Tags
beach, change, daughter, food, grief, horseshoe crab, Journey, letter, life, love, molt, nosh, rise, son, vacation
Dear Jivey,
It’s been three days since you returned to the Hudson river valley. I’ve been moping since, but today I find the courage to write aloud.
I love you and miss you both. You brought me blessings and laughter and happiness and treasure I won’t forget and thank you.
This morning the cicadae are shirring in the pine trees. (Remember the little guy shuffling off his former coil by my front door?) The temperature is cool and the humidity is gone: you seem to have taken it away with you. I wanted bathtubfulls of rain to fall sideways or maybe a thunderstorm to impress you while you were here, but all we got was drips, sweat, and static electricity high in the clouds. Tomorrow night the rain will come, courtesy of a hurricane remnant. I feel like I owe you wild weather, Ms. Vine, that we could stand outside and ride and shout out the wonderful chaos. And also Krispy Kremes.
I made a grocery store run this morning and everything I wanted was not there: bagels, rye bread, white queso sauce for a nacho treat. There are little teardrops of grease on my turquoise tablecloth, remnants of the New York pizza you brought, and everything feels out of joint. I fall into the writer’s recollection of how food joins us, humans, in happiness and grief.
Monday I expected Ms. Vine to come in to the room where I write and felt sad when I remembered. Last night I felt parts of you still in my room. It was a long night with little sleep.
Horseshoe crabs come to the beach to molt their exoskeletons so they can grow into their new lives as their ancestors have done for a million years. We collect their skins and wonder at these ancient arthropods, some intact, some in pieces, but we rarely see them as they continue their journey in the waters. You brought one molt in and prepared it with everything that I love about you. I’m glad the Universe put it in your path. Jivey, may your journeys be as successful, contingent on rising with the tide.
Love always,
Mom.