The
days pass quietly by, in a life quieter
still.
I sit
with my son as we drive to visit my beloved, and watch him do all the things I
did at that age, unbeknownst to him.
We talk
now and then, in precious bits, the side-by-side mode a precious thing for
parent and child, with much freedom to just be, or to mention something on your
mind.
I tell
him that his father and i became parents at his age, and he turns to stare at
me, amazed. Laughs.
I laugh
too, seeing far into the past, how we manage, what we manage, how we learn
slowly.
We have
a hard, beautiful visit, and then I sit in the Mexican restaurant he regaled to
me, while he gets us lunch.
We
stroll through Brookline together, watching families and joggers and dogs drift
past, til we begin our drive back to my home, and then he to his.
There
is so much here, in this life. This day. It is such a thing, to learn to
feature what is most distressing, and let it have its necessary moment. Partly
out of fear of suffering; in part out of a growing understanding of how things
work.
Near home, he is talking about situations in
his life. About road rage. About learning to juggle huge work weeks and a new
beloved.
I put
my hand on his arm, loving him so, possibly never more than now.
I tell
him I learned to choose to do what works.
He
glances at me, smiles.
The
late afternoon sun shifts in the sky overhead, as the traffic eases a bit, and
we rumble on down the road.
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