Tuesday, May 20, 2014

For My Mother

My mother lost her battle with breast cancer. I was six years old when she was diagnosed and 11 when she died early in the morning of May 22, 1976. It was a Friday.

Now I am a grown woman with children of my own. I walk through life with my eyes open. I read the newspaper, heartbreaking fiction, and even more heartbreaking non-fiction. I have worked in child welfare for nearly two decades. I love family and friends deeply, leaving my heart and hood open for the sometimes accompanying wounds. I know more than one kind of sadness. I have witnessed great beauty and great injustice. 

Yetand I am quite embarrassed to admit thissince my mother's death every single time the month of May rolls in it stops me in my tracks. After the birth of my children, and particularly since my daughter has become the age I was during my mother's illness, May is even more wrenchingly difficult. This year I am the age my mother was when cancer took over her days. While the flowers and trees are coming into fresh bloom, my heart overflows with a lifetime of missed moments. And I'm really angry to have not had a mother for all of those moments of my life for the past 38 years. 

I have adult friends who recently lost their mothers. By instinct I want to assure them that it will get easier. Others provide this assurance. I can't. Because in my own experience, living a motherless life has never gotten easier. Even as a grown woman. Even knowing that she she might not be alive now had she lived a full life. Thirty-eight years later, during the month of May, I just want to crawl deep under the covers and defy all the logic of my educated mind and my lifetime of perspective by feeling deeply deeply sorry for myself. 

Of course, my children know very little of this. I carry my grief quietly. My husband knows, braces himself, and does his utmost to walk beside me through it. 

And so I breathe. I try to be gentle with myself. I go on long hard runs in the springtime sunshine. I struggle to amass good May memories to carry me through the worst of it. And when our children climb into the bed, like our daughter just this morning, I nuzzle their sweet heads and hold them extra tightly. 









Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Note to Never Take Myself Too Seriously

Last week I had a hard slogging run through the streets of New Orleans. I've had tough runs before and I'm seasoned enough to chalk one uncomfortable run up to "one of those" runs and move on. It was the humidity, the time change, my travel-weary body.

Back in Brooklyn, another tough run. I managed to eek out the promised ten miles but slow and plodding. My legs felt tired and my breathing heavy. Odd. Two in a row.

Then, after dropping the kids at the bus this morning, I set off for a five mile run. Immediately I felt tightness in the back of my upper thigh. Tempted to stop and go home and rest and stretch, I instead kept at it and soon the tingling pain eased up somewhat. But again, there was little ease in those five miles despite the beautiful spring morning. 

So here is the mid-runwithout a touch of ironyconversation I had with myself this morning: 

  1. MILE ONE:  Maybe I need to seriously this time pay attention to my body and do some cross training. It is ALWAYS my right leg and the PT told me my hip flexors needed work and for years I have ignored all of the signs because...I can run marathons but I'm too lazy to do leg lifts?!
  2. MILE TWO:  Running is over for me. It was a good stretch, but now it's over. Sure I'm still passing people in the park, but the signs are written on the wall. All downhill from here. Funny that it happened like flipping a switch, but maybe that's how it happens.
  3. MILE THREE: I obviously can't run the Brooklyn Half.
  4. MILES FOUR AND FIVE: There is something seriously wrong with me. I must schedule a physical exam and get blood work. Were the antibiotics ineffective after the ticks of last summer? Something even worse?

After five miles I headed home and texted a running buddy this message:  "Wow. Five really tough miles. Beautiful but can't get to easy last bunch of runs." His reply? "Congrats. How are the shoes? Perhaps wearing down." 

Not sure how I failed to note during my run that I have been telling myself for weeks to replace the sad, tired Sauconys that have happily accompanied me over hundreds of miles.

So maybe I'm not through. And maybe I'm not dying any time soon. And maybe I will run the Brooklyn Half Marathon in 10 days.

Heading out this evening for a long overdue running shoe shopping trip (And yes, I should cross train too).