tags:
On the Fayetteville Square there’s a little store that for years has had a very large, expensive piece of word art that I always stop to read, and it fills my eyes with tears every time. I must have mentioned this casually to Troy in the last month or so, because he visited the store, gasped at the size and price, and made his own version of it for me. Upon investigative researching, he discovered that it’s part of a beautiful short 1970 essay called “Let me Hold you While I May” by Mary Jean Irion, and here are the final words:
“Normal Day, let me be aware of the treasure you are. Let me learn from you, love you, savor you, bless you before you depart. Let me not pass you by in quest of some rare and perfect tomorrow. Let me hold you while I may, for it will not always be so. One day I shall dig my nails into the earth, or bury my face in the pillow, or stretch myself taut, or raise my hands to the sky and want more than all the world your return.”
We’ve had a lot of perfectly normal days this Christmas break, our home once again filled with the sound of Huck’s voice and laughter, the smell of incense, the very sight of him. He’s been relaxed, affectionate, and present, doing puzzles and regularly winning at family card games. He doesn’t snack like the old Huck, and when asked why he said, “I realized how expensive chips were so I stopped buying them.” He has a new appreciation for home cooked meals and doesn’t do nearly the same amount of laundry as he used to. He still loves to sit and visit but has noticed his parents’ propensity to enter a room loudly and interrupt all conversations, causing him to sarcastically ask: “Can we play a game called when you enter this room last and there’s people talking, you are the lowest status?” This has proven especially tricky for Mr. Troy.
On January first of this fine year filled with the ups and downs of all years, we began filling an oversized glass jar with “good things” that were happening in our lives with the intention of emptying the jar on New Year’s Eve and reading the many, many colored note cards aloud. I know there will be lots of reminders of the big days we had in 2023 – Huck’s high school graduation, trips, visitors, celebrations, performances, college move-in day – but I’m most excited to read about all those wonderful normal days that got noticed.
Happy New Year, dear family & friends!