Capture

I posted a lot of photos to Instagram on May 4, 2013. It was a big day, after all–maybe the biggest day of my life, besides the one I was born or the one when I found out how much Jesus loves me or the one when I first tasted coffee. Those were all big, good days. But this one was different, because I graduated college.

photo 1

I posted a lot of photos to Instagram because I was proud. I was proud because I’m a first generation student, the first one in my family to graduate college. And I was proud because college is a hard thing, a thing that demands that you get out of bed so many times when all you really want to do is sleep (in this way, I feel that going to college is akin to having a baby. Seems like a solid theory, right?)

So I posted a lot of photos, photos popping with smiles, each one shouting, “I”M HAPPY!” And I was happy–so, so happy. But later I scrolled back through my Instagram feed, and I realized that some of the other emotions got lost in the happy, that the filters on those photos blurred the truth that they represented. HAPPY is a terrific element of photos, but I needed to remember that they showed off more, that they weren’t just snapshots of a happy moment, but of a life that has its happy and its joyful and its honestly hard and its toast-hits-the-floor-jelly-side-down moments. It’s hard to believe everyone else has those toast moments when no one Instagrams them, am I right? That’s where the words come in.

I posted a lot of photos, like this one:600960_10200295378679631_1466166855_n

I like this photo. I like it quite a bit. I like it because, for one thing, we look super happy, which we were. The joy that seems so evident is real–you can’t make that up. But we were also exhausted, which perhaps you cannot see, but I can. The day had been unimaginably long already at this point, and we’d all just done this great big thing, but we didn’t feel any different, only tired and a little bit hungry and amped up on adrenaline. We’re all sort of bumbling around, unsure of how to feel or what to do, and we find each other and hold on, looking into the cameras again and again until our cheeks burn.

We find each other because it’s what we do–we find each other because we’ve learned to do that, but the picture doesn’t tell about the process, about how we’ve fought for the relationships that look so sunshiney here. We’ve spent four years loving each other, and I can tell you those four years saw snappy comebacks and broken hearts and grumpy mornings. I can tell you that I’ve looked each of these people in the eyes and said, “I’m sorry,” and also, “I forgive you.” I can tell you that they have taught me what it’s like to have a friend and to be a friend, that when I have felt certain there was no reason for them to give me another chance, they always did. I can tell you that when they call me, I answer, and when they need me, I go, and when I see one of them coming toward me, I get excited because things are better when they’re around. It’s a photo of six tired, happy kids, holding onto one another, unsure of most things but that. It sure did get a lot of likes on Instagram (they like us, kiddos.)

**********************************

In an unromantic twist, I headed straight to the bathroom as soon as I filed out of the Coliseum. Once I finished (I set my diploma on the floor and decided to Lysol it later), I came out just in time to see my mom disappear around a corner, and my heart began to race, because it was my mom. I shouted, “Mom!” and at least 17 middle-aged women turned to see if I was theirs, but not my mom. I wondered, as I chased after her, if their daughters had ever asked if they could call them, “Mom,” or if the title ever sounded strange when it hit theirs ears. I wondered if those same daughters relished the word like it was dark chocolate, sweet and rich and the real deal. I said it again to her, but she still didn’t hear me, so instead, I touched her shoulder, and when she turned and saw me–when they all did–they came around me in the way a family does. They told me how proud they were and I believed them. We took this picture.

934829_10200288442786238_877499489_n

Later, I wondered if the chap who snapped it had any idea that we weren’t a normal family, but rather, one who had shifted and swelled and meshed with one another. I wondered if he’d noticed that I had different eyes than they did, that I had a different story, if any of that showed up on the screen. I wondered if the picture shows that the night before, we’d argued over what appetizers to order for dinner or that my mom had woken up before the sun with me or that there was a time when I believed they couldn’t ever possibly feel like my real family. I wondered if the picture said, “But they do. They are.”

**********************************

I guess, relatively speaking, that I didn’t post that many photos–maybe four or five. But it was enough for the instagram likes to drain my cell phone battery, and those made me smile–you shared in my joy, my pride, my affinity for photos that make it seem that I graduated college in 1983. And the day–the long, beautiful, perfect, exhausting day–was one to be celebrated, so I was happy to celebrate with all those people who follow my life in photos.

But I needed words. I needed to place paragraphs under these moments, paragraphs to say it’s what you think, and it’s not what you think. I needed to let sentences explain that it’s everything you see, it’s all the sunshine, and it’s more, and it’s less, because it’s shadows, too. I needed to show you these photos and ask you to celebrate them–like them, please–but also, give me a chance to explain. I needed to admit that it was a long, long day, that I came home and stared at the wall in a stupor for a good half hour because I wasn’t sure how to start wrangling my emotions. I needed to show you a picture of me with my favorite people in front of my favorite place and put into letters that I’m scared to leave them, scared because they’re the best thing. I needed to say, also, that I’m excited, excited because I will always believe the best is yet to come, in some way or another. I needed to say all of this, and I needed to show you, too, that we were happy.

947373_10200291272096969_679887788_n

It was a big day, after all. Maybe one of the biggest days of my life. Thanks for celebrating with me.

photo 2

About these ads

Of Evident Invisibles

of evident invisibles
exquisite the hovering…

–cummings

I tend to move quickly. I don’t mean that figuratively–everyone and their mamas know I be hanging on before I can let go–but honestly, in my day-to-day life, I go from place to place with the speed of a jackrabbit, mostly because my mother walks really, really fast and I spent all our grocery outings trying to keep up with her. I talk really fast, too, in such a way that leaves my brain in the dust. I feel quickly, my heart swallowing people and places and broken bits of nostalgia up before they know what has hit them (this is not quite as romantic or endearing as it may sound, let me promise you.) And I bang things around, in my speed to get places and say things and become emotionally attached to things. You may not think this true, if I’ve never banged you around, but it is. I have to take special care; I try my best to hold people and tacos and cats carefully, as not to dent or fracture or smudge them.

Paradoxically, though, I am fragile. I am soft, easily bruised. I get winded when I move too quickly, and I get the feeling I’ll never be in shape enough to keep up. And I have bits that notice the world, even as I’m breezing through, and so it is that I come to halt, panting, noticing. So I am caught so often, strung between telling my story and listening, between running to class and standing paralyzed by the beauty of something ordinary, between feeling so fiercely that my bones quiver and sleeping. (Sleeping is kind of my strong suit in general.) Perhaps this seems confessional to you (perhaps not if you’ve ever been banged around by me), but, you see, this is my place to run after I’ve noticed, or listened, or felt. This is where I file my remarkable things, because I do believe that they are suspended all around us, waiting to be to plucked and tucked in our pockets, moments to become ours and to mean something to us, if we let them. And I tell you so you reach out too, and take your own, and call your life beautiful, because if you want, you can see it that way. Everything I said before–the me-breaking-the-tacos part–is to let you know I don’t have a soapbox, only a longing for the joy and peace that I know is already mine. It’s only to say sometimes I have to run into a tree to look up and see it, and that what happens inside of me when the wind blows its leaves is extraordinary.

cottontree

*******************************

The past couple of weeks have been long but not tedious, because I’m entering into that period of time when everything is glossed over with “But it’s almost over.” Still, my here-to-thereness is in full swing nonetheless, so I am running, stopping, smelling the roses, running, whining, counting the clouds, reading, running, sleeping. Maybe you are too. Here are my standstill moments; may you find yours, too.

*******************************

It’s a busy day at the office, so much so that my feet are sweating from all of the back-and-forth I was doing. I spend an hour lifting boxes of magazines up and down, causing wisps of hair to escape from my bobby pins and my fingers to turn red. I slide the pages into envelope after envelope, fasten the clasp, pull packing tape across the top, and drop it into a pile. Slide, fasten, stick, drop. Over and over and over. Perhaps I was a little lonesome, but only because mailing day is like watching your baby graduate kindergarten, and I was doing it alone. But then, in the middle of the process–slide, fasten, sti–a magazine fell off the table and open to the page of my story. There is my name, read most probably by my mother, but it marks the work that had kept me up at night, caused me to bite my nails to the quick, pushed me to eat 37 Hershey kisses too many. The page, there, just a page with a name; the name, there, belonging to me; the me, there in my office, but also 15 years old with a dream, and all the dreaming really looks like biting your fingernails to the quick and rewriting and picking another word and earning your name, in 12-point font, on a page, and no one told me that. But there, my name on the page, feeling better than I’d ever dreamt. I stop to touch it, to whisper to dreamers everywhere that dreaming is hard and that I’m dreaming still, let’s dream together, and then: slide, fasten, stick, drop.

photo 4

*******************************

I am sitting on the floor of my living room, 6:17 p.m. sunshine warming patches, a March evening wind teasing spring. My head is full to the brim with gotta-dos, but I’m just breathing, letting the quiet do a number on my head. I almost start to write, but I decide instead to Google (again) “jobs in publications” and so I scroll through the listings (again), my eyes looking for something that sounds like me, or could sound like me. I have no intention of applying yet, but I just want to see, to calm the anxious voices in my head. Before I know it, I’m writing a cover letter, putting a final bullet point on my resume, sending an email that ends with, “Thank you for your time and consideration.” I know my email lands among dozens of others, but this is the first time I’ve tried, the first time I’ve said, “Pick me, please.” It’s the first time I’ve really reached out past May to that future of mine and said, “Let’s do this.” The quiet stands still, noticing me not; the wind blows without knowing that I’ve just acknowledged June and July and the rest of my life with a smile. It settles on me first, but then it flits away, and I know the worry, the anxiety, isn’t coming back. So I make some toast.

photo 5

*******************************

I stop by her office to say hello, and she invites me to sit down, and like I’ve done so many times before, I pull a chair up and tell her about the bullet points of my life. She knows all the bold ones already, so we talk about how I sometimes feel caught between being a rational being and seeing life aesthetically; about how the sunshine fell on someone and it made me love him, maybe just for second, or maybe for the rest of my life; about how in the summers I nap in the Alabama sun and wake up with puddles of my sweat pooling around me, happy as a clam. “Some people think that’s weird,” I say, shrugging, and she smiles and says, “You are weird,” and I think about how this woman didn’t know me two years ago, but now she does. I think about she picked me to write for the thing she pours her heart into, and now she pours her heart into me, and I tell her she’s my friend, and despite how different we are, we are friends. I want to tell her I have very few friends whom I trust as wholeheartedly as I trust her, but instead we talk about something in the paper and then I leave.

On my way to my car, I think about how I’d like some tacos, but I come home and have a salad.

blooms

The Secret Life of Bees

I look; morning to night I am never done with looking.
Looking, I mean not just standing around, but standing around as though with your arms open.
–Mary Oliver

Aren’t you busy?

Isn’t that what we say, when they ask you how you are? “Good! Busy, but good.” And oh, it’s true. I am busy. That word, when I say it so many times, begins to sound a certain way–bitter on my tongue. Busy, busy, busy. Too much. Busy. Can’t do that. Busy. Tired. Things to do/to-do list. Busy, busy. And because I am busy, busy in a way that makes people laugh when I admit I must schedule them in my planner or they’re not “official.” I am busy in a way that causes the barista to raise his eyebrow at me when I order my third cappuccino of the day. I am busy in the way that some of you must be, the way that pulls you from commitment to class to work, in this fashion that strings you along until your breath is but shallow panting in an effort to keep up. I am busy in ways that demand so many hours that I feel guilty if I waste precious ones people-watching in a corner of the coffee shop–or at least I feel guilty for a bit until I remember that people-watching is a rather good way to spend time. And because when I tell people I’m busy they always respond, “Oh, I know what you mean!”, I’m assuming you do know what I mean. I’m assuming you’re busy, too.

photo 3

I was on the phone with my best friend earlier this week, and at the same time paging through my planner. “I think next week is going to be busy,” I said, breathing deeply at the mere idea of the tasks that would summon my efforts. “That’s okay,” she said. And I stopped to think–to look around the coffee shop–and I realized she was right. I just have to pause and see at my busy.

My busy is mine, see. My busy isn’t your busy–it’s special busy, busy picked out for me, busy only I can do. If I kneel down and examine my busy between my fingers, I can see it. Hanging on between the b and the u is a group of girls who meet to sing to Jesus, who expect to me show up, sure, but who I know would forgive me if I didn’t. In the middle of my busy is a magazine that I helped stitch together with my words, yes, but also with 2 a.m. emails and listening to that song over and over and a red pen and a swelling of pride. My busy calls me to walk out of a classroom with goosebumps from expanding my brain. And when I step into the warmth, with all of those brilliant words I’ve consumed already becoming a part of me, I turn to my comrade and mention the spangles of sun cast through a checkerwork of leaves: “Isn’t the world a beauty?”

flowers

I’ve been busy, sure, and I’ve been busy in the ways that leave you with dark circles under your eyes, the kind of running that leads to last-minute everything and oops-I-forgot-that panic, and a sigh and a knowing shrug when someone asks, “How are you?” I’ve been busy, like you have been, sometimes so busy that I do not notice the spangles of sun, the dancing coins themselves, that are mentioned in the heavy book I’ve been carrying around all day. Sometimes I am so busy that I climb on the bus for a reprieve and find myself riding in circles, missing stops, and panicking at the thought of missing my moments of busy.

The busy is busy, it’s demanding and jagged and sometimes stressful, like all good busy is at times. But the busy shines, or at least it does if you look at it in the right light. And let me encourage you to hold your busy up in the sun and watch it reflect Glory–may you allow yourself to get steeped in the heat of busy, and see that your busy is handing you your moments, the ones that are only for here and only for now, the ones we turn to look for when the busy calms.

warmth

So I have been busy: I have risen with the sun to share my coffee with James Joyce. I have found myself zipping across campus, as fast as I could zip, to fall, three minutes late and sweating, into a desk, my teacher literally talking to me in a language I can’t understand quite yet. I have cried on the bus because I missed my stop and I was late and I had work to do. Busy. But then: Busy: a cluster of girls laughing; a late-night trip for doughnuts and milk and dancing; a baby clutching my neck. Dozens of things to do, lists to finish and more to make, a life to be lived; a chance to breathe through the busy and notice the dancing coins.

sunriver

Look and see them for yourself, Reader. They are there–they are everywhere.

So come to the pond,
or the river of your imagination,
or the harbor of your longing,
and put your lips to the world.

And live
your life.

–MO