remind me later



remind me later how you looked as you slept the night before you turned five. your face still resembling the baby you were a few short years ago.
remind me how you fought to keep the TV on longer, though it was way past your bedtime already.
remind me how it felt when you ran up the driveway earlier that day to greet me after i'd been out buying ingredients for your birthday cake; you running full speed, grinning and throwing yourself into my outstretched arms.
remind me how you asked, even though i'll be five soon Mom, you can still pick me up, right? how it stung my eyes as i smiled and replied, of course.
remind me how your almost five-year-old body looked this summer, diving down to the deep end of our pool, how exhilarating it was watching you learn how to swim.
remind me how you carried your stuffed cub the mountain lion with you everywhere. how excited you'd get about the things you loved.
remind me, remind me, remind me.
as i crawl into bed with you, my nearly five-year-old, i will press these moments into my mind as i would flowers between the pages of a thick book.
to find later, scattered gingerly when the book is re-opened, yet kept so beautifully despite the passage of time. a wonderful discovery of a moment, a burst of life both fragile and true, and the loveliest, oh so sweetest reminder of these wildflower summer days.
summer days,
and you
my wildflower.

the space between us



this summer you can swim
like a fish
i watch you dive to depths twice your size
recall that feeling, that freedom
that thrill
i watch you ride your bicycle
more of a race than a ride, really
pedaling as fast as your little legs can take you
tearing through the trails behind our house
i think about the space between us
now
a space where there was none
for five years, my little shadow
at my heels even as i make coffee
i just want to be where you are, mom
they say having a child is like having your heart walk around
outside your body
more like my stomach or my guts out there
my stomach churning with excitement
as my feet pump the pedals of my bike
my guts tightening and contracting
as i slam on the brakes with all my might
my lungs down there in the deep end
trying to hold my breath
and i wonder if this is the beginning
yes, it must be the beginning
of the space between us
as you – my heart, my lungs, my stomach and my guts – begin to move in all directions
all these new ways of moving
your body
my body
our body
your body
all the while a quiet whisper
slow down, caught in my throat
there used to be no space between us
i mean, zero space between us
i just want to be where you are, mom
i’m not ready for my heart to walk around in this world without me
is a mother ever ready?
ever ready
to live without her little heartbeat?


tiny socks



tiny socks
are everywhere
have taken over
this house
every place i turn
underneath every pillow
a plate
the couch
are the tiniest
eensy-weensy
tiny socks
each time i find them
i am surprised
by their size
delighted by
their appearance
and curious that
perhaps this house
had never
truly
been complete
without them
being
here.

our babies are comprised of





wishes into flesh
love into bone
dreams into life
whispers into song
the purest thoughts we have
our unadulterated joy
our raw hope
our entire hearts
how can a mother not believe in magic?
when she has held it in her womb, pressed it to her breast, loved it into existence?
our babies are here to remind us
what we already know
this universe is miraculous
and magical
an expanding and all encompassing love
is inside
and outside
each
and every
one
of
us
it's what our babies are comprised of
it's what we are comprised of
but you knew that already,
mama.

Michael Singer says Just Remove the Rocks



We are currents in motion right now, my love. 
We are at sea, and there is a storm.
We are the river, but we are also the rocks.
Simply remove the rocks and the river will flow smoothly. Easy, right?
But, it’s turbulent now. We’re in-between and in-between isn’t here or there, is it?
I remind myself: life is always this way. Only, sometimes we flow with it. Sometimes, we dance with it. Other times, it feels more mechanical and awkward. Like a toddler beginning to walk. Like when the training wheels come off, or the house lights come on.
I'm here, I'm meant to be the captain, but I'm lost in this storm. Maybe I am the storm.
At night, as you tuck your head just beneath my chin and I begin a storybook about where trains sleep, I remember that nothing lasts. Nothing lasts — including storms, times of transition, or these blink-and-you-miss-them early days of your almost five-year-old life. To be tucked in together like this is the greatest gift on earth.
So, I vow to move the rocks. And I try not to blink.

beautiful nanoseconds



i.
picking you up from playschool
the immense joy
in each step
present moment exhilaration
it is so clear
i was placed
on this earth
to
receive
you.

ii.
there are so many incredible moments
beautiful nanoseconds
with you
that swell my heart
sting my eyes
catch my breath in my throat.
this one, today —
it's for you Mommy,
i made you a rainbow.

make me a believer



when you look up at the night sky full of stars, you don't need to be convinced. it's right there in plain sight. but wait, here's something — try explaining stars to a child. explain to them that they are made up of the same materials as one. tell them about the moon, it's phases. chat with them about seasons, sunsets and strawberries. go into great detail about how these little red berries just grow and when they're ripe you simply pluck their sweetness from a bush then pop it into your mouth. tell them about pineapples. have you ever seen a baby pineapple? it's perfection. and coconuts? list all the ways that coconuts are lessons in abundance. afterwards, try to describe how trees talk to each other, through an underground system we can't even see. oh, and don't forget to tell them how those same trees also help us to breathe. 
go ahead. explain all this to a child.
see if you can say you don't believe in magic.

a whole day



today i buzzed around all day but felt that nothing got done.
meals were made, toys were taken out and put away again.
groceries were bought: pineapple, tomatoes, cucumber.
things were ticked off to-do lists.
preparations for Mimi's upcoming visit.
hardware store, swim, negotiations about TV. concessions made.
meals eaten, jackfruit cut, smoothie date at the local cafe.
i thought to myself, i should be writing more.
but i also thought
hey, at least i'm writing.

and when i wrote out the whole day, even in point form and looked at it
from up here, bird's eye view, as they say —

i thought of the herons we see daily. the vultures that fly overhead that you so often call eagles, and i don't correct you. because eagles are nobler, somehow.

i thought of the big picture.

life is like that, you know.

it's a bunch of tiny dots, that connect to make a reality that is so much more than we tend to give it credit for. its astonishing, really, that we don't spend most of our time in complete awe of the out-of-this-world beauty that is our every day moment-to-moment reality.

the fact that you even exist. that we are here, at all. that herons are taking flight and vultures are soaring overhead, pretending to be eagles. that wings can spread and wind can lift, that the moon controls the tides and the sun rises each morning to greet us.

finally, the sound of the waves crashing outside our little house was enough to inspire me begin this poem again.

today i buzzed around all day but felt that nothing got done.
however, each moment was truly full of wonder and magic.
and i was lucky enough to be able to spend a whole day loving my son.
and we passed the time marveling at the world together.

isn't life grand?





the things i love are so small



the things i love are so small. my son's tiny hand in mine. the top of his head tucked under my chin. the coffee someone makes me. a guitar being strummed. wind rustling the trees. mangoes. stretching my body. my Dad's laugh. my Mom's Hello Honey, as she answers my call. sunlight dancing on water. being barefoot. a smile exchanged with a stranger. 
the things i love are so big. the mountains of northern Thailand. a whole country that both made and undid me. the lakes of Ontario. huge, holy trees. the sky at dawn. new beginnings. possibility on the horizon. this chaotic, beautiful world. Motherhood. hope. love. life.