Wonderful Memories, Just Beyond Reach

Wonderful Memories, Just Beyond Reach

If only you could wrap up a few happy moments and give them back to people when they are in need of happiness. If only you could freeze the best of times the way you freeze fresh-picked blueberries in June to savor again on a December day. We have memory, yes. But memory is a tease, a still shot, a small picture of what was, not all of what was. It’s a blueberry pie on the cover of a gourmet magazine, beautiful to look at but tormenting, too…

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Still in Love with Dollhouse after All These Years

Still in Love with Dollhouse after All These Years

All the things I've wanted. Saved for. Had to have. Bought. Loved in my life. Then, one day, abandoned. That's what happens with things. Ginny dolls. Cabbage Patch dolls. Elsa and Anna. All history now, passion turned to indifference, generation after generation after generation.

My first real purchase? I was 12. It was summer. I'd baby-sat for an entire week, Monday through Friday, 9 to 5, three kids. I'd earned…

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When the littlest things really are the are biggest

My husband insists I shouldn't have been kick-boxing with women 20, well, actually 30, years younger than I am. But it wasn't real kick-boxing, It was kick-boxing light, and I did it only once and only for a half-hour and it was fun and didn't hurt at all. Until I was walking to my car. That's when age, old bones, maybe even the fates, caught up with me…

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If only there were a way to bottle a child's pure glee

If only there were a way to bottle a child's pure glee

I am looking at my grandson Adam's picture as I write this. His mother snapped it with her iPhone, an old iPhone so the picture is pixelated and a little out of focus. Still, you can see the joy in his face, a child's joy; unmasked is the word, I think. But it's the wrong word because Adam is only 11 and has nothing yet to hide…

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Pure love is the antidote to aging

The Boston Globe

Beverly Beckham

I used to celebrate a birth month, not just a birthday. But this year was different. This year I was strangely quiet about the whole thing. The quiet you get when you realize there will be enough candles on your cake to boil eggs, and the sleep lines that used to disappear five minutes after you woke up have long been permanent.However, I have discovered an antidote to the ever-accelerating passage of years.

Usually I go around telling people that it's my birthday when it's an entire month away. "Only 30 more days," I say. "Only two more weeks. Only 12 more hours!"

Usually, I announce this to everyone and anyone. It's not a birth day, I explain. It's a birth month. And usually I feel shortchanged because my birth month is February.

This year was different. This year I was strangely quiet about the whole thing. Not grumpy quiet, but incredulous quiet.

The quiet you get when you realize there will be enough candles on your cake to boil eggs, and the sleep lines that used to disappear five minutes after you woke up have long been permanent.

I remember how shocked I was by the number 40. I peered in the mirror that day and looked at my face and inspected my forehead and thought, "I have so many lines!" So I started wearing bangs.

I remember how I felt when I turned 50 and looked in the mirror and couldn't find my waist. I'd had a waist my entire life. I'd had a waist just the week before. But then 50 came and, poof, it was gone. So I started wearing sweaters.

I remember the day I turned 60. I had learned by then not to look in the mirror.

Now I am post-60. Post-post. Actually, pre-70 is more precise. In less time than it takes to pay off a car loan, I will be 70. If I'm lucky. "You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't," is the phrase that leaps to mind.

My father always said, when I began to be stunned by the numbers, how they accelerate every year and how they push you into categories you're never ready for — your 30s, your 40s, middle age, late-middle age.

"If you think you feel old, how do you think I feel having a daughter your age?" And then in a kinder and more philosophical tone, he'd add, "How old would you think you were if you didn't know how old you are? If there were no mirrors and no one around to tell you your age?"

He didn't always know the right thing to say, but sometimes he did.

My birthday came despite my inattention to it and my grandkids called and sang to me, first the Canton contingent, then the New York kids.

When the first group finished "Happy Birthday," I said, "Aren't you going to sing, 'Are you 1? Are you 2? Are you 3?Are you 4?"' And they laughed at me. Except Adam, who hung in and counted all the wayto 67, which took some time. Luke, who is 4 and wanted to count too, said, "But, Mimi, I can't count that high."

Mimi. This is the antidote to age, what turns gray to silver and straw to gold, this name and this role in a person's life. "Auntie" is the same, and "Caryn" and "Nona" and "GAA" and any name that's said in a tone that children use when they love you so purely and so blindly, that it makes your heart hurt in a place you didn't even know you had.

Until you had them.

"Mimi, will you read me a book? Mimi, will you sing me a song? Mimi, when are you coming to visit? Happy birthday, Mimi."

I hear that word and wrinkles and a lost waist and even the ever-accelerating years cease to matter. Because these children don't see my wrinkles or my missing waist. They see Mimi. They see me.

Oh, to be a kid once again in the summer

Oh, to be a kid once again in the summer

Kids have no lists. No calendars. No scraps of paper with scribbled ­reminders to pay bills, get dental floss. No baby sitters to call. No appointments to keep. No shopping to do, no places to go and things to buy. Spreadsheets? Quicken? "Where's the coupon for ­Jiffy Lube?" and "Has anyone seen the laundry receipt?" "Thank you for contacting me, but I'm away on vacation and will not be checking my e-mail. If you need immediate assistance, please contact. . . All these things are in the future.

Childhood is a paper boat borne along by a lazy breeze on a summer day.

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A Happy Obsession with Singing

My husband jokes, "The cows know the songs by now." He's referring to a scene in the movie "City Slickers" in which Billy Crystal is trying to explain the basics of VCR recording to a friend who isn't catching on. The two of them are on horseback, driving cattle, trotting along, and a rider behind them, who has been listening, shouts: "He doesn't get it! He'll never get it. It's been four hours! The cows can tape something by now."  And so it is with me and singing…

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Beloved Children Both, and Losses Beyond Measure

Beloved Children Both, and Losses Beyond Measure

It wasn’t supposed to end like this. Not after all they have been through. Not after all the hope and prayers and therapies and people storming the heavens. If you have faith the size of a mustard seed nothing will be impossible to you. That’s what we’re told. They had faith. And they didn’t want to move anything as big as a mountain.  All they wanted was to save a child, their child, to make their child well…

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No point in wishing life away

No point in wishing life away

Where did June go? And May? And why does February plod and March stall, while spring and summer fly by? It's July Fourth - the quintessential summer holiday - and I still have winter coats hanging in the front hall closet. I haven't planted any annuals yet. Or weeded my garden. My window boxes are empty. There's not a single flower on my deck. My marigolds are seeds in packages. The lawn furniture remains in the shed. And I haven't even begun to make a summer reading list.

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Happiness is finding magic in the everyday

We were on vacation at Rock Harbor waiting for the sun to set - my grown children and their young children, all of us way out on a jetty, the sky pink, the night clear, the bugs, for the moment, somewhere else.

A steel band was playing, calypso music; not Old Cape Cod, but it was nice, festive.

The little kids didn't stay still for long, though.

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A woman's fancy turns to birds and flowers

A woman's fancy turns to birds and flowers

I don't know when the birds became important. Knowing their names and their sounds. And the garden. Working it. Growing it.

Once upon a spring, it was all about the boys, chasing them away through most of grade school, first, second, third, fourth, and fifth grade, then suddenly, one day, reversing the game and running after them. Lilacs enclosed my old schoolyard, huge hedges of them that were taller than the tallest sixth-grader. And every May they perfumed the air in our stuffy, overcrowded classroom…

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In season of rebirth, the sounds and smiles are testament

 In season of rebirth, the sounds and smiles are testament

Rebirth, everywhere. Across the street and down the street. In my front yard and just beyond my backyard. In the ground and above the ground.

Al, my neighbor across the street whose heart stopped beating 230 days ago, turned 80 last Friday. Lazarus, I call him. And he smiles and shakes his head in wonderment and gratitude and turns to his wife, Katherine, and she smiles, too.

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Conjuring up images of the past

Conjuring up images of the past

It used to be easy. More than easy. It was like breathing. It happened without thought. I'd be driving - past my old school, Tower Hill, where my best friend, Rosemary, and I used to play; past the halfway point, where Rosemary and I used to meet; past St. Bernadette's Church, where my husband and I were married. And I'd see these places exactly as they had been, 10, 20, 30 years before - Tower Hill School hidden behind a hedge of lilacs so thick you could smell them from the next block; the halfway point all woods and swamp and orange lilies; St. Bernadette's so new it looked placed, not built, on the black macadam…

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