We're flying the unfriendly skies

We're flying the unfriendly skies

Mostly I go with the flow, count my blessings, remind myself how lucky I am because, really, how can I complain about airplanes and flying when for countless centuries people, even rich and powerful ones, couldn't fly, flight a longed-for achievement of which I am a direct and privileged beneficiary.

And that's the thing. The airlines love that we — most of us — are still in the thralls of, "Wow! Isn't this incredible? We're 30,000 feet in the sky and we're not falling!" I may not be the most appreciative flier, but I am always, always appreciative when I land safe and sound. The truth is…

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Unlocking the Power of 'Yes'

Unlocking the Power of 'Yes'

Apparently I was saying "no" too much. "No, thank you." "No, not today." "No, I'm sorry. I can't." Which is why my daughter Julie began talking to me about the power of yes. Saying "yes," she explained with a serious expression and her hand on my shoulder, had led her to people, places, and experiences she might not have had if she had let distance, weather, and an "It's too late and I'm too tired" mindset keep her in her comfort zone…

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Paying Attention to the Details

Paying Attention to the Details

There's no way to slow down time, to change the pace of the here and now and have this finally lush, incredibly beautiful spring linger. I know this. But winter was so long, not because time did the impossible and actually inched to a crawl, but because we did. Heavy coats, boots, hats, gloves, snow, sleet, wind, cold, inertia — they weighed us down and they slowed us down, too.Frozen. That's what we were for months…

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If Only Memories Could Take Us to Another Place and Time

If Only Memories Could Take Us to Another Place and Time

I wish time were physical, something you could touch and see, a giant, football-field-sized collage laid out for perusing. Only instead of chronological still shots of your life there were collections of moving pictures. Pause and choose, then step into the past the way Mary Poppins whisked the Banks children out of a drab, London day into a magical, colorful park simply by stepping into a sidewalk painting.

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Still Enchanted by Hats and the Memories They Hold

Still Enchanted by Hats and the Memories They Hold

I miss hats. Not the pull-over-your-ears, knitted, ugly wool creations designed solely to keep your head warm, the kind we are all being forced to wear right now. (Note: Despite advertisers' creative claims, there really is no such thing as a "Fashion" Windproof Pullover Cat Ear Warm Knitted Hat Toque.) No, what I miss are the totally superfluous, impractical pillboxes, cloches, and wide-brimmed beauties designed solely for sitting on top of a head and making the wearer look pretty.

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The Best Part of a Trip is Coming Home

The Best Part of a Trip is Coming Home

He has to prod me to go. It's been this way all of our married life. I've attributed my reluctance to pack up and go anywhere, any time, to genetics. His parents emigrated from Scotland and England. They left all they knew to come to America. My parents moved from Somerville to Randolph and spent the next decade shuttling the mothers they left behind to and from our unfinished Cape for every birthday, holiday, and tiniest celebration. Packing up and leaving home is in my husband's genes. But it isn't in mine.

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Learning to appreciate the moment

There is such joy in Lucy. I don't always see it. Sometimes I'm too focused on improving her, reminding her to stand up straight, to look a person in the eye when she's saying hello and goodbye, to slow down her words when she talks.

"Can you say that again, Lucy?" "Where are your shoes?" "Did you brush your teeth?" "Do you have your seat belt buckled?" Always on her case but for her own good, right?

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Nothing Gold Can Stay; In the neighborhood, as in all of nature, the only constant is change

Nothing Gold Can Stay;   In the neighborhood, as in all of nature, the only constant is change

I have known for months that she is moving. Late October, early November, that's what she told me all spring and all summer long. She's been fine with it. And I've been fine. Still, when November dawned and there was a moving truck in her driveway across the street and movers carrying out boxes of her things, my heart felt like…

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Splendid scenery on a winding road

My granddaughter, Lucy, has Down syndrome. When she was born 11 years ago and I heard these words, I was shattered.

Stereotypes take a long time to die. My head was full of them, despite knowing Chris McLean, who has Down syndrome and has been part of our extended family for more than 40 years, despite having watched the television series "Life Goes On" and seeing how much a person with Down syndrome can accomplish.

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Nothing against fall, but this summer is ending too soon

Nothing against fall, but this summer is ending too soon

Sometimes you can convince yourself that it isn't bad — summer ending, the rest of the year beginning. But it is bad. I like cool, crisp nights as much as anyone, that hint of a fall smell that's in the shadows right now, and the way the late afternoon light makes the world look suddenly prettier. I like seeing all the little kids with their new haircuts and scrubbed faces, their backpacks as clean as they are, walking to school and waiting at bus stops. I love what September is for them: a beginning, another notch on their growth chart, new grade, new teachers, new chance.

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Making Paragon Park memories for the future

Making Paragon Park memories for the future

My father took pictures of everything. I have dozens of black-and-white prints labeled "European Campaign — General Eisenhower 1942-1945," and hundreds of slides he took later, after the war, after I was born, which he showed for years in our parlor on a big white sheet, until one day when he bought a real screen. He gave me his photos long before he died. I scanned them into my computer and it's where they live now, at my fingertips, pictures of people and places long, long gone. But just a few clicks, and they fill up my screen.

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Looking for a silver lining in a tragedy

I keep looking for the silver lining in the long, slow dying of a friend who should not be dying. He's too good a person for the world to lose. But this is how life works. Good people die every day. Now it's Kyle Gendron, a good man in the middle of his life, who has a wife and three young children he would give anything not to leave.

Kyle Gendron and his wife, Kerry, and their children.

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