Monday, July 25, 2011

Leaving on a jet plane

I sent my 11-year old off to California today.  By herself.  On a plane.  For a 4-hour flight.  As Lola and I stood at the top of the gangway watching her march down to board the jet -- backpack and violin slung over her back -- we smiled when we saw that each of us had tears in our eyes.  My little girl...her big sister....off on an adventure, as usual, but without us -- her comrades in life so far.

Till today.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Back in Time at the Sheffield Garden Walk

It was the Sheffield Garden Walk this weekend.  The kids put out their lemonade stand, cranked up the tunes and did their best to steal customers from the 5 other stands on our block.  While Clifton may not have stately trees arching over it like most of the other streets in this area, we do have the best gardens -- primarily because of the big (by city standards) front yards and the lack of shade (there are good things about not having a lot of trees).  Watching the swarms of people strolling our normally serene streets and snapping photographs of the gardens and houses reminded me how fortunate we are to live in this old neighborhood.

I was reminded of other stuff, too.  Walking down Webster and hearing the strains of Poi Dog tonight reminded me of Sheffield Garden Walks gone by.  15 years ago I would not have missed Saturday afternoon at the Sheffield Garden Walk for anything in the world.  It was one of the biggest weekends of the summer.  My favorite year was following a softball game for The Brown Dogs -- a team made up of my then-boyfriend, Dave, a bunch of his friends, their girlfriends and, of course, our chocolate lab (a.k.a., the Brown Dog).  I remember playing a game of softball at Wrightwood Park (at that time it seemed to be on the edge of the earth) then skedaddling over to McGee's -- at the heart of the Garden Walk then, and still today.  This morning when I walked the dog (not the Brown Dog, who went with Dave -- but instead with our Boston Terrier, Domino), I was surprised and nostalgic to see McGee's already in full swing at 11:00 AM.  I smiled as I noticed all conversations automatically pause momentarily as the el train screamed overhead, only to be continued seconds later as if our brains hadn't just been completely rattled senseless by the noise.

I stopped at a boutique selling half-price yoga clothes (although I hate yoga) and chatted with the young DePaul students working there who were characteristically enamored with Domino.  "Ya know, the Sheffield Garden Walk used to be on Webster, not Sheffield," I commented sagely, as if I were 850 years old.  The girls sized me up a little, nodded politely and replied, "Really?  That's funny."  Okaaaayyyy, not really anywhere for that conversation to go...

Yesterday I took the girls to the Kids' Corner where they had pony rides, a petting zoo, and a terrible singer screeching away about an octopus.  While we stood there listening and cringing I noticed with amusement a sign that read, "Help support are teachers" (hmmm...is it really the teachers who need help?)  I honestly don't recall if there was a Kids' Corner back when the Sheffield Garden Walk "was on Webster."  And I never realized that there was actually a Garden Walk until several years post-singledom when Roc and I ventured back into the neighborhood some lazy Saturday afternoon (by mistake).  Now that we live here, I take an unexplained pride in the DePaul area -- same as I did in Old Town and, apparently, same as I will in the next neighborhood (there's always one a-coming).  I am prone to that, I guess.  I relish the ideals of a community and in taking care of our streets and homes -- wherever and whatever it may be.

The reality is that the Sheffield Garden Walk, like so many of Chicago's street fairs, brings out the Americana in everyone. The kids running around with their scooters and wagons, the seniors admiring the gardens, the hipsters partying in the sun.  There really is something for all of us -- and it's the meshing of these different walks of life that makes the whole thing feel right.

It wasn't the Sheffield Garden Walk of my twenties -- I'm not gonna wake up with a headache and I don't have any exciting stories to tell (oh, I have some good ones); but it was the Garden Walk of my forties -- when my kids rode a pony and sold some lemonade.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Someday

We are settling into our summer routine now that we have been home from Colorado for a couple of weeks.  I'm not a huge fan of sending the girls off to summer camp (it's the best time of the year in Chicago; why would I want them away from us?), so although the girls sometimes get a little sick of each other (ie, I said, "Stay out of my room!"), it seems we do best when we have time to wander.  When they were little we would traverse the city visiting various playgrounds in random neighborhoods or meandering through museums for as long as we could manage.  Now that they're older our outings can be more varied....last week included a visit to our old high-rise neighborhood, Lakeshore East (near Millennium Park) with the dog; a day at the Art Institute spent sketching in the Modern Wing, swimming at the Wilmette Pool, riding roller coasters at Great America and a couple of trips over to Adams Playground to play in the splash area.  All and all, as Lola said, "A week of adventures" -- and a week to be grateful for, particularly because I'm able to work from home right now.
Days gone by...

While I'm good at appreciating all the good experiences and people and memories that we've been blessed with, I know I'm also good at worrying about the times ahead that may not be so sweet.  Spending time with my kids is what drives me relentlessly through pretty much every aspect of every day.  My goal is to spend as much time with them as possible because I know that someday I'll be sitting here at my computer wondering where the time went, as well as wondering what I'm going to talk to Roc about.  I've already figured out that I'll be 50 the year that Isabel goes to college -- probably not a good year for me (or Roc, by association).  Right now we are so, so busy in our daily lives that we often have barely a moment to catch up on each day's events, but I know that someday we'll be the old couple sitting out on the porch wondering where our kids are and why they don't visit us more often.  Cat's in the cradle...
...and today

Why is life set up that way?  Middle age is so full of responsibility and busyness that we seem to often bustle through the very best moments and then later age -- I'm not exactly sure what else to call it -- gives us more time than I imagine we will need or, even worse -- want.

For now, I relish the small hand that snakes into mine as we walk down the street....even when I'm already maneuvering the dog and two cups of coffee...always room for one more.  I cherish the wet kisses that suck (er, lick) my cheek, even though it's a bit wetter than anyone would actually enjoy.  I make a point of laying down with my big 11-year old every night so that we can talk or read because, especially with her, I know that time is flashing by and she might soon not want me there.  I sit in the parks and watch them run around playing and think how little they were the first time we came.  Songs about time and regret make me cry.  Songs about happiness and love make me wish more fervently for more time, even though I know it will never be enough.

Mostly I try not to think too much about someday because I'm pretty sure that it won't be as beautiful as everyday is now.  After all, if I enjoy every day the best I can, then maybe someday will never actually come.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

South Africa

My awesome parents are headed to Africa in October - never been, just feeling it might be a good idea -- which has brought back reflections of my own trip to South Africa some years ago.  Summertime is the best time to do this kind of musing, by the way.  Along with the sunshine and warmer temps, summer seems to bring with it new clarity regarding just about everything.  Lately I find myself thinking about experiences that happened years ago -- apparently for no reason other than my mind is less cluttered and more free to wander during these quieter, calmer months.  As for South Africa, it's been a while since I've really "gone back" to that particular time, and although the entire experience is really memorable, there was a game reserve that I visited - Londololozi - that stands out in particular. 

The routine at Londolozi was peacefully monotonous.  We would awake early, around 5:00 AM, head to the main lodge for a huge breakfast buffet (marveling at the monkeys swinging around just outside the open-air seating), and then head out on one of the specially outfitted, topless land rovers for a morning safari.  We would return a few hours later for lunch and a free afternoon, followed by an early evening safari and an outdoor, grilled meal served at large communal tables.

The game rangers at Londolozi were generally young, white South African men who had studied to become rangers and were well-trained regarding all of the animals and flora that we saw on our daily jaunts.  The trackers (ie, the men who would sit at the front of the vehicles and hunt for animal tracks), were generally well-weathered, black South African men who were not necessarily trained, but who had so much knowledge of the bush that all one could do was sit back in wonder as they repeatedly led us to spots where we could closely observe a multitude of animals (lions, hyena, elephants, rhino, cheetah, to name a few), in their natural habitats.

Being young and alone, I was befriended by some of the game rangers early in my stay and began attending their after-hours parties.  The rangers were required to dine with all of the guests at dinner, but afterwards I would go with them to a different area of the reserve where the staff would have their own more casual gatherings. These experiences were great fun as they offered a window into what seemed to me to be authentic South African culture -- something I greatly admired and was happy to be included in.

One night, my new friend John M. suggested that we go into the bush alone -- he wanted to show me something.  I agreed and wasn't much concerned when he strapped on a rifle (red light, anyone?) before heading out on the land rover.  As we made our way into the bush we passed an old pickup truck with a huge mound of impala in the back.  Some were still breathing, but all were doomed to be our dinner the following night.  It was one of the first times I acutely realized where our meat comes from -- and probably laid the groundwork for my later decision to go veggie.  At the time I was wolfing down a lot of cheeseburgers and, on this trip, impala.  John explained that killing and serving the animals for dinner (kabobs!) was an efficient way of handling over-population.  Just like the deer back at home.  Sigh.

We continued onward; me holding a large lamp that John entrusted to me and which I clumsily jerked around the darkness as he called out instructions, hoping to spot something interesting.  Have you ever been in the African bush at night alone with a dude you just met a coupla days ago?  It's a surreal experience.  Aside from the excitement of doing something so completely unexpected, the sounds we heard during that night drive were like something out of a movie.  Add to that the fact that John would periodically kill the lights and the engine of the land rover so that we could sit in darkness to "hear better" and, well, it was pretty much an incomparable experience.

Eventually, after crashing around through some trees and bushes (never leaving the vehicle) we came to what seemed to be a large clearing.  My heart was pounding out of my chest as John directed me to shine the lamp directly in front of us.  There -- to my astonishment -- was a pride of 15 or more lions lounging about in the pale moonlight.  To our right two were mating.  John looked at me; I gawked at him and he grinned broadly.  Apparently, mission accomplished.  I grinned in return and thought, "Okay, a little weird, but best date ever!", while the words to Prince's song strummed along in my head, "...animals strike curious poses...."

Fast-forward to 2011 and it nearly feels like that whole episode never happened -- good thing I have some photos (pre-digital, so only a precious few) to remind myself.  In them I am young, naive and obliviously happy.  They record one of those brief and rare moments in a lifetime -- in my lifetime, at least -- when I achieved something I was always looking for back then, and even sometimes today -- anonymity.  I yearned for the feeling of being "lost" and creating a new me.  Who can say why.  I have a close and loving family that, then as today, I miss intensely when I'm away for too long.  And yet -- there was/is something magical about wandering alone in a place where no one knows you -- and where no one knows you are.  I think it's possibility

When it came time for me to leave Londolozi, I was sad, sad, sad.  I'd been there only a short time, but the lifestyle and beauty of the land, the people and the animals had resonated deeply.  I didn't want to leave, but I did anyway, telling myself that I would go home, save money, and come back to stay.  I remember sitting in my seat on the little prop plane, literally waiting for a giraffe to leave the runway so that we could take-off, and thinking, rather dramatically and grandly, "This is where I belong."

Of course, those feelings faded after I returned home to work, friends, family and a new boyfriend (hello, Roc!), whom I later married.  I did keep in touch with some of the people at Londolozi for a few months afterward -- actually, based on letters I've recently uncovered in my stash of treasured notes, we kept in touch longer that I realized - mostly via fax - which is hard to imagine now.  Funny how time washed away the relationship part, but left the strong connection to South Africa intact.  Our minds do that sometimes.

A friend suggested that I could "find" some of the people I met at Londolozi on Facebook if I really wanted, but I'd rather not.  I like to remember them just as they were then -- young and idealistic, entertaining the tourists...showing off the lions and showcasing the best thing of all...possibility.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Summer Skiing at A-Basin

Roc, Isabel and Stella hit the slopes at A-Basin today -- on July 1st.  Crazy, yes?  I love Colorado.

The day began not so well as Stella was still recovering from our hike up Quandary the previous day, so we basically dragged her out of the house and she cried/complained/whined for a good portion of the 20 minute drive from my parents' house to the Arapahoe Basin (A-Basin) ski area.  If you like to ski and have never been to A-Basin, it's really worth adding to the to-do list.  Not far from the large, commercial resort area of Keystone, A-Basin is like stepping into the past -- in a good way.  The "lodge" is small and smells a little; the food selections are basic; the "village" is....well, there is none.  There are also no Beginner slopes, so skiing at A-Basin is a little more like skiing in Europe where they don't slow down the lift for every new skiier trying to hop on....you either get on or get out.  Which is refreshing, in its own way.

Anyway, by the time we arrived Stella had decided that she wanted to participate in this adventure after all and, overhearing Roc and I discussing whether HE should take her or I should take her (neither of us really relishing the idea of the tired and whining menace) she commented slyly from the backseat, "It seems like nobody really wants to be with me today," which made all of us laugh, and the mood instantly lifted.

We got them suited up (the power was out -- soooo A-Basin), and although there were no lights in any of the base buildings we managed to rent snow pants ($10 each - brilliant idea for summer skiing!) and bought some gloves and socks (the kids were dressed in shorts and flip-flops); and off they went.  Lola wasn't interested in skiing, despite our best cajoling, so she and I headed off to the Dillon Farmer's Market while Roc took the other two up the mountain for a spectacular day.  Best part was apparently the pond-skimming, during which skiers whisk down the slopes and then skim across an alpine lake (hopefully not sinking in the process).  This was something new to us, so from what I can tell, standing by the pond and watching who made it -- and more interestingly -- who didn't, was great fun.

Lola and I picked them up at 3:00 and we headed back to the Frisco Marina for kayaking in the warm afternoon light.  A perfect day.  Lucky girls.  Lucky parents.