tracks on a road that came so close to the tracks that my heart thumped when K asked, “Can you imagine being at this point of the road when the train comes?”

We later shared this with the owner. “Oh, I do that on purpose. It’s quite a rush.”

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But finally, we’d made it. Everything faded away as we slipped into the hot tub on the front porch, listened to the crickets and cicadas, and marveled at how utterly dark it was in that secluded place. The stars provided enough light to see the clouds passing by overhead.

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Next morning, we headed to town after a short walk along the tracks, surprised at how quickly and effortlessly we’d made it through the transitions. No kids to feed; no E to worry about potty training; no L to worry about moments of panic exaggeration; no car to pack. We simply ate our breakfast, took our walk, and said, “Well, let’s just go head to town.”

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We had a relaxed lunch without fussing about food this one doesn’t like or about getting more of this or that food that the other is on the verge of breakdown about. No trips to the bathroom afterward to clean an incredibly independent but not quite coordinated little boy’s enthusiastic eating.

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We just ate lunch, paid the bill, and left. No routine.

“What a marvelous change,” K said. Or was that I who said it? Or both?

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We headed over to the grounds where the Bluff Mountain Festival is usually held, trying to place where the stage was, where we usually sat, where the clogging area was — mindless chatter.

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We went to the hot springs for which the town is named, soaking in a hot tub filled with hot mineral water that made our skin tingle and our muscles relax. We went on a short kayak trip with no one panicking at the rough water (L) and no one begging for more (E).

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We went for another walk when we got back to the cabin,

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talked about how thrilled E would have been to be standing there as a train crawled by then stopped, waiting on the siding for an opposite-bound train to pass by and stop to wait for a third train to go by.

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There was no one to complain about how long our by-the-train photo session was taking.

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There was no one to ask just how many times we would take the same picture.

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There was no one to be utterly thrilled with the multiple deer sightings.

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There was no one to complain about hunger when we returned to the cabin, no one to get upset about us going back into a hot tub for the third time in twenty-four hours, noone to put to bed.

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In other words, it was absolutely and blissfully peaceful while being all wrong. Those routines, new and old, are what make us a family, and being a family is what makes us us. We are greater than the sum of our parts, and we are less than two individuals when we’re alone.

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So when we got back to Nana’s and Papa’s and took the kids swimming, it was all as it had been before. The routines returned; the exhaustion of a return to the everyday settled.

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And we were happily complete again.

Orientation

21a

Exactly eight years ago today, to the minute, K and I were in the midst of our wedding party. One might suggest that I’ve made a mistake. “It’s six hours later in Poland,” one might protest. “That would make it almost five in the morning there.” Obviously, such a protester has never been to a Polish wedding.

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At five in the morning, we were still going — perhaps not going strong, and certainly not all of the guests still with us, but going all the same.

Eight years later, we’re still going, but there’s four now, which makes the going a bit more ponderous at times. Yet we still share the same future- and present-orientation that brought us together in the first place: family.

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And we’re still going ever-new places. Like kindergarten orientation.

Kindergarten? Already?

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Yes, and someone’s already set to be in the teacher’s seat at that.

Six

The passage of time has always fascinated me. “X years ago today, this happened,” I would think, marveling at all the things that happened in the meantime. Often, it wasn’t an exact day, but instead, within a month or so of the actual anniversary, I would find myself thinking such nostalgic thoughts.

Many of those events later turned out to be insignificant, of little more importance than what one had for breakfast nine days ago.

Today’s is the most significant of my — and K’s — life.

02b

When I reflect on the patience necessary for us to get married (a non-Catholic American getting married in Poland requires only slightly less bureaucracy than starting a war or passing a stimulus bill) and the patience necessary to put up with my foolishness for six years, I realize how fortunate I am.

09b

Six years — an awfully short time. Wars and debates have lasted much longer — and marriages. But when I look to the next six years, and the six years after that, and the six years after that (ad infinitum),

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when I think of a time when my few remaining hairs have turned gray and migrated to my nose and ears, when my mind moves slowly and my body more so,

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I will still have the most intelligent, beautiful, and thoughtful (among countless other superlatives) woman at my side. Perhaps only then will I truly understand the significance of our love.

Or maybe it’s to remain our ultimate mystery.

Happy Anniversary

Nana and Papa celebrated their forty-fifth anniversary weekend before last. We threw a little family party for them, gave them a present or two, and ponder the implications of being married that long.

Nana can finish all of Papa’s stories for him, and she can provide commentary on how they have evolved over the years. “How long exactly was it that you were unconscious after the truck hit you?” Papa knows very well how Nana worries about him and could probably even predict what Nana will say about a given, potentially dangerous situation — not that he’s ever done that. They can both anticipate each other’s thoughts and finish sentences for each other.

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And they both love L hugely. She comes in with a stepping stone she made for them — with a little help from K — and presents it with commentary: “I made this for you!”

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In five years, half a century. “It makes me feel old,” I can hear Nana say. “You should say, ‘It makes me feel noble,'” I’ll tell her.