Sunday, February 23, 2014

Being the Little Sister

I find myself thinking about my big sister  a lot today.  Had to capture some of my thoughts:


The little sister- that was me.  I can remember looking up at my big sister and wishing to be just like her.  Why couldn’t I have green eyes and long, curling hair?  Why were my eyes the color of doggie doo and my hair non-existent?  She could read, sew, play piano and sit still.  I could do none of these, well, okay, I could sort of play the piano, but that went along with the sit still thing, which I failed at miserably.  She could also be quiet and polite.

I wanted to be her, or just like her but I knew it wasn’t possible.  She got the first Barbie doll, the first day of school; in my little girl existence it seemed she got to be first at everything.

I was a daydreamer, a talker and mischievous.  I wandered off in the woods once, scaring my mother and father to tears.  I really just wanted to go to the neighbors, but in our neck of the woods that was a quarter mile away through dense forest. While my big sister made cookies with Mommy, I usually made a mess in the mud in the yard.

I am pretty sure my constant chatter drove my parents and my big sister to despair.  I don’t recall exactly, but I expect I did not sit still in church, that I blurted out inappropriately loud questions.

People mistook me for a little boy when I stood too close to my sister.  She was much more feminine than I was with that hair, those eyes and her shy smile.  She was truly the little lady to my bull in a china shop.

Where she was patient and determined to do things well, I remember always wanting more- wanting to know, wanting to explore, wanting, wanting, wanting often what I could not have and too impatient to finish any task well.  Then as I grew older, I remember discovering that sometimes there was a way  to make things go the way I wanted to if I worked hard enough, talked loud enough, practiced and practiced and practiced.  Sometimes this meant pushing someone out of my way. Very often, this became my big sister, the closest obstacle in many of my paths.

I cannot imagine the hurt and embarrassment that my loud, pushy ADHD self caused my sister along the way, but I know it did.  She often set the bar in my little girl mind, and that bar was my challenge as I imagine it is for little sisters everywhere.

As we grew older, I did not have the intuition to tone it down, could not see the damage that could be done in constantly hurting someone’s feelings.  To me, I was still the little sister, the pudgy tomboy to her slender beauty.  But I could run, and I could sing loud, I could tell stories and I could draw- I had discovered that I was better than her at these things. I had made a mental decision that If I wasn’t good at it, I would walk the other way leaving to her forever the baking, sewing, piano playing, babysitting, long hair and thin waist.

We grew up, grew mature and became good friends, but I know that little sister never completely disappears.  I continue to talk loud, run fast and jump from thing to thing, and of course try to always climb higher.  My big sister knows me well.  She knows my character, she knows my restlessness. She sees my wit and sarcasm, my pushy determination and in the darkest of moments, she senses my little sister neediness.

I love my sisters- yes, I have a little sister too who I will write about sometime, but she was much younger, so our relationship is very different.  My big sister was the other pea in the pod of my childhood, and I can imagine it was hard to be trapped in that role as I kicked and wiggled and wormed my way forward regardless of the tightness of the pod.

Recently someone posted a picture of two little girls in matching dresses. The big sister had darker, longer hair and was scowling furiously.  The little sister, with blonde hair stood next to her and her smile was beaming. The caption was, “I’m dressed just like my sister”.  It made me laugh and at the same time I recognized that it could easily have been a picture of my big sister and me.  Matching outfits always thrilled me, but I am pretty sure my big sister was not as overjoyed.

Sisterhood is not for the faint of heart. But I will always be grateful that my big sister accepted the role that was not her choosing.  I will always be grateful that I had a playmate, a second mother, a bar setter and a friend in the midst of all the animals and woods that we called home.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Love Has Many Faces

February has just started, and with it more cold temps, snow and clouds.  But along with these comes the reminder that this month, one of the quiet winter months we nod to on it's way by, is also the month that we pause at least momentarily to think about love.  Great loves, little silly loves, loves lost, loves re-gained, loves longed for and love's many splendored things.

Love has many faces doesn't it?  Just thinking of the word gets my mind to spinning and hopping...

For me, when thinking of Valentine's day, I remember the years when my husband was overseas-  I am quite sure we were not able to talk on the day itself on the first Afghan deployment, but we exchanged extravagant gifts and long letters well aware of the blessing our love is by the absence of it's daily routine.  The second deployment Dick was on R&R and we celebrated Valentines Day in Paris, heading to the top of the Eiffel tower for sunset and then taking in the evening on the river cruise along the Seine. I remember the year we took my parents to Puerto Rico.  The sweet way my father and husband bought and presented Mom and I red roses while we dined with a view of the sunset on the ocean and the sound of waves crashing against the cliffs below.

Thinking about this traditional day of expressing love cannot help but give way to other, more broad memories of love. I remember my boys- and I smile remembering our favorite crazy mystery science theater "comment-alongs" accompanied by pizza and usually a couple of extra loaner sons. Later still, dinner and a movie which is still a favorite mother-son event.

I remember when, just days after Dick left for war the last time, I attended my best friend's son's wedding-  the son who had been a frequent loaner son that had his own toothbrush at our house. When it was time for the mother-son dance, he and his mom called me to the floor to take a spin in the midst of them, and I felt the warmth of their love when I needed it so...

I remember the year a car full of us-  all college freshmen were in an accident on our way home-  the truck we were riding in flipped upside down into a water-filled ditch.  No one knew what to do, but I knew my dad could be counted upon-  and he came for us, driving four hours through the snow storm to retrieve us all, paying for our hot dinner and getting us all home safely

I remember the fun I have had with my big sister going to auctions- and with my little sister singing karaoke.

My grandson Jude, who, while we were doing puzzles together one night, turned to me, put his little hands on my cheeks and said, "You're pretty great Grandma" as if startled by the discovery.

I could go on and on, as I am sure each of us can if only we think on those we love.

This year Valentine's Day is on a Friday-  a wonderful treat which means we can have a special night with a special someone or some ones. 

Our venture into business has given us a chance to provide a place and an evening where our friends and guests can come and join us for great food, great entertainment and great atmosphere.

Come to the Aqualand Ale House and join us for dinner, conversation and music.  The fire will be lit, the food and wine will be fine and as always the best craft beers will be on tap. 

This event needs you to RSVP by next Saturday though, so be sure to send us an e-mail, phone call or facebook RSVP.  We need to grocery shop!

Memories have many faces- and love has a long memory.  Come an make a few new ones with us won't you?!