Grampa and the Book of Wishes

About a month before we got married, I started a journal I call the Book of Wishes. My friend Christina had brought me back a beautiful notebook from Jeju, an island off the coast for Korea which is famous for its female divers. One day on my lunch break I started a list:

  • I'm going to finish a book
  • I want to train for a marathon
  • A Dog! We need a dog!

And, highlighted in big letters at the very top:

  • I wish that my grandparents are well enough to enjoy my wedding day

On Thursday, June 19, Ryan and I packed our car and drove to our wedding venue to get ready for the big day. I got my very first French manicure. Before we left our condo, I slipped two postcards in the mail for my grandfather Fred. We'd gotten the news that he wasn't able to travel to join us, so I wanted him to know that we were thinking of him.

The sky was glorious. My parents came bearing food, decorations, candles, framed photos of my grandparents, in-laws, friends and family--and a big, beautiful chuppah. My big brother flew out from Hawaii and got right to work creating block prints with our initials on them. My in-laws hosted us all at their beach condo and we ate pizza and watched the sunset over the ocean. Our dear friend Judi showed up with a car load of amazing decorations for the big day--green and blue mason jars, shells, burlap, vases, jewelry for me to borrow. Ryan's brother and sister-in-law were there too, and my sister-in-law Shelby was already on her way to join us. It was Thursday and I felt a new, wonderful sense of peace. So many of my favorite people were already beginning to gather. Our lives were buzzing with love--and not just our own. Since getting engaged I've begun to notice how quickly love multiplies, and what a relief that is.

Friday morning, June 20, we got straight to work preparing for the rehearsal dinner: decorating, cleaning, coordinating food and people. Our dear friends started to arrive, starting with Laurel, my best friend since womb, this wonderful woman who had collected all the dog doodles I'd created over the years and created a huge, beautiful, life-size dog out of cardboard--a dog bearing her own, cardboard insulin pump. Tiffany and Dumi arrived soon after, best friends, sisters really, both armed with shot bloks and secret stashes of flowers and confetti. I was walking over to the Lagoon House to join them when my parents pulled me aside quietly and shared the news: my 91-year-old grandfather, Fred Jackson, who had for the past year been planning to join us on the big day, had passed away that morning.

We stood under the shade of a big tree. Grampa had not been well for some time. He had a sturdy and proud disposition; he was an engineer. My grandfather was a man of clear and direct expression. Ryan and I got engaged on Christmas Eve 2012, and I remember when we shared the news with Grampa Fred, he smiled, but didn't seem surprised. As the night wore on, I started to wonder if he'd really heard what we'd said. And then, a few hours after dinner, while all of us cousins were in the dining room, he walked in and approached Ryan, speaking (nearly shouting), "Ryan, I'd like to see you in my office." We all watched as Ryan followed him down the hall and they shut the door behind them. I was astonished--and, I have to say, flattered. Their private conversation made our big news seem more official--more important.

Grampa retired the same year I was born. I knew him as an avid traveler. He and my grandmother Alice went to Australia, Europe, Central America, Canada. They went all over the United States. I got a birthday card from them one year that had a photo of them on a zip line in Costa Rica--in their 70s. For 20 years they made annual fishing trips to Alaska, pulling in 140-pound halibut well into their 80s.

Grampa was a gardener. He kept the most thorough fishing logs in the world--tracking weather, water temperature, bait, tackle, time of day, tides. He took beautiful photos and filled his home with pictures of the Canadian and American Rockies.

When Grampa lost Gramma, the woman he called his "peach," his wife of 66 2/3 years (his calculation), he said once that he would never consider meeting anyone else, because he knew that when he saw her again, "she'd know."

The thing about planning and executing a wedding is that time is premium. You spend months (in our case, 18!) planning, troubleshooting, coordinating, and then the weekend arrives and you realize that the hours will not slow down for you. You have to soak in what there is--feel the sun on your face, kiss your partner, your best friends, your parents, your in-laws, your cousins and their beautiful children.

That night, at our rehearsal dinner, my cousins, aunts and uncles were all together, alongside Ryan's family and friends. When my dad announced the news of Grampa's passing, he told us that when it became clear that Grampa was too unwell to travel, he had devised another way to join us in spirit.

When our big day dawned, and the fog lifted off the ocean, I thought of all my grandparents. My sweet Gramma Alice, who died a mere month after my brother's wedding in 2011, and who used to email me when I was in Spain simply to say, "Whatever you do, keep writing. Keep traveling." My darling Amah, who was unable to join us in person, but who got to watch our wedding videos (filmed by my sweet cousin Jeff Wayland), and who recorded the wedding processional for us at the tender age of 91. They were all there with us, in their own ways--Ryan's grandmothers too, in spirit. In many ways, I got my wish.

There are so many more things to say and feel about our wedding day itself. I'd like to broadcast them but in truth, they are private feelings, special things, dear to me and my husband, to my parents and in-laws, my best friends and cousins, to all of those who we love. We are reliving it all in the days that follow, and we are full of love.

I post this now in memory of all of you -- you who made it possible -- and with special thoughts toward my kind and wonderful grandfather Fred, who we will remember every year, on our anniversary. We love you, Grampa.

 

 

 

 

On wisdom and fiction

"....what is wisdom anyway? It's usually just the feeling, 'I better not do that.' 'She better not do that.' 'We better not do that.' What is wisdom? It's just the word, 'No.'"

--Charles Baxter, in conversation with Jeremiah Chamberlain, from the fall 2012 issue of Glimmer Train (Issue 84)

I'm turning 30 at the end of this month, just three weeks before Ryan and I get married. May is always the most frenetic time of the year; birthdays, graduations, weddings. Days are long and endless and hot. Secretly I love spring sweat, the adolescent twinge of warm evenings, sitting outside after sunset with strawberries and root beer, everything so very ripe. I always wanted to get married right when spring met summer. I've never cared much for frills, pomp or circumstance; what was always important to me is the quality of the air. I want to be outside on my wedding day and know that we are all on the cusp. A very specific cusp, one I won't really have the words for until we're all there together.

The space I typically reserve in my brain for writing fiction has been temporarily rented out to event planning--not just our wedding, but a career fair that attracted 350 job seekers to my place of work, as well as our third installment of Play On Words, scheduled for a week from tonight (May 22 at the Blackbird Tavern, and yes, in case you're wondering, you should definitely come, because it will be an amazing evening). (And yes, and that plug was 100% intentional.)

The weeks when I can't or don't write fiction, I imagine that creative space in my brain to be an empty radio station, nobody home but the microphones are still running. I tell myself that though I'd rather be writing, sometimes the leg work can be done in one's head. I see the hours of the day as all opportunities where my characters are interacting--that every hour I'm not with them, they're off doing the truly fiction-worthy things. Today I came across a 2012 issue of Glimmer Train that featured an interview with Charles Baxter, whose essays and lectures on craft are among some of the most informative and accessible that I've read. Like this:

"People spend much of their lives trying to repress and hide things, and I've come to feel that it's the business of fiction to bring up to visibility those things that families and social groups and individuals habitually hide. And you don't have to make explicit what's up to the surface, but something has to come up there."

I read this today and it hit me in the gullet. Fiction is often undervalued for its social and cultural power, but maybe that's because so much "marketable" fiction lacks that focus. What do we respond to? We respond to stories that call us on our shit, even if we lack the courage or self-awareness to realize that's what's going on. Controversy, intrigue, mystery, tragedy, hell, even romance--in some way we crave an honest mirror.

Sometimes I don't write because I'm not ready for that mirror myself.

And then I remember that I'm right there on that cusp--that the sun sets late, that the hummingbirds in the tree outside our bedroom can see us through the mirror, that when I go to bed and when I wake up I'm lying next to someone I love in an entirely new way every day--and then it's time to write.