So tired of taking a number

So tired of taking a number

`Reframe," is what my friend Anne tells me every time - and the times have been many - that I've phoned her to moan about having to go to the grocery store.

She says I should think about all the people in the world who would love to trade places with me, who would be thrilled to be driving - not walking in sand, in snow, barefoot and hungry and in penury - to a place packed with all kinds of "wonderful" things.

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Good things happen while you're waiting

The Boston Globe

Beverly Beckham

I still have it, tucked in an old scrapbook, a small, year-at-a-glance-paper calendar, which, for six, long months, was taped to my bedroom mirror. I remember looking at the calendar, every morning, from July 1, 1967 to January 20, 196, carefully, religiously, the days then coloring in the square of that day. No simple check marks for me. No giant X's. Just Crayola pastels, the colors of fairy tales, marking the passage of time.

The song in my head back then was the Beach Boys "Wouldn't it be nice if we could wake up in the morning when the day is new?” I was so eager to begin married life that I didn't give much thought to the life I was leaving.

I was 20, then. I had a mother, a father, a second-hand car my father bought when I was a freshman in college, a car he was still paying for as I was dreaming about being a bride. I was the first in the family to go to college, but I lived at home. He didn’t want me driving with anyone so he bought me a car he said was “safe.” I had never been away from home not ever. Not even for summer camp.

What must my mother have thought when she looked at that calendar? When she saw the eagerness and expectation in all those squares?

In my mind I see her, not face-on, but in the mirror, behind me, smiling. I see the stuffed animals on my bed, my old record player in the foreground, the stack of 45s next to it, sweaters and skirts everywhere, and me, as I was then, little more than a child.

This is the gift of time - that you can look backward and see.

I see now how young I was. I believed in fairy tale endings and was positive that when the last square on the calendar was filled in with I walked down the aisle, life would go on just as it was except that I would be a Mrs. waking up in a different house, eating breakfast at a different table, studying in a different chair, but that's all. Nothing else would change. Not the music I listened to. Not my friends. Not my clothes. Not my beliefs. Not my mother and father. Not the world.

I never once imagined 40 years later. Forty years was outer space, as far in the future as silent movies and the Great Depression were in the past. There was only today and next week and next year.

But here it is now my 40th wedding anniversary.

Benchmarks make you pause.

When we were married 25 years, my husband and I renewed our vows. They felt more solemn than the first time we said them. "In sickness and in health, until death do us part" weightier, no long an "if" but a "when."

The first time our parents sat misty-eyed in the pews behind us. The first time we smiled for the cameras. The first time was before losses, and sorrows, and disappointments.

When I was young, I believed I would always be young. I believed that I could die at any moment, but that I would never be old.

"You're not old," my grown-up kids insist. "Sixty is the new 50."

Perhaps. But there's no denying that 40 years married is a long, long time.

Katherine, my neighbor across the street, insists that it is not. She calls us newlyweds. "Wait until you're married almost 60 years."

I hope that we will be married 60 years. But I'm in no hurry to get there. Because I know that so many good things happen while you're wishing away time.

While I was waiting to be married, I had my mother beside me. While I was waiting for my husband to come home, I had his parents and my parents nearby. While I was waiting for a child to be born, I had that child within me and all to myself.

And so it is with waiting for wedding anniversaries, even when you're not watching the calendar, even when you long ago stopped coloring in the days.

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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Time doesn't heal, but it helps you cope

Time doesn't heal, but it helps you cope

There's a Willie Nelson song that keeps playing in my head. "I've been feeling a little bad, 'cause I've been feeling a little better without you."

My aunt Lorraine died 10 years ago and the song, I suppose, is a reminder that not only have I survived, but that I have grown, too, and despaired and rejoiced and wept and failed and laughed and succeeded, all without this woman I was certain I could not live without.

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A Free Fall with a Soft Landing

A Free Fall with a Soft Landing

“However motherhood comes to you it’s a miracle.” - Valerie Harper

She never believed. Not in her core. Not the way she believes that morning follows night.

Or that ice melts in the heat. Or that if you throw something into the air, it will fall back to earth.  This kind of certainty eluded her.

Tara’s faith was tenuous. Some days she hoped. Some days she despaired. Most days she wondered if she would ever be a mother…..

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The Magic Doesn't Expire

In the beginning, I did it for my children - or that's what I told myself. I made Halloween costumes, for them. I asked my husband to fashion a giant spider web between two oak trees on the front lawn, for them. I dangled creepy looking spiders and bats from ceilings, bought plates festooned with witches, packed away everything that was summer and replaced it with anything that was Halloween.

I even painted my face green…

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A light of love and joy toward others

A light of love and joy toward others

"May I always put the needs of others before my own. May I so love my family, friends, and co-workers that they see only Your goodness in me. May Your love and Your light shine through in everything I do." - A prayer for growing spiritually. Beth Spence Cann may never have said this prayer. It's Catholic and she was Congregationalist. But she lived it. She put the needs of others before her own. It was the best thing about her. And, in the end, it was the worst. She was murdered two weeks ago by a man she tried to save…

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Finding that the garden is a rabbits' salad bar

Finding that the garden is a rabbits' salad bar

They ate my Jack and the Beanstalk tree. From stem to leafy stem they felled it, devoured it, and made it disappear. Rabbits, I fumed. Bandits and thieves. And other names I cannot repeat. It wasn't, for the record, a real Jack and the Beanstalk tree. It didn't grow from magic beans overnight and disappear above the clouds into a land of giants. It wasn't even a tree, just a leggy, flowering plant. But it was taller than I am by at least a foot, and to the 3- and 4-year-olds who called it their Jack and the Beanstalk tree, it seemed to reach the sky…

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Victories come, sweet and simple

`The victories, when they come, will be sweet," someone, many someones, told us after my granddaughter Lucy was born.

But we didn't believe in victories then or that life would ever be sweet again. We were stunned and scared and grieving the child Lucy wasn't. The words "Down syndrome" had rocked our world.

We should have listened to the people in the trenches, mothers and fathers and sisters and brothers, people who knew and loved someone with a disability who kept telling us: She will be fine. You will be fine. You will be better than fine. Wait. You'll see. We've seen.

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A land of fairy tales and memories

We wore dresses - my grandmother, my mother, and I. My grandmother's was frilly and swirled when she walked. My mother's was light brown, a color she seldom wore but wore well. And mine was turquoise with puff sleeves, a cinched waist, and a white mock-apron top, which I thought was very Heidi-like.

I was into Heidi back then.

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A giving heart takes a worrisome pause

A giving heart takes a worrisome pause

watch him all the time. He is my entertainment and my muse. For years, I'd come into my office, glance out my window and across the street and there would be Al, buffing his car, scrubbing his gutters, mowing his lawn, trimming, digging, raking, painting, hammering, hosing, chipping, shoveling, season after season, always doing something. Or he would be walking Dante, his wife Katherine's big black dog, smiling and talking to everyone he met along the way…

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A grandmother is born

A grandmother is born

I can’t stop thinking about my friend Jill’s new grandson. I look at his photo and smile. I speak his name - Chase Henry – just to say it. And I tell people – neighbors, friends, people at the gym, strangers in line at the deli - about this little boy, whom no one has met yet, but who is already, totally loved. “It isn’t official, but here’s our baby BOY!” Jill’s daughter e-mailed. The phone call she’d been waiting for had finally come. After years that felt like decades, Tara and her husband Rob are at long last parents-in-waiting.

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What parents can't control

What parents can't control

t's eight in the morning and my husband and I are talking about laying stones around the periphery of the garden, big stones, more boulder than brick, in an effort to keep the dirt in and the rabbits out. It's a sensible plan, except for my worry about the little kids who cut through the garden and race down its slope. "Maybe stones are a bad idea," I say to my husband. "What if the kids fall?" "Maybe living near a street is a bad idea," he says, meaning you can't protect children from everything…

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The hands that tell of life and love

The hands that tell of life and love

I am my father's daughter. I have his hands, old hands, worker's hands, calloused and sun damaged. And I have his ways. His ways I accept. The hands stun me. I look at them and they are his, only smaller; the fingers short, the knuckles creased, the veins like tree roots too close to the surface. How and when did this happen? My father's hands fixed things. They were exact, like tweezers, plucking tubes from the back of our TV, testing them, until the one that was making the picture arc was found…

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In every end, there's a beginning

In every end, there's a beginning

I found it in a card shop in Concord, N.H. - Caardvark's, a place that is now closed. It was hanging on a wall and it was perfect.

I'd been looking for perfect. My daughter was newly engaged and I wanted something special to celebrate the moment. For this was my baby who was getting married, my youngest child leaving home not for a little while, not for college, or for a summer, or to test her wings. But to fly away - with someone else - forever.

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