Each morning this week, my husband and I have woken early and walked together. With our two sons back in school, the daily rhythm of our life has shifted. We’ve gone from twenty years of being utterly child-centered — and from a summer of family schedule-juggling, despite the fact that our children, at 17 and 20, are not actually children anymore — to the quieter intimacy of two.
We take the same route from our house, a loop through the woods and along a quiet bike path, then up the hill toward home. By the time I put coffee on and Steve heads upstairs to shower, the sun is well up and we have said to one another all the things that are on our minds. Already this new ritual feels special, worth protecting and continuing. Sunday we marked our twenty-third wedding anniversary. I say marked instead of celebrated because there were no gifts or letters exchanged, no romantic tryst in a hotel, no showy surprises. We shared a bottle of champagne, and in the morning we put on our sneakers and began the twenty-fourth year of our life together.
A couple of days earlier, I’d had a couple of old home videos transferred to DVD, and Steve and Jack and I sat in the kitchen that night and watched the footage of our wedding, September 12, 1987. How odd it was, to see my own parents, just about the age that I am now; to see the two of us not as parents but as young lovers; to see so many friends and dear ones who have passed away in these intervening years, but who, on that joyful day, were simply alive: dancing and making toasts and chatting under a white and yellow tent. My dad had bought the video camera just for the occasion. No one in the family quite knew what to do with it, and so it was casually passed around, from one willing photographer to the next. Someone managed to film our first kiss, a blizzard of rice, my grandmother with her black purse on her arm, Steve leading me out to the dance floor. My Uncle Chet zeroed in for quite a while on a college friend of mine, dancing barefoot in a transparent purple dress. And then, a bit tipsy perhaps, and unaware that he had failed to press the “off” button, he simply carried the camera around as he enjoyed the party. So this is what we have: an unwitting, ridiculously precious hour of captured feet and sky and tent-top. Most of our wedding video could be mistaken for a bad Robert Altman spoof — random and unscripted and oddly revealing. All those legs and pairs of shoes! All those wide, aimless swaths of grass and ground, followed by majestic arcs to cloud and awning and tent pole. The uncensored soundtrack of laughter, clinking glasses, party talk, swing music.
We had a laugh the other day, my husband, son and I, watching what is arguably the worst wedding video ever recorded. But at the same time, I can’t help but treasure this odd memento, this collage of accidental moments captured for all time. What I realize is that the quality of the picture-taking doesn’t matter all that much; meaning is not to be found there anyway. The truth of our lives is not in photographs that freeze time and memory, any more than it is to be found in gift-wrapped boxes or champagne bottles. And yet each glimpse of that long-ago day, each unplanned kiss and silly dance move, each overheard scrap of conversation and each tapping foot does remind me to wake up and pay attention right now. Twenty-three years of marriage is a multitude of moments lived, of gestures made, words spoken. We have not always been kind. Mistakes have been made. Regret, perhaps, is inevitable. And yet what I glimpse in that video–love, optimism, anticipation–endures. How grateful I am for all that we’ve shared, for the two sons who are now nearly men themselves, for the quiet early mornings of this bright autumn.
My heart is full today. A beloved friend is nearing the end of a long, exceedingly courageous journey with cancer. Moment by moment, she is being called upon to let go of this physical world and to open to mysteries beyond our human understanding. Watching the sunrise at 6:30 this morning, walking in the woods, touching my husband’s arm, I tried to live and love and pay attention enough for both of us, for a friend who is not ready to leave this earth and for myself, so fully occupied upon it. I wondered whether — if I could only be grateful enough, notice enough, feel deeply enough — I might somehow occupy both realms at once, material and spiritual. “Write me the mundane details of your life,” she e-mailed the other night, from her hospital bed. I try to do that. And each time I pause, and look, and gather up some small bouquet of mundane details, what I see is not ordinariness but evidence: this world in which we are blessed to live is full of meaning, beauty, and holiness.
Lindsey says
Yes, yes, it is. And your words remind me of that holiness every single time I read that. And that is a precious gift. Thank you.
Pam says
Katrina, thank you for your beautiful reminder to pause & remember that life … my life is filled with meaning, beauty & holiness.
Lisa Coughlin says
Thank you for your observations, as always, Katrina. You sharing "mundane details" with your friend is a loving gesture that reminds us all how precious these daily details are. A belated Happy Anniversary to you and your husband.
Judy says
My life is also filled with meaning, beauty and holiness today. You said it so well.
Congrats on the anniversary. We celebrate like you do. I always tell him that the gifts he gives me every day – love, compassion, patience and laughter – are worth more than anything that comes in a box.
I think about your friend every day. I will shed some tears when I find out she's finished her journey here – for her pain, her loss, your pain and your loss, and for the sheer gratitude I have for my own simple joy.
Hugs, friend.
Judy
justonefoot.blogspot.com
Diane says
I didn't see that last part coming and the tears came quickly. For her, for you, for my own losses. And I look around behind me just now and see my own beloved canine companion who has osteosarcoma. There will be a time when he is too sick to go on further, but now he is happily chewing on a tennis ball. I am grateful for the day as it has unfolded around me. So happy I stopped by today. Thanks as always.
Corinne says
Oh Katrina… my eyes are brimming with tears…
I'm thinking of you and your friend tonight, saying a few prayers and sending thoughts of my mundane daily happenings telepathically to her…
Beautiful, as always.
Claire M says
What a thoughtful reflection – one that really speaks to me at this point in my life. I may still have the last of my 3 boys at home this year (Sr. in high school), but unlike his brothers he doesn't want anything to do with my husband and myself. So…. we are venturing down that road of "2" again. Thank you for sharing your thoughts – they are very meaningful to me.
Privilege of Parenting says
Great week for anniversaries—and I love the image of your Altmanesque (meets Cassavettes meets Dada) wedding video as well as the spirit of gratitude, compassion and transcendence with which you infuse your words. Sending all good wishes for the suffering of your friend as well as for the rippling continuation of yours and Steve's love.
denise (musingsdemommy) says
Oh Katrina. I am here, reading your words, and crying, again, just like I did on Saturday when I was blessed enough to hear your read these timeless, glorious words in your own voice. Your words are a beautiful present, one which I will hold in my mind– to reexamine and ponder–and will steep myself in time and time again. Thank you. xo A Regular Person
Merrick says
This is beautiful, K. Happy belated anniversary – you're an inspiration. And blessings to you and your friend.
Trish says
It was an HONOR to meet you at the Mother's Plunge. I will continue to keep you and your friend close to my heart. Your words echo long after what you recite.
You are a beautiful spirit in this world.
oxox
Trish
rachael maddox says
i cried through this entire post. getting married in 3 weeks. i can only imagine the adventures of ordinary and simply stunning life ahead–and it's such a gift to remember that they're also happening right now.
your words are precious and so eloquently put together. thank you so much for this. it's a true gift.
lots of love,
rachael
Monica says
I have no words…you have said it all…thank you
Shannon Phelps says
I want you to know how thankful I am that you wrote your book, I absolutely loved it, and I am a lot older than you!!
I remember the times so well, so keep on writing, I wish I could entice you to do a retreat on "The Gift of an Ordinary Day"
I have the perfect island for it, would you be at all interested?
Smiles,
Shannon