FAM time, family Susan Rountree FAM time, family Susan Rountree

Summer Sentence: what we didn't do — and what we did

Summer Sentence

What we didn’t do — capture a family photograph.
But we
ate sand out of puddles
found a fish,
cuddled the baby
ate shrimp,
found the sandbar,
jumped the waves
watched the baby
ate snapper and flounder
mahi and more shrimp
played on the playground
kissed our cousins
shared a cold
traced some starfish
stamped some letters
watched Buzz
and Coco
and the Beast,
read stories
about a polar bear’s underwear
worried that Max’s supper
wouldn’t be hot
counted fish in
’the bailey book’
rode a boogie board
ate some tacos
learned where poops
come from
sang ‘Itsy Bitsy Spider’
sat in Pop’s lap
ate Pop’s popsicles
didn’t eat Sooze’s
cooking
wondered why
Max chased the dog
with a spatula
missed some pages
talked a bluestreak
turned the music down
felt the ocean’s breeze
dug our toes in
held hands tight
wiped our noses
(a LOT)
missed home (a little)
touched the
baby’s foot
found some
shark’s teeth
saw the
turtle hospital
sat with Mommy
sat with Daddy
built a
bunkbed fort
said “cheese!”
and ate some
bacon
rode the scooter
and the swing
hugged Aunt Pamula
asked Sooze to
Google
lots of things
ate some cantaloupe
colored pictures
ate Friday pizza
painted shells
cried a little (but not too much)
sucked a thumb
washed our feet
watched the baby sleep
tickled
the grandparents
until
it was time to
wash our feet
for the last time.



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What's a Story Worth?

Every Monday morning, before I’ve even donned my walking shoes, I check my email and find a question for me to answer. It’s a gift my son gave me for Christmas, and he week he asked a question through a website called Storyworth that I'm to answer about my childhood and other things.. When I’ve answered all the questions, my children get a keepsake book.

Now I’m guessing, that since I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2018 and had recently completed more than a year-and-a-half of chemo/radiation/targeted therapy, that he thought I might die with stories in my head that were still left to be told. It was touching beyond measure, as my kids, historically, have rolled their eyes at my stories. I wondered at the time if he really wanted to know these answers, but I took the gift into my heart as it was intended and starting writing.

The answers, I was told, could be short — a paragraph, really — and when I read that, I thought, well, if it’s a story there must be more to it than a single paragraph. (And I thought, too, that the creators of this website didn’t know me at all! But on that first Monday after Christmas, I got my first question and began to ponder. “What is one of your favorite children’s stories.” A lot. Just one story? How could I narrow a childhood of reading into just one story? But as I perused my mind and my library, I kept coming back to the Illustrated Treasure of Children’s Literature.

Here is what I wrote ( it’s not ONE story, but several):

When I was a child and before I was in school, our library at home was quite limited, as was the town library, which was in a room above the Fire Department (if you can imagine that.) I can still remember walking up the creaky stairs to the library room, watching the dust filter through the windows. Out the window to my left was Pop B’s office, and in front, the Post Office. But you didn’t want to be up there when the fire alarm blared! I remember those details but not particular books I checked out. In the school library, I remember a book called “Little White Dove,” which was the imagined story of what had happened to Virginia Dare. Her life fascinated me as a young girl — does still — and I liked the book a lot. 

But I suppose some favorites came much earlier, from a book I have on my bookshelf today called “Better Homes & Gardens Story Book.”

I’m sure B must have gotten this as part of her subscription to Better Homes & Gardens magazine. Somehow it ended up as mine, which was rare for this third child! I remember this was my first exposure to Beatrix Potter’s “Tale of Peter Rabbit,” and grumpy old Mr. McGregor. It was filled with poetry, something I loved as a child, and one of my favorites was called The Goops. “The Goops they lick their fingers and the Goops they lick their knives; They spill their broth no the tablecloth. Oh, they lead disgusting lives! The Goops they talk while eating, and loud and fast they chew; And that is why I’m glad that I am not a Goop — are you?

That would make me giggle, because we were all Goops as children of course! I used to read that one to you.

The stories of Uncle Remus drew me, too, but though they are based on old slave tales, they where written by a white man writing in dialect. ( At Carolina I wrote a paper on “Jack Tales,” and interviewed my boyfriend’s maid, who learned the stories about Uncle Remus from her grandmother, who had likely been a slave. I recorded her and I think that recording ended up in the Southern Collection at the Wilson Library at UNC.) The stories carry universal messages, the language is not appropriate for today’s child.

I loved the poems of Robert Louis Stevenson. He wrote one called The Swing, which I loved to do in my grandparents back yard, and The Land of Counterpane, which was about a boy who was stuck in bed because he was sick and learned to create a whole story with the toys he played with on his bedcovers. And my favorite is probably My Shadow, which is can recite by heart. “I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me. And what can be the use of him ( I would say ‘her’) is more than I can see….”

 But the question asks for just one story. (You know I don’t follow the rules!)

The one that keeps coming back to me is from another anthology that I read all the time as a child called The Illustrated Treasury of Children’s Literature. Again, we didn’t have a lot of books in the library, but at home we had this book. You may remember it, because I read from it when you were younger, before we started reading books together like Old Yeller and Harry Potter. 

It’s a fairy tale from Hans Christian Andersen, who wrote all the great fairy tales, many of which are dark. The Emperor’s New Clothes (so much like today’s Trump), Little Mermaid, Princess & the Pea, The Ugly Duckling. He also wrote The Little Match Girl. It has never been made into a Disney movie for reasons that will become apparent. 

It’s the story of a child of poverty who has to sell matches on the street to make any sort of living at all. And on New Year’s Eve, when no one has bought any of her matches, she is cold and hungry and searching for warmth. 

As I child, I could not imagine this life, no more than I could imagine being a princess, but this one drew me more for some reason. I did know children who I never thought of as poor, but who wore the same clothes to school every day and never had new shoes. They would grow out of their clothes but never had clothes that fit. I never asked my parents why this was so.
In the Little Match Girl story, cold and hungry, she walks through the streets and watches the windows of the houses she passes. There, she sees people celebrating the New Year with goose, bright fires in fireplaces, family all around. But as she walks, she grows even colder and sits in a corner shielded from the wind and starts striking matches for warmth.

And with every match she strikes a new image of warmth embraces her. She imagines sitting in front of a warm stove until the match fades out. She strikes another: a table set with pretty china and her own roast goose; another brings a Christmas tree, filled with candles (no electricity when it was written); and then her grandmother, who was the only person who had ever been kind to her. And in trying to keep that image alive, she strikes all the matches she has in her possession until she had no more. 

The story says her grandmother had never looked more beautiful as she lifted the child up and took her through the stars at the end.

I think it was lost on me that she died in the end! But it’s the story of the warmth memories bring that drew me to her, I think.

So it seems an appropriate story to start this thing off. 

I guess, through The Little Match Girl, I learned early in my life that stories can be beautiful and sad and uplifting, all at the same time. And that is so true with life, right? You both have been through joy and beauty and great sadness all at once, as have I, many many times. As your mother, I wish I could shield you from the sadness, but my job is not to shield you but to offer comfort, when the challenge comes. I hope I have done that, at least to this point. And not caused you too much pain as you try to sort it all out.

This is an amazing gift. In the writing, I’ve learned a good bit about myself just now. I look forward to the next question. (I didn’t peek, though they said I could.) 


Every week since, then (well, ok, I skipped a couple of weeks) I’ve written stories about my grandparents, what my mother was like as a young woman, how I go to school, the friends I’ve had since before kindergarten. Stories about travels I’ve taken, organizations I’ve belonged to — it turns out the Tar Heel Girls State, class of 1974, was a very progressive group — my first job and given awkward advice about relationships. I’ve written about inventions that have most changed my daily life (the smart phone was first, chemotherapy advances, second.), and shared the fact that my preferred way to travel is by country road. And the question of where I went on vacation as a child? My response to my children was: I wrote a book about that! But as it turns out, the book was about how other families spent their vacations, so there is a whole ‘nother story about our own.

I have always felt I knew the worth of a story, and I’ve told many. But it turns out, the worth of stories prompted by my children are turning into the most worthy of all to me. In these months since Christmas, I’ve mined my own history like no time before, sorting through scrapbooks and scripts of plays I was in, Playbills I’ve kept (I had no idea I’d actually seen Michael Crawford live in a production in London in 1975, though I remember the runway in The Rocky Horror Picture Show too vividly.) I’ve read letters and political platforms that supported rape crisis centers and mental health programs in every county, and statewide recycling. —from that Girl’s State trip —when nobody in eastern N.C. had heard a thing about recycling.

As I said in that first entry: Stories can be beautiful and sad and uplifting, sometimes all at once. Stories can be simple and complex at once, too. And funny and heartbreaking. All of that, all at the same time. And that’s remarkable, when you think about it.

Lately, I’ve been listening to a podcast hosted by author Kelly Corrigan, much of it about the power of story: why we tell them and why we need them. In her conversations with authors from around the country, the same theme keeps coming through: Stories show us the truth of our lives in ways living through them doesn’t necessarily reveal. And it’s in the retelling of our own stories that discover things about ourselves that we didn’t really know in the moment.

So get out that and tell your story, folks. Your family will thank you. And it’s so worth it.

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Chemo Camp Finale — Letters from Home

Nov. 17, 2020

Nov. 17, 2020

I have been thinking about y’all a lot lately. Who, you say? Y’all. All y’all, as we love saying in my Neck of the woods. Do you see that stack of cards there? (more than 250 of them) The flowers? The little gifts? These things have filled my soul these past 18 months as I found myself captured in Chemo Camp.

So I have been thinking about all y’all who got me through it. Re-reading your notes and seeing your faces as I did, thinking of the emails, too, and your visits (way back when those where allowed), the food (Lord, have mercy, the FOOD!) the walks and the phone calls and the quiet moments when we sat in silence and you let me cry as I tried to take it all in. Your laughter. Your donations to Susan G. Komen and the Walk for the Cure. Your telling me I looked beautiful without my hair (though we all know I didn’t) — and now when you tell me you like my new “look”. Every single one of these things that you did for me has made my life so rich while I waited for camp to be over.

November 12, 2019

November 12, 2019

I didn’t save any letter my parents had time to write when I went to camp when I was 9. I wish I had (maybe my mother has saved the no doubt thousands of letters I wrote to her in the three short days I stayed, though if she has, she has not revealed this.) I’m sure if I had save those letters from home they would have been much like yours: We love you, you can do this, think of all the friends you’ll make and how much fun you’ll have (well, maybe not that last idea for chemo camp.)

When I thought I was going home from camp last November and then found out a week later that my mother was not, in fact, coming to pick me up, and that I would be staying for a whole ‘nother YEAR — you stayed right there with me, sending cards, calling, walking, assuring me that I could stay as long as was necessary, and then I could go home. (No more meals, but alas, I had packed on the casserole pounds in the previous year and girded with such sustenance, I soldiered on through more camp activities.)

Like target shooting.

I remember my daughter did this at her week-long camp and could easily hit the mark, so much so that when she CHOSE to become a camp counselor while in college, (she must have gotten that DNA somewhere else) the camp assigned her this post. My daughter and I have never been the kind of twinsy mother/daughter team some people think of. I spent years teaching her how not to be like me, so I consider this choice as making me, finally, a champion.

And then I became the target shooter, with only one goal in mind: Get rid of the damn cancer.

And guess what I did? I GOT RID OF IT, with the guiding lights of my doctors and the nurses at the Rex Cancer Center, who finally LET ME GO HOME last Tuesday. All by myself.

Though my old pal Tim and my nurse Hope (who hugged me, despite all the rules) wished me well, I drove away, with only the shadow of a tear in my eye.

“She’s grown,” I could hear my mother say. “You have handled yourself admirably,” my brother actually texted.

That part, “admirably,” he quoted what my father might have said, if he were to have reluctantly shoved me off to cancer camp. He is right, Daddy would have said that, but I honestly don’t quite understand.

A friend of mine who had cancer just before me has said often “cancer can’t wait.” (It’s a tagline for a local organization raising money to cure every kind of cancer affecting women, not just breast.) And this is so very true. Sorting through all my cards the other day, I found an email I wrote to my Bible study on May 15, 2019, the day I got the news. I was to lead it the next day, and I told them, so niavely, that a cancer diagnosis would not disrupt the dozens of plans I had for my life in the year to come.

How wrong I was. A cancer diagnosis does NOT wait. Within minutes of learning you have it, you turn you life over to those caring for you and though you ask a thousand and more questions, not one of them is “when?” because the answer is always: “right now.”

One of the few things I remember about real camp is the swimming test. Everybody had to take it, no matter what. I remember looking at the murky river water with the tadpoles swimming in it and asking, “when?” and they said pretty much: “Now”. And I had only two choices: dive in and get it over with, or wade in and swim from one point to the next, as best I could. No bravery. Just truth.

The same is true for Chemo Camp.

On the first round, I dove, head first, not knowing much about what it would do to me (though they did tell me as honestly as they could.) The second time, I waded in, testing the waters a bit, though I knew I’d eventually I’d have to make that dive. And I did.

But despite what some have written me, I am no hero.

My doctor is a hero. She has done the hard work of puzzle master, her fine mind taking my own curious circumstances — three kinds of breast cancer — to task, until she found the exact cocktail combination to cure me. Did you get that? CURE ME. Which she did.

My nurses are heroes. They greeted me and all the other cancer patients as if we were the only one in the room, day after day, caring for us when some get our walking papers, and when some don’t ever. They are gracious and loving and champions for all.

And then they let me go. Tuesday a week ago. Just like that.

I was a puddle. Honestly. After a quiet day in the chemo room I was looking for the marching band. A raised pom pom or two. But when that did not arrive, I looked to Hope, who had nursed me on my darkest day, probably, when I was the most homesick I had ever been in my adult world.

“I wish I could hug you,” I told her. “I will never forget your kindness to me.”

“You are gettin’ it!” she said, breaking all the rules of COVID and giving me a hug I had not had from anyone except my husband in too many months. It was tight. And we sobbed. And I felt healed.

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Back at home, family had filled my kitchen with pink. Two dozen roses, one dozen from my birth family and mother, and the other from my family by my daughter’s marriage. “Welcome home from camp,” their card said. Tickled me pink.

When you have cancer and get through treatment, you pick your ‘cancervesary’ as a way to remember it. Could be the day you are diagnosed or the day you felt healed or the day, through surgery, when cancer took leave of your body. That day, the day cancer took leave of me, was one year ago today.

So I take today to celebrate. And on this day before Thanksgiving, to be thankful to God for all of you.

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I also want to honor all those who have gone before me in this camp. Who carved their initials on the scaffolding and in the bathrooms and on the the sheetrock that holds so many of these camps in place. I don’t know your names, but all ya’ll have come before me and I thank you for your service and your commitment to allowing doctors to study the disease in you, so that I might live. I honor hundreds of thousands of you, some of whom aren’t here any more, but so many of us are here and leaving our cancer days behind because of you.

I will not forget that.

Now back to the pile sitting in the picture at the beginning of this post. Thank you all for your letters and your love and for not letting go of me when I was taking the swim test at camp. I survived because of you, too, and I’m forever grateful that you cheered me on as I made it, finally, to the other side.

Much love,

Sooze

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The Devil You Know: Chemo Camp, Part 3

The camp counselors in charge of my life right now kept telling me I’d be in for it when the Red Devil made its introduction. I’d read about the drugs they would pump into my body every two weeks, like clockwork, for two months. (The Red Devil is one of two). And even that first time when the nurse brought out the giant vials I thought, well now, they aren’t so red after all. Not blood red anyway, but a brighter pink than I expected. 

I don’t know what I was thinking. A lighter pink might mean a softer blow? Yes, I lost my hair, but I kept my pace that first couple of infusions, resting when my body said to, pushing forward when it felt like I could. I sat for those two hours crunching on cherry popsicles (which I hate) and talking to my sister and my friend AB about everything except all that redness flowing into my veins. 

I would not be outdone by this. I had bandanas! I had special chemo scarves! I’ve had what has felt like a sky filled with cumulus clouds full of witnesses praying for me! And one of my first “counselors” was Joy! 

But it didn’t take long to learn there is not much joy in the actual treatment for breast cancer. There is an overwhelming sense that a stranger has moved into your house, uninvited, and you have no way to evict. You must trust other strangers you’ve only just met to rid your home of this intruder. It may be a complex mission but it’s not complicated, you remind yourself. They do this every day, like the people you hire to do all sorts of things you aren’t personally trained to do yourself. Like roofers and electricians and carpenters and such. And though you  might be “one in eight” in the statistics, you are one among dozens they will see in a day’s time who might be getting some version of the cocktail they are giving, to shed you of this unwanted thing.

And though you might be one among almost 270,000 women who will be diagnosed just this year with invasive breast cancer — 15 percent of whom will have the triple negative kind like you — that’s not really a very large number in the scheme of things. But then, you are that one, in eight, that it’s happening to. 

So that’s what I scrape the skies about in the middle of the night — at 2 and 3 and 4 am, when I can’t sleep. I lie in the dark, praying — even when I don’t feel like it — for myself and my doctors nurses and all the people I know in this world who are hurting — way too many —  and the millions I don’t know but who are as well. Like the young nurse in scrubs in the waiting room at the cancer center last week — younger than my daughter — but already wearing a wig — herself one in eight among her own peer group.

Back in June, they signed me up for four doses of this Red Devil — Adriamycin which a nurse told me just this week gets that name because it takes you to hell and back before it makes you well. Joy first called it that as she was plying me with popsicles. (Adriamycin can cause mouth sores, so they try to keep your mouth as cold as possible in the 10 minutes or so that it’s actually being pushed into your veins.) It’s so toxic, apparently, that there is a lifetime maximum on the number of doses patients can have. 

After the second dose, all that redness started seeping out, my skin erupting in ways I’d not seen since acne days, a painful and unsightly rash that looks like measles, creeping across my back and chest and arms. A constant dry cough took over at night, so neither I nor my husband could sleep. By day, fatigue set in that wasn’t curable by an afternoon nap.  (I’m on my third dose of Prednisone for the rash, and the number of pills I take morning and night for various things when I barely took more than vitamins three months ago is embarrassing.)

All this time, I’ve been trying to work, at a slower pace, surely, but work. When it’s all over, I want to add the moniker “cancer survivor” to my list, along with grandmother, writer, yeast roll maker, left-hander and dog nose kisser — way at the end, not the first thing to define me, but one small thing among many that make me into me.

Keeping it to just a small thing has proven harder to do this summer than I thought. Two months in, I’m weary. I long to have a Friday night out with friends or spend a weekend at the beach or visit my mother. But in recent days, I’m pinned to the corner chair in my sunroom trying to concentrate on a book because I have little energy for anything else. 

Which is why on Monday of this week, I was back at the cancer center, trying to get someone to hear my weariness, to help me out of it, if that was possible. To find some way to stop the cough and the sore throat and the fatigue so I could actually sleep for several hours in a row.

The young nurse sat across from me, handing me Kleenexes, as I listed my laments. If I could sleep, we agreed, the world would look a little brighter. 

“You’ve gotten through the worst part,” she said. The worst? But I have another 12-week stay at chemo camp before my mother can retrieve me. “A lot of people don’t have as much trouble with this next round,” she assured me.

Even though I am indeed a crybaby, I lied, telling her through my tears that I am not really like that. Except it wasn’t a full-one lie, just a tiny one, as I have kept my counsel, proudly so, throughout much of this ordeal. 

“It’s ok,” she said. “You have a safe place here.”

In that room with her I did feel safe. I changed the subject from myself to my son and his wife, whose first baby was due that day. I wanted to be well enough, I told her, to meet the newest member of our family without a thought of this damn disease that’s stolen my summer. I want to be there for my grandson, Henry, and for my daughter, who will have her own daughter in January. 

“Right now you have to take care of yourself,” she said to me. “But keep your eyes on the goal.” 

“They are my goal,” I said back.

Leave it up to me to make a cancer nurse cry. 

She has a six-month-old daughter — Grace — my daughter-in-law’s name. During our conversation, she thought about own mother and baby, and for a small moment imagined what it might feel like if her mother had cancer like me. 

As we both dried our tears, I searched for her name, but her ID was upside down.

“What’s your name?” I asked.

“Hope” she said. “It’s Hope.”

Of course. Of course.

And so, there was God was again, stepping into my eighth week of chemo, with Joy and Hope, and I learned about Grace. (I promise, I’m not making this up.)  Too serendipitous to be coincidental, at least in my thinking. 

I’m sleeping well now, and my cough is almost gone and I’m feeling so more like myself than I have in weeks. Next week I’ll start my new camp session — two new drugs that will do other crazy things to my body — but I do so feeling renewed, somewhat, and ready for the onslaught. 

And for today. It’s before dawn on August 10, and today is BIG. Sometime today, I hope to finally meet our newest family member, who has taken its own sweet time getting here. We don’t know yet if we’ll be greeting a baby boy or girl — yesterday I bought both blue and pink bows for my son’s mailbox — but it doesn’t matter. Born in the middle of what has felt like a stolen summer, this new baby offers it back. And no devil, red or not, can steal it away again.

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Dear Chick

August 1, 2019

Dear Chick:

I remember the day, almost 30 years ago, when I wheeled my grocery cart around Food Lion in search on one last thing to fill my growing boy’s Easter basket. My offering of jelly beans and Peeps seemed rather paltry. I needed something large that would stand out.

And there you were, your black eyes staring at me, yellow arms outstretched, your orange beak almost shouting at me: Take me! Take me!

The boy didn’t yet have a favorite friend, but he had a yellow blanket he loved, and so I thought you’d match each other well. Off we headed to the register, Jelly Beans and your soft yellow torso in tow.

Morning came, and the kids saddled up to the kitchen table to  check out their loot. Your boy, who always left his candy in his basket for months until the magic beans melted together, plucked you up like he might a new puppy, and in this mother’s eye, rarely let you go. As he grew, though he didn’t take you to school (he tried), you sat with him on car trips, always, snuggled up with him each night for a story, hid in the caverns of that yellow blanket — it’s folds and you lit by a flashlight  — long after you both were supposed to be asleep.

Once, you must have hurt yourself somehow, because you and the boy came downstairs to show me your arms, now guarded by green Ninja Turtle Bandaids, carefully placed. I wish I could remember the conversation, but it’s very possible (and likely) that he had identical ones on his knees. 

In time, the boy wore the blanket to shreds, but you could still be seen holding fort beneath the windows left in the yellow threads by his nurturing hands. You were a team, the little yellow Chicky and the boy.

Until one day, while the boy was on a father/son trip with his dad, I found you abandoned on the bed. I couldn’t imagine he would have left you on purpose, but he was now in first or second grade, and maybe boys of that age didn’t want to be seen snuggling up to what others might see as a stuffed toy, in the middle of a cabin filled with boys and dads. That weekend I do remember, because the boy came down with a high fever and had to come home, and when we placed him on the bed, he searched until he found you, carefully tucking you under his arm, a place you had long-since molded to fit. And there you stayed for a really long time.

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On another day, we visited the boy’s grandmother, who had a dog fond of chewing things. The boy had left you on his bed while he ate his breakfast, and upon return, found pieces of your face scattered about the room, your beak torn away. I thought he might be inconsolable, but he picked you up and loved you all the same. (A dog lover all his life, he did not, however, ever like that dog again.)

And so the boy grew up and moved away to college. The blanket was long gone, except for a tiny corner of silk and yarn and a single band of silk, salvaged by me because I couldn’t bear to throw it out. But you, you sat on his bed for the long-haul, beak-less but waiting for him whenever he came home. I know his love for you never wavered, though it may have waned in those years. Yet you were patient, somehow knowing that one day you might be needed again.

I thought about that, too, as I moved around his room, cleaning out, changing it from boy’s room to college kid’s and beyond. I sat you on his bookshelf, then on his chest, trying to find the perfect spot for you to stand sentry. I brought you out on his wedding day, wrapping what was left of the ribbon from his blanket around your neck to remind him that he might be grown, he would always be our boy.

This year, spring came, our man was about to become a Dad. I knew he needed something special to show him just how great a dad he would be, so I plucked you up, studying your whole body for the holes that might need stitching, the stuffing that might need replacing, and when I found more wounds than a box full of Ninja Turtle Band-aids could heal, I searched Esty for a shop that might care for you as I would. I found a woman who through her description promised care for you in her healing as much as our whole family did.

So Chicky, I bundled you up with a prayer and a picture of what you looked like at your most loved (but with your beak), and she set to work. You arrived safe at home a few weeks later, carefully wrapped in tissue paper, your new beak smiling as if you were chirping, Thank you! Thank you!

I found a box and put the picture of you and the boy and your Band-aids inside, wrapping you up with a special note. And on Father’s Day, I put you back in the boy’s arms, ready for your new work to begin.

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Now you sit in the crib where in just a few short days, a new baby will be joining you. We don’t know if it’s a boy or girl yet, but I’m certain that as he or she grows, they will reach for you and will feel all the love poured into you by that boy rushing out to greet you, dear Chick. You. And you will pour all the love you’ve been holding in your heart right back out, and a new story will begin.

You have an important job, watching out for this new child growing up in our family. It is my hope that one day, the boy will find you under covers lit by a flashlight long after you and your new owner are supposed to be asleep, and he’ll crawl inside with the two of you, to see what the story is all about. 

With much love, Sooze




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Chemo Camp, family, FAM time Susan Rountree Chemo Camp, family, FAM time Susan Rountree

I feel bad about my hair

“Above all, be the heroine of your life, not the victim.” 

― Nora Ephron

My hair and I finally came to an understanding when I was in high school and I got it cut in a short shag. Until my senior year,  I’d had years of bad hair days, starting when I was 1 and had not a single hair on my head. 

Maybe I was cute when I was four (not a lot of pictures exist, so there is no telling), but when I was five, the daughter of my mother’s hairdresser — in beauty school at the time— practiced her perming skills on me. My otherwise short, tow-headed sleek ‘do’ was now a nest of curls more suitable for a bluebird than me.

When I did choose my own style — despite every reason to the contrary — I chose a long Patty Duke flipped-up style that drew my chin down to my chest and widened the gap in my teeth. This was the same year I got acne and breasts and everything about me seemed to grow so awkwardly that I wanted to keep myself hidden in my room until the ugly duckling gave way to the promised beautiful swan.

Only that part didn’t happen either. Oh I grew out of the Patty Duke and cut my hair shorter and managed to be if not a beautiful swan, then an ok looking duck.

But my hair.

My sister had long locks in high school (she was dubbed the pretty one and I the baby) and I longed for those. But some hair just isn’t gonna go there, and when mine tried, the ends split and dried out and frayed until when I finally got the nerve to ask that same daughter of the hairdresser — who by now was doing my hair regularly — to give me that short shag. My mother said then, and often, “You always look better with your hair on the short side.”

She’s raised me on bobby-pin curls done up Saturday nights for Sunday church, so I knew nothing of curlers. My sister must have had some instruction — maybe from Molly, her friend’s sister who was in beauty school —  because she rolled her hair with giant curlers, frosted it just so, and it came out looking beautiful, her hair draping across her shoulders like a soft blanket.

But I always felt bad about my hair.

That shag, though, took me through the 70s until Dorothy Hamill came along and showed us how to think about hair as geometry. Her hair molded to her every move, forming exact angles no matter how many “Hamill camels” she performed. This, somehow, was a language I thought my hair might understand. I wanted my hair to move like that. I still remember the day I sat bravely in a new Raleigh stylist’s chair at Crabtree and asked for it. From that day forward, my hair and I began a new relationship with each other, me and my Hamill cut— though I would later abandon it from time to time, depending on Princess Diana’s chosen style.

Then came the 80s, and talk about geometric hair! I got another perm and my new curls formed the perfect triangle. (Every time I see “Sleepless in Seattle” I’m reminded of this.) But now I had not only my head to care for but my daughter’s, so the hair, eventually, had to go. (Hers was so much prettier and thicker than mine.) So I cut mine short, where it stayed, and for the next 30 years, I felt good and bad about my hair, depending on my stylist. 

I found myself  been feeling bad again, after staying with the same stylist for too many years, and in the past year I left him. It was truly like a divorce, leaving the man who’d given me massages on my head and neck for at least 10 years, who’d styled my hair for my children’s weddings — letting go of that, and of our friendship, was hard. 

But from the first time in her chair, I knew Carla would make me feel better, if not great, about my hair again.

And she did, painting it the color my sister said I was born with. And using her own geometric skills to shape my locks so no matter how many weeks passed, the shape stayed the same and in place. I didn’t feel bad about my hair for the first time in a very long time.

And then, well, chemo happened. 

When I entered the Rex Cancer Center doors for my first appointment, a beautiful, tan and bald woman passed by me, her colorful skirts swaying as she walked. Her head, shiny as a bowling ball, glowed as she walked. No way could I sport that look. My head, though fully covered with hair at the time, was covered not in shine beneath my hair, but eczema. Not a good look on its surface, I could well imagine.

We met with our chemo educator a week later, and she looked at my hair and said: “You’ve got a really cute cut.” As in: too bad! And then went on the explain that if I kept my hair, I’d be the first in history. The drugs I’m taking target all the healthy, growing cells in my body as well as the bad, so the healthy, growing hair follicles are the first — at least the most noticeable — to go.

When Carla heard my diagnosis, we both cried. Then she trimmed my hair and said she’d be taking care of me for the next nine months, whether I had hair or not. 

A few days after my second treatment, my husband, who had never even met any of the stylists who’ve cared for my hair in almost 38 years of marriage, drove with me to Carla’s, sitting on her bench as she gave me a buzz cut. (She’d cut it in a perky pixie only a week before, to prepare me. At the same time, she styled my wig so well my husband couldn’t tell I was wearing it for 20 minutes.)

Carla took her time, sliding her shears through my head until I said stop. I’d not seen my head so bald in my life, and to say it was hard doesn’t cover it.

A friend who had breast cancer years ago had given me bandanas to hide my head, and I tied one in a cute bow and went to supper with friends. The next day, we packed up for a week at the beach, and all seemed right.

Until the next day, when in the shower, my hair came out in sheets. 

Long gone was the short shag and the Hamill and the wedge and all the other “dos” I’d sported in all these years of having “the best hair in the family,” so my mother said. But there it was.

My sister came over, wanting, she said, to see my wig. I warned her about what my balding head would look like as I changed from the bandana to the wig, and she held me and cried with me, hard. It was the first of many kindnesses she’d give me during that time.

I have never had long, luxurious locks, but they were my locks, no matter how often I’d felt bad about them. Ever the crybaby, I deserved a moment or two to grieve them. And my sister made space for that.

I hated for my children to see me this way. I prayed that my 15-month-old grandson Henry would know me by my eyes and not my hair. The next morning, I was up early, as I am every day during this kidnapping, and he greeted me with bright eyes and a smile. And all was right.

I’m getting used to it. My husband says he can see my eyes, brighter than they were before. I honestly don’t know why. Because I am tired, and sometime sad, though showering is quick and getting dressed for the day is far easier than it was a month ago. 

As for the Nora Ephron quote at the top of this story: I’m not the victim in my story, nor am I the heroine. (those are my docs, and God) I am, in fact, myself, and I just happened to have been taken aside from my life for a little while while my kidnappers — my care team — whom I am growing to love as hostages do, make me well. The victim, we all hope and pray, is actually the cancer, and that with each sometimes grueling treatment, it is fading, fading so that in a year’s time, it will be the dimmest memory for us all. Most especially for the tips of my hair.

+++

If you are facing a cancer diagnosis that promises hair loss, think about these tips:

  • Take pictures of your hair as you love it.

  • Shop for a wig while you still have hair, so those fitting you can see how you wear it.

  • Wigs can be expensive and are not necessarily covered by insurance. Some cancer centers (like Rex) offer cancer patients a free wig, hat or hair covering. Take advantage of that.

  • Have your own stylist trim it to suit you(make sure they are trained in cutting wigs, as of course the wig hair will not grow back)

  • Your scalp will signal you when it’s time. It will become sensitive, even a bit painful, as your hair is about to go.

  • Allow yourself to grieve. You’ve had your hair a long time.

  • Don’t shield your family from the reality of what you’ll look like for the next almost year.

  • Consider your beauty. It’s way more than hair deep.






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summer sentence 2015

i sit, staring into the eyes of

my five-week-old great niece Lucy, 

the two of us bound together

by blood

but not yet by story;

the only missive

we share is 

our 

week together

saying 'good morning'

and touching noses,

me bouncing her soft body

when she cries,

me trying to soothe, 

her trying to discover 

her new world;

and on this morning, 

our last together, 

she turns the corner 

of her mouth, just so 

into a soft, 

baby smile

and i know 

she is thinking

about the times

her mother fed her, or

my mother rocked her

or when her sister 

(2, plus some)

held her and 

kissed her face, 

of the times her uncles

took her into their arms 

and 

showed her 

their world 

at that moment,

bound by 

beach and sound and sky;

or of when her grandfather 

danced with her

in afternoon 

delight for both;

and as i look into her

family-blue eyes and

marvel at our same chins,

i wish she could remember

what i have seen of this week —

my sister holding and bouncing

her new granddaughter,

my brother walking into the

surf with his grandson, 

now 8, who

asked my nephew

about girls and French kisses,

and 

Monopolized our evenings;

our beach party dance-off

with no misunderstanding

from our

part-time partytime

brother-in-law;

how her mother ate fresh peaches

and slept when she could

(and cried a little),

not able to stick her toes 

in the sand often enough

like her namesake, 

my grandmother

always liked to do;

how we ate shrimp 

and how we watched

the sun set

over the blue waters

of the inter-coastal 

waterway,

my husband wishing

he was out there, skimming

the smooth surface,

under sail,

or my son

casting chicken necks 

tied to string

in search of

crabs for his

Maryland love;

or how my daughter

lifting the paddleball

into the air 

or tossing it

into the ocean 

with her husband,

who sweated

into soccer heaven

with the 8-year-old, 

all of them 

no longer afraid 

of the sharks 

they had read about 

in the news;

how i sat with my

nephews for the 

first time in a year, 

learning about jobs

and life

as they see it,

shared an early-morning coffee

with the newest girlfriend, 

her eyes crisp as

the ocean water 

we were about to leave;

and how after supper,

on our last night,

my mother sat

at the 

kitchen table

with her grands,

holding stories

in her lap as

softly as she did her

great-grandbabies,

hoping to 

pass 

her own history on.

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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Has a nice ring to it

On a spring day in 1981, I sat at my future husband's family kitchen table wondering just when he would tell his parents that we were getting married. He had asked me in theory a few months before, and since we'd asked my parents for their permission a couple of weeks before, my mother's wedding machine was already in motion.

I think we even had a date.

We had been in Atlanta all weekend, sharing meals and conversation with his parents, and through each one I waited for him to share our news. 

Tick tock. Tick tock.

Sunday came, and i sat the kitchen table, wondering if I would have to call my parents and tell them that the wedding was off. he was just not saying anything 

We were minutes from leaving, when the man I had fallen in love with just five months before finally took a seat beside his mother and spoke.

'We've got some news,' he said. 'We're getting married.'

'Why didn't you tell me?' She countered and with those words, she took the diamond off her finger and handed it to me.

A few months before, understanding, surely, that I was the one, she had told me about the ring. It had belonged to my husband's grandmother and became hers when she and her handsome army pilot decided to marry. Family tradition required she hand it down to her son's choice. her only son. I hoped at the time she would be pleased for me to wear it.

I loved the ring, more for what it stood for than for its actual beauty. We reset the small diamond into a setting that suited me, married a few months later and set about making our life together, the heirloom reminder of the legacy of long marriage that came with it circling my hand.

Some years later, I lost the diamond (a whole 'nother story as they say). When I finally told my mother-in-law, she said only: it's a diamond, not your marriage.

++++

I will tell you that certain moments every mother cements to memory. That first giggle and step, the random day when your boy plays with his sister in the attic in the rain, or when he drives out of the dmv parking lot with you riding shotgun. that day when he says he wants to make his own decisions — which amounts to what time he wants to go to bed — when he leaves the house, heading to the first job that means something to him.

And there is that day when your son sits with you at the supper table where he asks to make those first decisions about his life and tells you he wants to continue the family tradition. with the ring.

The days following that day have filled my life with joy. Meeting him at the jewelry store to figure out just how we would keep it secret. The fact that my current ring is not the one that belonged to his grandmother and great-grandmother didn't matter. We were helping him create a new legacy out of an old one, and we were certain that legacy would matter to the young woman who will be his bride. 

When I joined him the day he picked up the newly reset ring, he apologized for not bringing a handkerchief to wipe my tears. I cried anyway, knowing this particular day, like so many other in my memory, would not repeat.

A week ago tonight, we gathered with the people who will welcome my son into their family, and the four of us waited for our children to arrive. Two hours before, my son had taken his girlfriend on an ordinary walk with the dog to the park, and she had come back wearing the diamond that I had worn on my own hand for the last 12 years.  

And then they joined us, mothers and daughter crying, fathers and son smiling, restaurant patrons offering to take pictures, stopping by the table with best wishes and congrats.

At our center we sparkled, this moment of clarity, cut to memory for us all.

+++

stay tuned. i begin a new journey writing once a month for the News and Observer on Father's Day 2015 as an Our Lives columnist. I did this 12 years ago, and they have asked me back.

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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car talk

for a girl whose grandfather was a Ford dealer for more than 50 years, i should think more about cars. but i don't. a car to me has always been transportation, surely, but a means to and end? a status symbol? a love? not so much. and i have not ever really thought much about the car in story — like some people might write about the trans am they saved up for and drove as a teenager or the '65 mustang they painstakingly restored.

a car gets me down the road and home again and i always feel pretty blessed about that. but i don't often think otherwise about the meaning of the box with pistons and throttle, brakes (unless they don't work) or gas (unless i am out of it), and though i should think of the people who created this great machine that changed the world as we know it, i don't.

or at least i didn't.

until i go a new(er) car. two weeks ago.

i have had my fair share of cars, though there is not one picture of any of them. the first, a pale blue maverick i shared with my sister. no ac, no power anything: brakes, steering or windows. a static-y AM radio. my grandfather didn't trust any newfangled gadgets like FM or AC, and though more than once my mother chose those options on family cars, her new drive often showed up in his shop without them. 

the Maverick took me many places, but i remember most driving down the back roads, windows down, headed to the beach for the very first time by myself. i think i was 16.

then there was the mustang — a blue 1975 4-speed my father let me pick out, not at all the collector's item as the '65 — that car moved with me to Carolina, to my first job in journalism. when my landlord found out i had a cat in my apartment, i threw her into a suitcase and into the back seat of the mustang and drove her home to my mother.

together the mustang and I moved all the way down to Georgia and into the-rest-of-my-life. we traded it for a harsh two-toned brown escort with an orange stripe down its side, a little car more suitable to carry the baby home from the hospital than the 4-speed upstart. that brown car was the only car i ever really hated.

then came mom cars. the wagons — a burgundy dodge and a white chevrolet, the dodge van with the fake wood on the side. the expedition that made me nauseous when i drove it out of the dealer lot it cost so much. then the jeep that took my children to college, the one i drove all around eastern North Carolina schlepping my first book. 

and then the last car — a used lexus suv. daddy thought we were living beyond our raising  buying a luxury car — even though by the time it joined the family it was already four years old. 

but it's this car that for some reason got me to thinking about the story of it. and the stories of all the other cars in my life.

people write whole

novels about cars

. (my friend Jane has written a slew of short stories and every one of them features a car.) one of the only twilight zones of my memory was about a car that talked back to its driver (imagine that!). what about 'my mother the car', apparently labeled the

second-worst sitcom of all time

and who can forget Car 54 Where Are You?

i don't write about cars or name them or think about them or tell stories about them, really. but then we found a new car, and before we were headed to the dealer to pick it up, i found myself thinking about all the places the old one had taken me.

100,000 miles. that's how many we trekked together. and as i thought about those miles i actually took a picture of the odometer, and thought, Lord, you are going crazier in tiny increments every day. a few minutes later, we ticked across the 114,000 mark, and it felt like a milestone.

when my husband said he had someone coming to look at the car, i went crazier still. found myself pulling out a note card and writing — as if i were the car itself — to the faceless new owners to tell them what the car had meant to me. seriously. 

I may look a little worn around the edges, the car wrote. I am 11 after all, (is that 33 in car years?) but i have been good to my family...

the buyer didn't show, and i tucked the car's carefully scripted letter in a safe place to wait for one who did.

100,000 miles. 

to the gazebo where the Pea got engaged and to her wedding, with her gown draped across our laps. to the vet with the dog, when we had to put her down, then home with her ashes. to my son's college graduation. to his first house, the back filled with new house things from Target. to my niece's house to meet her new baby. 

to my father's hospital bed too many times, the car doors and windows framing winter as it changed to spring, the steering wheel absorbing my many tears along the way.

that car took me away from my childhood home for the last time and to my mother's new house. to our favorite beach and our friends' favorite mountain respite. to the airport with the dog and to church and to the grocery store and back again on hundreds of regular days. we didn't cover a lot of the map, my old car and me, but we traveled far.

when we sold her last week, (did i really call her HER?) i forgot to put the note in the glove compartment, which is probably a good thing. no reason for the new owners to worry that they bought crazy along with a pretty good old car.

now i'm finally back in blue again. though it's three years old, my new drive still smells like the back of my Bigdaddy's neck ('new car' was his cologne of choice), and has two — TWO — manuals, a 300-pager for the sound system alone. 

and this: it doesn't even have a key! what in the world would my grandfather say to that?

and so we're back on the road. i can't say where my new blue car will take me, but i know somewhere along the way, that's where the story will be.

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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Happy Birthday, Pamula!

Happy Birthday, Pamula (repost) #sheis60today!

note: in the years since i wrote this post, my sister has become a grandmother, and the hoy of watching her in this new role is unparalleled. her new baby girl Gracie carries the gene that reaches from my grandmother to my sister, on to her daughter and now grand. (we have seen pictures of our great-grandmother, and have mercy all five generations look just alike! Wishing her a happy 60th 

birthday, which once again falls on The Gathering weekend. miss you Sis. and i feel so much closer to you on our journey in the past few years.

Pamela Jean Byrum was born on a February morning so foggy that my grandfather drove past the hospital entrance and had to turn around. My father was in the Navy, and my mother, great with child, was living with my grandparents in a tiny village in northeastern N.C. about 20 miles south of Suffolk, Va., when the big day came. Daddy came home shortly after, and from that day on, she stole his heart ... ( ok, so I was a twinkle in God's eye when she arrived and my brother already a reality, but I think all will agree that she is the fave. She dressed as my father for Halloween one year. I mean, who does that and does not win favor from somebody?)

While I was not there to witness her arrival, I imagine my sister made her entrance quietly, unlike my own, as a whirling dervish a little over two years later. And that pretty much sums us up as sisters. She is the quiet one, and I am the one who tries to get all the attention. Do I need to even say that she's not on FB?

Today is her birthday, and since she won't speak for herself, let me say just a few things about PamUla. (she will not be happy with me, but I promise, it won't be the first time.)

One thing to get out of the way: On her wedding day, the priest mispronounced her name, calling her Pam-U-la, and the name has become our affectionate moniker for her ever since.

I don't have any first memory of my sister, just soft images of the first room we shared. I think there was a lamb on the wall, and a doll bed, but I am not sure. Pictures of us show that we wore matching nightgowns, and in our crinolines, she looks a bit thinner, which would hold true through the years. Old home movies reveal when we walked down the sidewalk, she tried to hold my hand. 

Everybody called her the 'Pretty One' and me the Baby, and our identities have held true to that, too.  She is the steadfast to my mercurial, telling me much too often than I would like to admit that I need to buck up and get going. She has lived in Texas, Illinois, North Carolina, Missouri and Iowa, has set her stakes down in every place, and quickly. The first move took her on her wedding day in our childhood hometown to the Texas Gulf Coast, a hurricane swirling close by within a few weeks of her settling. Back then, she called me every day (when Long Distance cost a LOT of money), telling me how she had to take up the carpet, get the wet vac, take care of business, and move on.

She is like our grandmother in favor and demeanor, so much in fact that a photograph of my grandmother when she was a teen looks exactly like my sister. I have always marveled that someone could be so much like another, but two generations apart. 

My sister can fix a toilet, dance a mean shag, decorate a house, plan a beautiful party — be it wedding, 50th anniversary or birthday — raise remarkable kids, drive anywhere in inches of snow. This from a girl who once left her yellow Pinto on a hill on a major road in the middle of my current city because it was too snowy to climb. And she can do all this, with a certain fashion panache I have never been able to pull off. 

And this: what is the source of legend — She loved camp; I screamed til my mother took me home. ( She can get her own blog if she wants to rehash why, because I won't.)

When she was in high school, Pamela (never PAM) took her first trip in an airplane to California to visit the older sister of a friend. I had my birthday when she was gone, and I woke up sad that she wasn't there, but found a banner she had hand-drawn draped across the floor in front of my bedroom door. My brother walked by, saying "Happy Birthday!" and I didn't even think he knew what day it was. He had put it there for her, in her absence. She is that kind of sister.

Since then, she has taught me how to be both birthday fairy and leprechaun to my children, how to tough it up (well, sometimes) when things are not going my way. And the few times through the years when we have fallen out about one thing or another, have left me with my heart frayed at the seams.

In recent weeks, PamULA has become a patron saint of sorts, for The Gathering, which I have helped plan at my church. (She will probably not speak to me for awhile after this.) When we were looking for old photographs that defined the word "story," I ran across many, but one of PamULA, in a dress my grandmother (not the one most like her but the one most like me) made for her. She is pretty in pink, her hair curled just right, but for a dance she didn't want to go to — my brother's senior prom. A sophomore, she had been asked, not to go with a date, but to serve punch in white gloves, on the sidelines. When I showed the photograph to my friend, Katherine, the Great Designer, she was drawn to it. What girl hasn't had to wear a dress she didn't want to, to an event she would rather die than be attending? (hey, I made the picture very small)

So there was PamULA, suddenly representing the marvelous, conflicted, complicated story that is in each of us. To me, she fits perfectly in that role.

My favorite picture of her I took myself, at my niece's wedding a few years ago. PamUla is funny, and she loves nothing better than a good laugh with friends she has known for a long time, and that is exactly what she is doing here. Beautiful in her laughter. That is my sister.

When I talked to her the other day, I told her how her mug was now a LOGO. She can take heart that when we start planning our next event, she will probably be yesterday's news. Maybe. She might just become an ICON, which is what she is for me.

I hope she can forgive me if that happens.  Take a look at that first picture. She is still the Pretty One. And I am still the baby, trying my best to make a stink.

Happy Birthday Pam-ul-a, ... I love you so! 

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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it's all about the Pea

at twilight, on the last friday in december 1983, my husband and i got the first good look at our new baby girl. we had waited for what felt like a month of fridays... after her delivery, they'd whisked her off for prodding and poking, putting me in a semi-private room with a woman who reportedly (her words) had her womb tied up. where we waited, wondering if something was wrong.

at last the wheeled our tiny new person into the room with us in her bassinet, circling us with a curtain, while the womb lady on the other side dialed the number over and over of some invisible man who would never materialize.

in those first moments, we cried, touching her fingers, running our hands on her legs and arms and head, taking a good look at this baby of ours. a baby! all toes and fingers and perfect eyes, a baby who searched our own eyes for what her future might mean.

who knew, because we could hardly see beyond that moment. 

i'm not sure what we knew in that twilight time except we were glad to be through the worst part. or what we thought was the worst part and the best part— her coming into the world. 

i remember the short days in the hospital as a bit of a Camelot. i can still feel the warmth of the water on my body after my first shower, as i pulled on the flannel gown i'd worn on my honeymoon two years before (and before you say flannel?! it was October in the mountains, and satin on the outside.)

i still can feel that first tug as i tried to feed her. can remember just looking at my husband and exploding with love for what we had done together.

i felt beautiful, for the first time probably ever in my life, as i, with God's help (and a bit from my husband) had created this great beauty of a child. how could that be?

on a crisp, deep winter day, we took her home, the dog kissing her on the face upon greeting. and with a lot of help from our mothers, we set about parenting. in the coming weeks, we would diaper her and argue over her, sleep (or try to) with her on our chests, try to keep her from crying during supper, move with her to a new city where she finally stopped.

uptown girl was a favorite on the radio in those years, and it would prove to be a theme song for this little girl of ours. when she was tiny, i'd dress her up in her best and head into downtown Atlanta to visit her dad for lunch, and her eyes caught the skyscrapers, and i wondered what she was thinking. (now that she has ended up UPTOWN i know.)

i've spent most of the years since trying to grow into being her mother, and while i have not been terribly bad at it, there are times i wish i could forget. 

times when i screamed at her at things there were clearly my fault, times i cried privately (and sometimes not so privately) over her own heartbreak — friends who left her out of things, when she didn't make the grade, a boyfriend or two who weren't worthy of her attentions. times when i felt she failed me, but were really failures of my own in parenting.

tonight she wanders around her chosen city, getting a massage — as her husband lays sick with a virus they both contracted over Christmas — not to be stopped from her small celebration. 

and i long to be with her. her birthday was a game-changer for me — one of those days in life when the earth shakes on its axis and you're never the same, the day i stopped being (totally) selfish because someone needed me for the first time in my life. and i will continually mark it. 

we FaceTimed from the office, with surprise visits from her father and my friends, all of us wishing her a happy day as she sets out for ginger ale and crackers... ordinary pursuits on a day that will never be ordinary for me.

happy birthday Pea. 

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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from the forest to the trees

i've written and rewritten these first lines tonight a dozen times, and nothing seems to stick. 

what i want to tell you about is how my sister has given me Christmas trees for years, trees made from candy canes and wood and garland and wire and some laden with snowflakes that in years of wear have lost some of their shimmer. there is a quirky tree that looks as if it belongs in Whoville, (one of the oldest and my favorite) and another with a heart for its star. i want to say how now i have a virtual forest of glittery trees and how each year i walk around the house and try to figure out the perfect place to put them. should i scatter them around or place them together? 

just about now in the Christmas mayhem comes the panic: what have i missed? presents not yet bought, things left undone that may never get done, and i forget that it is like this every single year. every. single. year. 

yesterday i unpacked my trees, placing them on the mantel — a new spot for them. and today, as i bought and wrapped and decorated my mailbox, i realized that i can't make the perfect Christmas for everybody like i tried to do for so many years. and actually, that is not my job anymore. my job is to create the space for family, and to make sure there is good food on the table.

it is probably not related, but this year i put a forest on my mantel, and somehow i seems as if i am finally seeing the trees.

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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those little treasures

my friends and i lament this time of year about dragging all the Christmas stuff out. we've been collecting little treasures for more than 30 years, and well, they tend to accumulate to the point that unpacking all those ornaments and broken lights, tiny Christmas trees and nativities proves a bit overwhelming. especially when you don't have a pile of small people to help you put it all together. 

when we first started out, i could get the tree up, the lights on, the Santas distributed in the time it took for my daughter to take her afternoon nap. she would wake, coming down the stairs to a fairyland of lights and glitter, which captivated her for a good while. by middle school, though, she used to move my Santa collection around the house because apparently the places i'd put them didn't suit. when she was in high school, i remember an outburst because she came home from school and i had not put the finishing touches on the banister garland. i had no idea how important it was for her to come home to this holiday fairyland, the house filled with mementos of her childhood and the treasured days we had created for her. to her, a house decorated must have meant a house happy, and that particular Christmas it was not.

she left for college, and somehow i recovered from whatever kept me from the spirit that year. and though i found the fairy dust again, i can tell it's slower each year in the sprinkling. (tinker bell is getting old.) as my children become adults, the presents become fewer and more intentional, and i leave whole boxes of decorations unwrapped, their purpose no longer as important to me as it once was.

as i write this, my mantle is bare and every single present (which are few) aren't wrapped, though today i received my first present in the mail. i have about a dozen boxes to unpack — the nativity, my collection of Christmas trees, the large Santas that sit table-top. the dining room table serves as my staging area, and so there is no place to entertain, should anyone decide to visit. plus, no Christmas food! 

everybody rushes me, but i keep reminding myself that it is ONLY DECEMBER 9th! my own parents never decorated a tree or filled the house with greenery until at least the 15th, back in the day. otherwise it would die, because it was fresh from the yard (and not from Wal-Mart.)

back in the day. my father took my sister and me to Rocky Mount, a full 30 miles away, to shop for my mother in a mall with a magic Christmas tree, its lights blinking to the sound of organ music. i am certain we never shopped in November for what could easily be bought in December, and AFTER the 10th, thank you very much. who needed to shop before then? these days if you want it you had better have thought about it in October, for it will be gone by early November. it seems as if Advent, that time of preparing and anticipating has been moved to just after Halloween.

but my anger about that is not the point of this story.

it's this: when you do unpack your Christmas, whether it's the day after Thanksgiving or the day before Christmas Eve, what i forget about the sometimes laborious process of pulling it all out, is that buried among the ornaments are hidden treasures, those trinkets that by tradition and story provide a surprise.

this morning before the rush to work, i finished the last of the tree, taking in the tiny ornaments my mother gave us the very first Christmas we were married. and then i took inventory, of all the ornaments hanging and where they had come from through the years.

Hawaiian ornaments from my sister who had visited there in her early marriage. an origami star given to me by a friend who died unexpectedly a couple of years ago, the year after she gave it to me. miss piggy (from my sister, too — do you think that was a not-so-subtle message?). the corn husk nativity and Moravian stars we found for our first and only Christmas in Winston-Salem.

among my favorites is a bird's nest given to me by my Peace College suite mate and daily walking friend, so long ago she likely doesn't remember it. a nest with a tiny egg, a small nuthatch hand painted on its shell. when she gave it to me, she said this was something her mother had always kept in her own tree. because legend held that choosing a Christmas tree where a bird had nested would bode well to the family for that year.

every year i tuck the nest carefully in the branches of the tree to be sure it won't fall. and i marvel at the unknown artist who could paint something so small — no larger than a penny — yet so detailed. 

+++

a few minutes ago, my niece called to FaceTime, her not-yet-two-year-old showing me her tree, her snow globes, how she sits in her favorite chair right in front of the tree and kicks it softly, to see the branches glisten with the twinkling lights. every morning when she wakes, her mother says, she marvels that the tree still stands there in her living room, filled with Santas she can touch. 

i turned the camera around so she could see my tree, showing her every Santa i could find. her eyes widened as she said: ho ho ho!, with each one. then i showed her my little bird's nest, and she said 'tweet.'

little treasures. 

and there are so many days yet to give.

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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whole food

i spent a long lunch hour today with friends i have known my whole life, celebrating a birthday... our shared history unspoken between us, but sound.

i have known one of them since kindergarten, the two of us sharing those first lessons in creating angular letters on the chalk board. Later, we three shared  reading groups, basketball and  cheerleading tryouts (one of us AlWAYS sat on the sidelines.) 

endured algebra class and diagramming sentences, weathered boyfriends (a few of whom we have in common), college angst, the uncertainty of new marriage (and the 30+year kind), parents who perplex, siblings who sometimes don't give us what we hope, or sharing the complexity of being an only child.

today we weather elderly parents, children launching themselves or who attempt, siblings who have never needed us before but now who suddenly do. all difficult things.

though i don't see them often enough, they make me whole, somehow, in a way only home can do. 

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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Days with Daddy, FAM time Susan Byrum Rountree Days with Daddy, FAM time Susan Byrum Rountree

86

i've been carrying around some cargo in my car the past few days, waiting for today, when i could clear the clutter, if you can call it that, which i really can't. what some might consider clutter are remnants of my father — sports coats, dress shirts and pants —that used to hang in his closet.

we've been waiting for the time when my mother was ready to give them up. these were not his favorite things, but dress clothes he may have outgrown, both in fit and usefulness, that now hung in the guest room closet, dry cleaned and ready for something. perhaps some other body to inhabit them.

so that's what we decided, after we'd stuffed ourselves twice over the turkey and whatnot: to gather these few things up and pass them on.

i actually didn't mind my bodiless passengers. every time i opened the door to the back seat, i'd sniff them to see if they bore any traces of him, but they did not. i tried to remember when i'd last seen him wear that tweed blazer, the navy sports coat, the striped button down, the several pairs of khaki colored slacks, but i couldn't recall. it was right to give them away.

today is his birthday, 86 he would be. so it seemed the perfect day to donate these discarded pieces of his life to someone else to use. after lunch with my coworkers, i headed over to

StepUp Ministry

, which recently has created

GG's closet

, a place where men participating in their program, which is focused on financial literacy, can shop for interview and career clothes. (though women have similar clothing programs all over the country, men's programs are rare, it seems.)

(Daddy went on only one interview in his life that he talked about, and that was for the job he eventually held for more than 50 years — caretaker of the people of my home town. (when he applied for a loan to start his practice, the farmers who ran the bank asked for collateral, and he gave them his career, though they were used to dealing in land and tractors, neither of which he had.) 

he never wore a suit to work, saving them for church, funerals and weddings. he did wear a tie, but those were not part of my parcel.

i parked my car, gathering as many of his things as i could and headed to StepUp's front door, my heart pounding. i'd made arrangements to meet the volunteer director, and when i asked for her, handing over the first of Daddy's coats to someone at the front desk, i felt the tears coming. i'll go back and get more, i said, escaping. what was that about?

by the time i reached my car, the tears came on full force and i could not stop them, thinking only: i need to call my sister, she will understand this.

i gathered the last things and turned, finding the volunteer coordinator, a tall woman i had met briefly at my church, her arms open to me and to the burden i carried.

'i didn't think this would be so hard,' i said.

'i did,' she countered, 'which is why i want to give you a hug.'

we walked back with Daddy's clothes, and i found myself talking, probably too much.

'he was a physician,' i told her. 'many of his patients were poor.'

'what better place, then,' she said, 'than to share his clothes here.'

somebody soon will dress in my father's old navy blazer and his striped button down, his khaki slacks and head off into their own job interview. what they will have, if not land or tractor as collateral, is history —  one of helping and healing. 

such is what they need. 

i wish i had thought to put a small card in each pocket— 

'this blazer belonged to 

Graham Vance 

Byrum, Sr., raised in Sunbury, NC, father, grandfather, husband and physician. loved Wake Forest and circus peanuts. adored his wife. treasured his children & grandchildren. was tight with a penny and loved a pun. what you wear was donated on his 86th birthday. go for that job, and wear it well.'

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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4-20-14, a personal tale

hey daddy.

sometimes it seems like it was just last thursday that i picked up the phone and there you were on the other end of the line, brightly talking and saying how you were doing pretty good and glad to be coming home. only it was not last thursday but a year from last thursday that we had that last phone conversation.

it was the next day, in fact, that we had our last face-to-face talk. you lay there in your bed in your most comfortable pajamas and told me quite emphatically that my hands were cold. i tried to warm them, and as the hours went by and everybody crowded by your side, it was a sweet, holy moment, all of us there with you.

sometimes it feels like yesterday and sometimes like 10 years and other times like the long year it has been, since you last spoke to me. for awhile there, after we lost you, i'd go back into my email and read your last written message to me, looking for more meaning in it than was already plain to see. by then you couldn't really write letters anymore... your thoughts were too jumbled, so i hold this one close, what you wrote to me about something i had posted on this blog.

'

One of your best...........from your favorite reader.....wth love.  gvbsr'  

+++

this weekend we have marked many things. meredith and james have been married for five years. FIVE. what a joy it is for them and for our family to see how happy they are together. she is still the city girl you proclaimed her to be at 3 months old. we doubt, sadly, she will ever leave it. but knowing they are so happy together softens that sadness. she and james will be a great couple, no matter where they are.

after supper last night we facetimed with pamela, mama and hooks, something you knew very little about last year, but we do a lot now. in fact, you may remember that you talked to hooks and meredith and maybe kendall, too, that last day on Facetime, which made them feel like they were there, in the room with you.

FaceTime keeps us connected though we are often states apart. i wish we'd had it in when i lived in georgia, so i could have seen your face when i talked to you. but i do have your letters.

our favorite facetime time now is with gracie, because she is always happy and waving. when you left us she was but a bit of a thing, and now she has teeth and is talking about what the dog-bird-cat can say. laura gray is growing up, too, and so much the big sister to vance, who seems like the happiest part of you, which is wonderful. cole of course, is the star of every family show, and he loves his little cousins so much.

today we were in our favorite town — the one you always said you wanted to leave, but in the end, where you chose to come back to. and we were there because of you, to celebrate Easter, and to remember where we were on 4-20-13.

no more perfect day than this, the day of Jesus' resurrection, to take a moment to ponder about your own.

we gathered in church with mama on the pew you shared with her for so long after we left home. (we filled three pews, thank you very much.) and afterward met up with you at the cemetery. kip brought the circus peanuts and i brought the orange slices, a communion of sorts with your offspring and your favorite treats. your children read at thing or two (gra even wrote a prayer in the best baptist tradition) and we did it (mostly) without tears. mama had a few, but on days like this, she is a sailboat without her tiller. 

though there are so many of us trying to direct her way, we are not the same as you there, holding onto her elbow as she crosses the street.

we have been crying a little bit, remembering the day last year, which is really ok because you cried a few times in your life, too. and our crying is because we miss your very being, and your being witness to all that won't stay still in our family... and there is a lot. 

sam & lindsay are getting married on saturday, and kip has become chief resident... he obviously is as smart, though more outgoing than you...  meredith and james have new jobs and promotions, kendall and matt have a new house, and jay and john both have great jobs in new cities. graham has built that shed to house the saw you gave him... oh, and he brought a special young woman to share this day with him today. (she helped him paint the shed, if that tells you something about her.)

we picnicked at your favorite place — the bird farm — introducing cole to a baby duck and gracie to a hundred parakeets in every color of the sky. cole petted the duckling, and gracie even tried to pull the tail of a parakeet when it landed on her stroller. a full flock of them landed on my arm and in my hair and tried to eat my shoes. 

our picnic was fried chicken from hardees and mama's potato salad, pamela's chocolate chip cookies and hooks's brownies. graham brought your favorite deviled eggs, and we talked about the fact that you would only eat the yolks. there are three left, the three you would have eaten if you'd been able to. sam brought the humor, and kip wore his gvb tie clip. all your boys were dashing today.

all your number ones were there, including jimmy, marti and rick (in no particular order) but we were missing meredith & james & lindsay, kendall, matt, laura gray & vance, jay and john, but they were all there with us really, just as you were.

at the end of our meal, mama stepped in to say what you would have... thanks for coming... and that looking around, there is STILL not an ugly one in the bunch. i honestly don't know how in the world that has happened.

on friday, we will be together again, to celebrate sam and lindsay and their marriage, and we can't wait for that. you will be happy to know that mama will be wearing beige, and PINK, and she will look beautiful in both. 

Daddy, our family is growing and changing and that's exactly what a family is supposed to do. you and mama set us in motion all those years ago, and we have never really stopped. and of course, all the additions add so much color to our beige. 

today pamula read something you left for us to find in your desk, which talked about how whenever we really need you, you will be nearby. you were there today. we felt it.

i read parts of a letter you wrote to me in 1979, when you talked about how you would one day be someone's ancestor, and that your only hope of eternal life, really, was through your children and grandchildren.

well, i'd say you have it. that on this day of the resurrection of our Lord, you have yourself eternal life for sure, through not only what was promised by God to all of us, but through all of us gathered there, and those who couldn't be with us but who love you even though you are not physically here. 

i hope you can know, somehow, that we will, each one, as your descendants, do all that you have hoped for us. and we will do you proud.

sbr

writemuch.blogspot is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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unbind him, and let him go

april finally got here. though on sunday, march seemed to tug hard at winter, come monday the sun came out and by tuesday, there was no foolin', none at all, because the birds woke up with cackling spirits, singing so loud about this new warmth that on our morning walk, we almost asked them to tone it down. 

but we didn't. 

everyone around me —neighbors, family, co-workers, birds, dogs, even strangers on the street looked up at the blue sky and said, well, thank heaven it's april. finally. 

now we take our meals outside and drive home with the windows down, drinking in the warm air deep and quick because soon the pollen will kick in and we'll have to shut the windows again.

april. a good month for me historically. the month of birthdays: my mother's— a birthday shared by a dear, lifelong friend and a godchild — a day that always meant Mama'd get a new azalea for the yard from her children and a bouquet of yellow roses from my father. april meant meeting Lydia on the back road to ride our bikes to school in the bright morning. it meant spring cleaning, when i'd come home from school to find my hair brush and comb soaking in ammonia in the bathroom sink and all my winter clothes put away, my spring dresses hanging crisp and pressed in my closet.

April in college: i was tapped on my mother's birthday to edit the school literary magazine. (it was the best birthday present i gave her, ever.) my first child began life one april day. it's the month of my grandfather's birthday.

last year April took on a different meaning for me. a sadness that it's taken me just about a year to shake. but i can feel myself unbinding, if only a little bit.

my siblings and i have traded emails today. routine things when you're dealing with estates and mothers and whatnot. when i looked at the calendar, i could not help thinking of this same day last year, when our lives took a tumble (my mother a literal one, breaking her femur in Daddy's hospital room.) i wrote about it

here and here.

i'm blessed to have the mother i do. in this year we have all marveled, because she is all about April. Just watching her deal — with my father's illness and death, her broken leg and weeks in a wheel chair. in the weeks after Daddy died, when i visited her, each day brought progress. she got up out of the wheelchair. walked with a walker, then a cane. caring for herself. climbing stairs. set up a new home, drove herself, engaged life again. 

so we are celebrating with a party, not a birthday party (though it will be on her birthday), but a spring celebration. we've invited her friends from home to visit, to share a little lunch and see her new house. now when we talk on the phone, planning, her voice is bright, expectant, unbound.

i started a new Bible study this week. I am not one for sitting down quietly and talking out loud about God, but there you have it. there is a long-standing joke that Episcopalians don't actually read the Bible. but i have found when two or there of us gather we actually do know the Bible pretty well. our

Book of Common Prayer

is filled with it, as is our Hymnal

my friends and i met in the early morning before work and spent a few minutes with Lazarus, which is the gospel for Sunday, and well, we found that apparently, there is a lot in our lives to resurrect. 

by the end of the hour, we were all weepy — just like Jesus in the story — considering the hope offered in this ancient tale. we each had different reactions to it, but the Lazarus story reminded me of that holy day last April when we gathered around my father to say goodbye. only i don't think i did, fully. but it's time. 

yes, april finally got here, and it seems to me now, the whole month is all about unbinding —  everything from peonies to people, opening up, letting the light in after a winter that seemed to offer little. 

in the past few days i have been thinking of little except my father. the tone of his voice, his grin, all the times i have wanted to call him up and ask him something medical. my family will gather on Easter Day to remember him on the anniversary of his death. we'll picnic at a place he loved to visit and maybe even have a few candied orange slices for dessert. it will be a good day, a bright day, and what better day than Easter, to end our year of grieving, to unbind him — and ourselves — and finally let him go?

susanbyrumrountree.com is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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about a boy

just before daybreak, the phone rang and i answered. a woman, asking for my husband. a reporter, she said, for one of atlanta's tv stations i recall. i pictured a well coiffed, sleek brunette in spiked heels just waiting to purr something seductive into my husband's ear. i shook him awake, handed him the phone and looked toward my feet, but couldn't see them.

just then i felt, well, a nudge. and when he hung up the phone from his seductress, i said three words:

don't go far. then four more. 

the baby is coming. 

i could feel it.

my husband dressed for work — he was in public affairs for a utility company at the time and there was some sort of nuclear issue, which is in no way as important as a baby, don't   you know.

i gathered my thick body in my quilted robe and put my alarm clock in my pocket. walked into my daughter's room, wondering what in the world i would do with her in these hours as i waited for this new baby to come.

she found my closet, right after breakfast, and as i timed my contractions with the pocketed tick of the blue plastic clock, she found my honeymoon shoes and pulled my 'Princess Diana' rehearsal dinner dress over her head just so. how i wish i had pictures. 

as my 3-year-old plundered, i crouched on my hands and knees, cleaning all the bathrooms because once again, my mother would be coming and things had to be right. 

a few hours in i called my mother-in-law, who was on her way to the beauty parlor, which would be the perfect distraction for a cute little girl who would greet a new sibling, we hoped, by the end of the day.

i called my husband. it's time, i said, and he left the carefully coiffed reporter and drove the 20 miles home to take me to the hospital and into our new life as a family of four.  

it was one year to the day, i remember, from when the space shuttle exploded on national tv.

+++

last night we sat across from our son and his girlfriend sharing supper and stories. she asked what time he was born, he said: after Guiding Light, which is partly true. there would be no tv in the labor room that day, and GL was my favorite story, so i asked one of the nurses to find some way for me to watch. 30 minutes into Josh and Reva and this boy would have nothing of my distraction, breaking into this world so quickly that his napping dad hardly had time to put on his scrubs. i have to say my son has consistently interrupted my train of thought since. just when i thought i'd have a moment to myself, this quiet boy would say something that made me wish i had been paying closer attention.

he does so, still. 

+++

it seems, looking back on it, as if he grew from two feet to four then to six overnight, stretching his lanky body at times in such awkward ways that you could almost see the paIN in it. as a boy, he craved independence, admired (and practiced) great wit, loved Harry Potter and studied how to build things. he learned how to be a loyal friend to many and a brother to the sister he adores.

some say he looks like me, which is a curse or a blessing, depending upon your perspective (his/mine). the two of us have had our moments. there were days when i thought, well, i will never be good at the mother/son thing, and others when i felt we had just about gotten it right. 

lately, though i don't see or talk to him every day, it still feels tenuous. i want to help him but give him space. want to soothe with my mother thing but give him breathing room. want to say i'm proud but leave space for growth.

in the last year, i have seen my son grow into a man. we walked, hand-in-hand, into his grandfather's hospital room and out again, both of us quietly weeping. we shopped for sofas for the house he was buying. i stood by as he walked my mother to the communion rail on Christmas Eve, her arm in his hand. 

he inherited my father's saw and is building a place to put it using plans he found online. he is kind and funny and quiet, and he can be quite charming, i hear. though he drives me mad sometimes, my love for him is fierce.

+++

today he turned 27. Happy Birthday, G. It's a pleasure to know you.

mom

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and merry christmas to all

my husband turned the tree off about an hour ago and headed to bed, but i can't quite get there. the house is a wreck, Christmas paper strewn everywichway, presents crowding the corners of the living room. the garland that drapes the banister is losing needles, and remnants of last night's post-church dinner party still linger on the kitchen counter. the Christmas plates and glasses sit on the dining room sideboard waiting to be put away until next year. but i am not quite ready.

it was a good day, a heart-wrenching day, a happy day, a poignant one. all wrapped up together like the best present you've ever gotten. and the worst one, too. my father was not here. and my mother was here alone.

but it was a good day, too, because it was a day (or two, exactly) that we got to spend with the very people who have taken this year on with us and helped us feel our way out.

i am happy to report that my mother, who was wheelchair bound in April, has walked up and down the stairs of my house in the past two days slowly, but without incident. this is amazing in and of itself. she has moved her home and her life to a new town and though she is not quite happy, at least she is trying. my mother, as my father told me on the eve of their 60th anniversary, is tough.

yes, when the need presents itself, she is tough. and aren't we blessed by that. but she is fragile, too, and we need to be mindful of that.

she always worries about Christmas. what to give everybody that is not too extravagant but means something to each member of the FAM. This year she may have topped herself: a 35-minute video of slides my father took when we were children.

readers of this blog know i am the third child, and the photographs of the tiny me are few, but hidden within this treasure is are jewels: shots of my parents in the hospital the day after i was born, and of me, in the nursery bassinet — photos i had never seen until yesterday. other slides mark years at Easter and Christmas with our grandparents. there are dogs. a cat. a rabbit. a tree fallen on the house. trips to see my grandmother in florida. my mother and her hats. my grandfather's garden. my grandmother's sunday table. again, most of them never seen before.

kids today don't know about slides. they think they are something you slip down on your way to someplace else, a zip, and onto the rest of your day. when i was a kids we buffed our slides with wax paper, just so they could slip us more quickly into the next run.

but i want these particular slides to stick to me as if i were trying to slide on wet paper. to stop me in my tracks, at least for a little while, so i can take my childhood in again, through my father's eyes.

my brother stands with my dad on my grandmother's jacksonville, florida front porch. i have no idea who took the picture, because my mother stands in the background in her favorite hat, her hand so close to her heart that i can feel what she is thinking. we didn't visit florida very much, but here we are at her mother's home, and she is happy, watching her husband and son stand in the place where she grew up. i know that feeling well. she is beautiful.

i wish i could show you these pictures now, so you can see, but it's the fact of them that matters, not the pictures themselves. you have your own pictures just like them. you have all stood on that front porch, grinning for the camera on days when maybe you didn't feel like it, but 50 years later, on a random Christmas morning when you see yourself there, you are glad you stood and smiled. it means something. and it is important.

i came across a letter recently that my father wrote me when i was about to graduate from college. i won't belabor you with the details, but he closed it with an important point: the importance of history is that people lived it every single day. lived it. real people, doing regular things, some whose regular things ended up just in regular things, but some of those regular things ended up changing the world. and though we can't be really know about life after death, we can be assured that one day, we will be someone's ancestor. and that matters to those who come after us.

we are more than Kodachrome captured on a random afternoon in the middle of a sweltering august day in the 1960s. or 70s. or 90s or now teens. we are built of story. and the pictures matter. because behind the pictures is where the story lies.

take a look at your old Christmas pictures, and tell your family the story of that day. of all those days.

a gift. to all.

sbr

susanbyrumrountree.com is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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FAM time Susan Byrum Rountree FAM time Susan Byrum Rountree

Doubt, and then Joy

Thirty years ago in mid-December, I sat, staring at the dying Christmas tree. We’d bought it at Thanksgiving, tying it to the top of our tiny Ford Escort and hauling it the 300 miles from Birmingham, where my brother lived, to Perry, Ga.

My husband growled when I told him I wanted to do this. Surely there were Christmas trees in Perry, where we lived. looking at my eight-months swollen belly, he knew he had better comply. By the time we got it into the house, neither of us admitted how badly the tree had been beaten on the trip. We wound the lights around its branches, hung our meager ornaments, wrapped the small number of presents and put them under the tree.

And then the needles began to fall off.

I tried not to think about my parents’ tree, filled with bright white lights, the small bells that had belonged to my grandmother, the glittery birds we had given my mother one Christmas. I couldn’t travel, fat with baby as I was. It would be my first Christmas away from home.

How had this happened? How had I found myself just four short years our of college, hundreds of miles from home, married and expecting a baby, when I was clearly a baby myself?

Oh we were ready for the baby, who was not due until January, but still. The nursery sat, freshly painted, the crib filled with borrowed bumper pads, pillow and soft blankets. The small dresser had been carefully filled with powder-scented drawer liner, itty bitty diapers and tiny t-shirts, the few footed things I’d bought that could dress girl or boy.

I was tired of waiting. Tired of the body and the swollen feet, the back aches and the indigestion, and I was ready for it all to be over.

But I was not yet ready, to be a mother. How could I mother anyone, when I still so needed to be mothered myself?

Each day, I waited, pacing the five rooms of our tiny house, fingering the blankets, folding the tiny clothes, imagining the kind of mother I would be. Silently I admitted only to myself that when this baby of mine started to cry, I would likely cry louder myself.

What kind of mother?
Would I be patient and kind like my own mother, or more true to who I already was — insecure and overly emotional. Would I bring laughter into my child’s life, or would my incompetence at the job bring only pain?

I wasn’t very good at trusting God, even though in these last three years He had flat out filled my life with joy and grace. Why couldn’t I understand that God would equip me with what I needed to care for this child, even if I didn’t yet know how?

Had my own mother wondered these same things herself? (Probably not one minute when she was expecting me, third child that I am. But maybe with the first two.)

Before church on Christmas Eve, we took our picture in front of the tree, the room lit only by the twinkling lights. My large red maternity dress blocks most of the tree, so it’s hard to tell just how dead it really was.

I kept a journal while I was waiting — the only time in my life when I have done so faithfully, and five days before Christmas, 1983, I was at least ready for the holiday: “waiting, hoping, crying is all there is left to do,” I wrote. I’m sure I cried myself to sleep that night, my poor husband probably wondering just who he would have to parent when the due date came around.

At church that night, I’m certain I thought not one thing about Mary. My prayers were likely about asking God to keep my childbirth experience relatively pain free and short. My petite sister had a few months earlier given birth to a nine pound baby boy, and had sworn to me that she would never do THAT again. (She did, just three years later.)

But if I had, that year, thought more about the Christmas story and less about own Christmas away from family, I would have seen a certain kinship with Mary. Swollen body, surely, but both of us mothers-in-waiting, hopeful of what our children would come to be.

Christmas morning turned out to be one of the happiest in my memory, even still. I picture our tiny family — husband, dog and me — listening to Christmas music, sitting on the sofa, covered in blankets. We cooked together (well, the dog didn't... he just ate) — something we have rarely done since — so happy we were, knowing that Christmas would come again, with any luck, within a week.

The next day, we threw the tree out. The weather turned so cold that our washing machine froze. The cleaning lady didn’t show up, so I spent the next few days on my knees, not praying, but trying to get the house clean enough for my mother to visit.

I know for a fact that I went to bed crying on Dec. 29th, telling my husband that I was sure he wished he’d married that girl, the artist he knew in college, instead of fat, miserable me.

Within hours, Christmas started coming again, and the present was a healthy baby girl. Beautiful and wide-eyed. Ours. And we could hear the angels singing. Don’t they sing at every child’s birth?

What joy God filled our lives with from that day to this. I learned to mother. And though there were days I knew I made mistakes, I look at my daughter now and know God gave me the tools I needed to raise her up right. In a couple of weeks, our post-Christmas baby will be 30 years old. 30. I have no words, except thank you, God for filling my life with such indescribable joy.


susanbyrumrountree.com is the original work of author susan byrum rountree. all written work and photography is copyright protected and can only be used with written permission of the author.

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