Saturday, August 27, 2011

sand, sun, beach, fun

Cordelia insisted on bringing her t-shirt that reads "sand, sun, beach, fun," but I don't think she wore it.  With or without it, the week was full of the above.

Mom and Dad Sconyers generously planned a week for their children and their families to be together at Myrtle Beach.  I could see in Jim's sister Emily D and brother Paul the same intense satisfaction at being seaside as I know is in Jim (and his father).  I'm pretty sure Jim has saltwater running through his veins.

Here are some pics - not of our first day there - but of the first day I pulled out my camera (Tuesday?).  I had to wait some time for the camera to adjust to the warmth and humidity - my lens was fogged when I wanted to capture pictures of Mom Emily tossing a football with nephew Josh.

We found evenings after supper were the best time on the sand.  The crowds were thinned and the heat of the sun was past for the day.

Grace took to the beach like... a sandpiper.  That's what she reminded me of, running down to the water and back.

Paul and Sarah, celebrating their third anniversary, coming back from an evening stroll.

Grace and Cordelia watching their return.

Sarah and Paul

Mom Emily, Sarah, Emily D., Paul, and Jason - relaxing together.

Papa Jim playing with the boys - Ian and Josh.

Caroline fit in so well with our girls, I had trouble keeping track (one, two, three, four, no wait... five).

Grace practicing to be a marathon runner, and Cordelia practicing to be... a sulky runway model?  (She wanted to be in the pool).

The surf makes an excellent cover for girl talk.  Caroline and Gemma down by the water.

And a beach trip wouldn't be complete without dancing in the sand.  Caroline is a willing teacher and Gemma and Elian attentive students.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

vacation

VACATION

1
: a respite or a time of respite from something : intermission
2
a : a scheduled period during which activity (as of a court or school) is suspendedb : a period of exemption from work granted to an employee
3
: a period spent away from home or business in travel or recreation <had a restful vacation at the beach>
4
: an act or an instance of vacating


Before I post pictures of our time at the beach, I must include here pictures of the act of vacating.  This, along with the settling back in at the other end, is the part of vacation that can (but doesn't necessarily have to) steal from the benefits of the intermission which is, after all, the goal of the scheduled period.

The act or instance of vacating requires forethought:  How many changes of clothes does one need at the beach?  Will we wear two outfits a day because we get wet and dirty?  Will we dress up in the evenings or go for the beach bum look when our adventures take us abroad (or to worship on Sunday)?  How many diapers are needed in addition to swim pants?  What will we do with ourselves if Tropical Storm Emily turns into a hurricane?   (Note to self for next time:  LESS IS MORE!)

It requires skill:   How do you fit everything needed for a family of six to live for a week or so into two large duffels?  And by needed, we also mean pillows, and snugglies, and books we might want to read, and electronics - which, by the way, required two bags of their own.  (Another note to self:  There ARE modern conveniences - such as washers and dryers and grocery stores -  even in such exotic locations as... Myrtle Beach.  But the stroller, which was left on the living room floor, would have been nice to have!)


Thankfully, with these challenges, I have helpers.

Jim is an expert at taking all of the various bags, boxes, and bundles that were determined needful and fitting them into every conceivable space in our van not occupied with a human body.

And Cordelia (with some help from Gemma) did an awesome job organizing clothes for herself and her three younger sisters for our recent trip with Jim's family.  Which brings me to my third point.

It requires flexibility.  Here is a glimpse of one of the messier moments in the process.




Thankfully, order was restored when we walked out the door, which made coming home just that much nicer.


Monday, August 1, 2011

for Jim on his birthday

It's been more than 18 years.

We were in the sparsely furnished living room of college friends, on the bottom floor of the duplex that would be our first home together, though we had no thought of that at the time. Tish Hinojosa was crooning a ballad on the CD player, and we were fumbling to learn the Texas two-step. It didn't come naturally to me, or you. At some point, you overheard me say that I wanted to marry someone I could dance barefoot with in the kitchen.

Later, alone together in the car on the way back to campus, you said, "If you don't find someone to dance with barefoot in the kitchen, keep me in mind."

That was the beginning.

That summer, we were engaged. I joined your family on a trip to Myrtle Beach, and we danced barefoot under the moon, the crash of surf nearly drowning the tunes from the boom box on the sand.

A few months later in October, we danced the Texas two-step for real, in Texas, at my sister's wedding. I also danced with my new brother-in-law, a Texan, who quickly set about reteaching me the dance. We had learned it wrong.

Most of our dancing through the years has been at weddings, though we didn't dance at our own that December. And in our first kitchen, we didn't dance, but tiptoed, so as not to offend our rather sensitive neighbors beneath us, they who now occupied the living room that had witnessed a beginning.

Five years later in our kitchen in the rental in Indiana - you in grad school, I bringing home the bacon - we danced barefoot. That time it was around and on a copper plate, stepping in a soap solution, then slipping, sliding, trying to keep balance. Graceful was out of the question. Rusted Root's Cruel Sun blared from the stereo in the living room. From that dance came an intaglio etching, a flat memento in black ink on paper, of movement and music and together.

In our next kitchen (the one owned by the bank but with our names on it), you danced solo with Luan and grout and tile, pursuing perfection in renovation between studio and critiques while I drove and worked. Together was harder to find in those long, weary days.

Four years of those days brought two more mementos in black ink on paper - calligraphy and seal declaring an MFA conferred and a tiny footprint announcing a new life - that led to a new kitchen, smelling of fresh construction. I danced solo on the shiny linoleum, learning to be at home, to be a mother, to cook and manage and all the other things that were also new. Still striving for perfection and control while tentatively embracing the free form of grace.

As distance of belief spiraled us apart, I often imagined it coming right again. And in that, I imagined us at a dance, you loving me into graceful with the touch of your hand at the small of my back.


Our kitchen now is kind of like us, not new and not finished. Major changes have been made, but the tile that will make a great floor for barefoot dancing is on a pallet in the garage, awaiting time and energy and means. The floor in its present state defies clean. This L-shaped space is the hub of a life that never seems to measure up to the perfect that drove us both in the past; the busyness of four little girls and two grownups living and creating leaves it in a constant state of change, often chaos.

We've not danced in this kitchen, except sometimes with words and glances, around those spirals that haven't come to rest.


This morning as I read and prayed for you, I reflected on the years, and the dances, we've shared. And the dances we've missed.

And, this is what I want to say to you as I wish you a happy birthday:

There are steps of the dance we have to relearn.

We will, no doubt, stumble at times and step on each other's toes.

Our dancing will never be the stuff of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers (but who cares when it's just us in the kitchen?).

But, when you are ready to dance, I want you to know that every line on my dance card has, and always will have, your name on it.