By MBPDLPayday Loans

Tagged: graduation

Aug 17

The Phenomenon of Family

Until very recently, I took for granted what Family meant. Or, perhaps more accurately, I overlooked the deeper roots. I felt them, I just never considered them.

My mother always told me that family are the people who have to put up with your crap even when no one else will because if they don’t, it will be awkward at Christmas, and no one wants to have that unholy burden on them. No one wants to be the one who ruined Christmas. So you live and let live and forgive and love unconditionally even though none of your shirts fit anymore because your little sister and her enormous boobs have warped them all, and why can’t Mom just make her wear her own clothes? Sometimes, Family took more effort than other times.

In my mind, my parents went from being A Couple to being A Family on the very moment I showed up, their oldest daughter. (I find that often my misguided, misinformed assumptions about my parents revolve around myself, my presence and it’s subsequent glorious effects on their combined lives.) Rarely does it occur to children– innately selfish and simple-minded creatures, simply for not realizing there is a bigger scope-of-things to consider– that their parents had lives before them. Or that each parent had an entire life before they met one another and chose to team up.

It wasn’t until I was almost 20 that I realized two things about my father simultaneously. 1. He was a very cool guy, and if I was not his daughter, I would still very much like to be his friend. (Happily, I now get to do both.) And 2. That man can really tell a story. (And does he ever have cool stories to tell.) At 18, my mother had become my best friend, and I started to open my eyes to how much they’d given up for me, given to me… none of it begrudgingly. When children have this moment, it is the profound beginning of a new appreciation for the people who birthed them. I’m sure it seems to take forever, but eventually we get there, to the place where we realize they are so much more than the hander-out-ers of groundings and allowance. And there are perks in it for them, too. Below, you’ll see my parents on the day their oldest graduated college with a BA in Film and Screen Studies and then went out with her parents and got completely shitfaced.

My Parents... Featuring: My Father's Drunk Face.

My Parents... Featuring: My Father's Drunk Face.

Happiness looks good on them, together, 25 years after they stood up and promised to love each other forever. They’ve spent every day since making good on that promise and showing my sister and I firsthand what it means to be part of a Family That Loves Each Other NO MATTER WHAT (capital letters courtesy of my mother, who can push words through her teeth with a fervor that I can only hope instills subtle terror in the hearts of my children with the acute accuracy the way she once did to the hearts of my sister and I).

The Kiss.

Kristin and Ryan were just a couple in my mind, too, until the morning they had Jonas. Then they started being a family. Like, a real family, with a baby. (… … … KRISTIN HAS A BABY! … I am not freaking out… … … As long as I take time to pause on this matter… … … I am not freaking out.) When I got to talk to her the morning after her C-section, she told me, in these words, “He looks just like his father.” She meant Ryan, of course, who I knew as the-guy-she-was-sorta-dating before I knew him as her-boyfriend before he became her-fiancee and then the-man-she-married-in-the-park-by-the-lake. He’s now the-father-of-her-child… And, wow. They’re a family. The boy who didn’t kiss her under the fireworks all those years ago finally redeemed himself for letting the moment slip by.

He helped Kristin become a Mommy. They’re a family. One plus one plus very-tiny-one equals a family. Jonas has Ryan’s face, and that proves that my math is wholly correct. They went from couple, to family, literally, overnight.

James and I were laying in bed the night after Kristin had given birth, just talking. We talked about work, and about school, and about money, and about life, and about our futures, and about the cats, and about our vacation, and about our mutual friends, and about our non-mutual friends, and about the fact that Kristin and Ryan had a baby. We talked about where we wanted to be as people, and as a couple, in five years. We talked about our dreams, and about how we’d raise kids.

We didn’t talk about getting engaged, orĀ  getting married. We don’t talk about those things. I don’t need to with him.

And somewhere in the middle of the conversation, it hit me: He’s my family now. Somewhere along the way, and I hate to admit that I think the cats had a very big part in this, James has gone from My Boyfriend to My Person to My Family. And together, we’re putting together the beginning of what it is that our parents gave each of us: a strong familial foundation on which our children will build their lives.

It never occurred to me that it’s a process, that two people have steps to take before they suddenly produce a child that make them a family. There are a lot of parents out there who are not families, and there are a lot of families out there in which the parental-units are not biologically linked to their children. They’re still families.

And to bring it full circle like this, it’s pretty amazing. To consciously be at the beginning of something so profound and awesome is humbling, and exciting, and empowering, and amazingly comforting. I know that James and I have what it takes to build a foundation so strong that nothing– not even Evil Kittens– can shake it. I know this because we have two sets of amazing parents who have taught us these skills every day, our entire lives. I know this because we have between us one of the strongest bonds of trust and respect and love that I’ve ever seen among two people.

And I know this because we both place equal value in the phenomenon that I’m witnessing, first hand, reveal itself to me in my every waking day: the Phenomenon of Families coming to be.

In the Making.

We have a ways to go… We’re looking forward to enjoying the ride. I’ve heard good things about the destination and better things about the getting-there. In the meantime, we have a very long road trip with two very-small kittens coming up in the next 72 hours.

Amazing what you’ll do to get back to your roots, your mother’s hugs and to hold the next generation of your very best friend in your arms. I’ll even travel with Evil Kittens.

-M.

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Aug 01

Memory Lane.

Frozen Dream, by Shel Silverstein:

I’ll take the dream I had last night
And put it in my freezer,
So someday long and far away
When I’m an old grey geezer,
I’ll take it out and thaw it out,
This lovely dream I’ve frozen,
And boil it up and sit me down
And dip my old cold toes in.

We all have them, our old dreams and favorite memories. We do exactly what the poem says, we snuggle the dreams we cherish the most in the far recesses of our mind and summon them when we need them most. When the world goes dark, and it’s hard to remember what days with sunlight felt like.

These are my moments, the ones that make me smile no matter how hard the rain or how dismal the day.

Kristin at her Baby Shower. I'll love this image forever because in most of the other photos I took that day, Kristin was looking at me like, "Really, Mal?" I got a lot of cheesey smiles. But this shows her greeting a coworker's daughter, and the smile is so genuine and motherly that when I saw the image after the fact, it was the first time I looked at my very pregnant best friend and saw her first and foremost as a mother. She'll likely be having Jonas, her baby, within the week.

Kristin at her Baby Shower. I'll love this image forever because in most of the other photos I took that day, Kristin was looking at me like, "Really, Mal?" I got a lot of cheesey smiles. But this shows her greeting a coworker's daughter, and the smile is so genuine and motherly that when I saw the image after the fact, it was the first time I looked at my very pregnant best friend and saw her first and foremost as a mother. She'll likely be having Jonas, her baby, within the week.

Blue Skies. This is what the sky looks like on the lake from the deck of my father's boat. Fishing with my father has easily supplied me with the happiest set of Hometown Memories I'll take with me into full-fledged adulthood. All you hear is the lapping of the waves against the boat and the zip of the fishing line with each cast. Sedatives don't even provide that kind of peace and relaxation.

Blue Skies. This is what the sky looks like on the lake from the deck of my father's boat. Fishing with my father has easily supplied me with the happiest set of Hometown Memories I'll take with me into full-fledged adulthood. All you hear is the lapping of the waves against the boat and the zip of the fishing line with each cast. Sedatives don't even provide that kind of peace and relaxation.

Dad, Reelin' one In. This is easily my favorite photograph of all time, from the gradient lighting to the arc of the fishing pole. It's my dad like I'll always think of him.

Dad, Reelin' one In. This is easily my favorite photograph of all time, from the gradient lighting to the arc of the fishing pole. It's my dad like I'll always think of him.

The Captain. This really was one of the best mornings for fishing, ever.

The Captain. This really was one of the best mornings for fishing, ever.

Corduroy and I. This was back during Sophomore year. (Before the epic heartbreak and the tequila.) Cord was Sammy's new puppy (and I'm not posting photos of her, because she had already washed her fact when I got there that evening, and real friends never post photos of friends without makeup.) He was so sweet, and his breath smelled like Baby Puppy, and he wiggled when he walked. We just chatted and laughed and snuggled the puppy. Life was so much simpler then.

Corduroy and I. This was back during Sophomore year. (Before the epic heartbreak and the tequila.) Cord was Sammy's new puppy (and I'm not posting photos of her, because she had already washed her fact when I got there that evening, and real friends never post photos of friends without makeup.) He was so sweet, and his breath smelled like Baby Puppy, and he wiggled when he walked. We just chatted and laughed and snuggled the puppy. Life was so much simpler then.

The Grimmace. This was taken by an ex, on Christmas Eve, and this was my reacting to the house being roughly 10 Degrees Farenheit.

The Grimmace. This was taken by an ex, on Christmas Eve, and this was my reacting to the house being roughly 10 Degrees Farenheit.

Beth Martin Langford. At the time she was the National Vice President of Kappa Delta, she has since stepped up into the role of President. Because she's that amazing. Being in the same room as her was like being infused with energy by standing next to lightning. Productive, witty, inspiring lightning. She also introduced me (halfway) to Maura Hayes, who is easily the Kappa Delta that I most admire. (Steph Scalzo and Amster are my KD sisters standing with us.)

Beth Martin Langford. At the time she was the National Vice President of Kappa Delta, she has since stepped up into the role of President. Because she's that amazing. Being in the same room as her was like being infused with energy by standing next to lightning. Productive, witty, inspiring lightning. She also introduced me (halfway) to Maura Hayes, who is easily the Kappa Delta that I most admire. (Steph Scalzo and Amster are my KD sisters standing with us.)

Graduation Night. Yes, I am wasted. So is James. Arune is not. As always, when my parents are involved, I blame them for letting me drink four glasses of champagne, and then for letting James and I take that shot of Patron the strange man at the bar bought us. It was such a happy day. Then we spent the next day moving, hungover. Not a good look.

Graduation Night. Yes, I am wasted. So is James. Arune is not. As always, when my parents are involved, I blame them for letting me drink four glasses of champagne, and then for letting James and I take that shot of Patron the strange man at the bar bought us. It was such a happy day. Then we spent the next day moving, hungover. Not a good look.

My Parents. My father and I have the same drunk face. Thanks, Murph.

My Parents. My father and I have the same drunk face. Thanks, Murph.

More to come. Those are all the happy moments of mine that you can have for now.

-M.

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