Thursday, December 31, 2020

21 for 2021

 



It’s the last day of the year and my daughter Charlotte and I are sitting in the coffee shop across the street from our apartment here in Beijing, which is largely COVID free. I brought my multi-color markers and paper and while I recalibrated my goals, she crafted her own for the new year.

One of my resolutions is to have bi-weekly individual ‘dates’ with each of my daughters so that we can cultivate our friendships. They are 15 and 17 now and I think it’s time to shift from mothering less and into friendship more. My parenting these days is more about scaffolding and shepherding rather than imposing rules. These girls of mine are ready to make their own decisions and live with their own repercussions while still under the roof of supportive parents. It seems like the best way forward.

During our nine months of almost constant togetherness during our family’s pandemic saga that took us from Beijing to Thailand to California to Wisconsin and finally back to China again, my sweetheart and I consciously made a decision to let Charlotte and Emily live without too many rules. We were all busy teaching and learning at all hours of the day, and it seemed like the right time to back off. At one point, Charlotte told a complete stranger in the supermarket, “Oh, we are raising ourselves.” Now, this is not true by a long shot, but we were successfully giving them much more freedom than we imagined would be recommended.

They could rise and go to bed when they preferred, do their online studies when it suited them and view and play what they wanted, provided they participated in our family expectations such as daily chores, evening meals together and evening family time (during which time we made our way through Kim’s Convenience, Shitt’s Creek, Brooklyn 99 and The Good Place as well as learning poker, magic tricks and how to cook serviceable meals).

Not surprisingly, they have both proven themselves to be responsible, likable, reflective and, most of the time, rather pleasant to be around. It’s been a revelation to not have to be on their cases about what to do and not to do. I’ve become the opposite of a helicopter parent, just making myself available and saying yes to most things that they request to do provided they are safe, affordable (or they pay for it themselves) and fall in line with our family values which are essentially all about kindness and respect.

One of Charlotte’s 21 for 2021 goals was to take care of her skin and feel good in her own skin. How perfect is that for a 17 year old?


Here's a link to the podcast 2 CHIT CHAT CHICKS that one of my dearest friends, Eydie, and I have. This edition is all about resolutions we have that are manageable and will bring joy!


https://anchor.fm/2chitchatchicks/episodes/Episode-22---21-in-21-The-One-About-Resolutions-eo0jbr

Sunday, December 20, 2020

First Snow



We stepped out of the bakery - where the girls had sipped hot chocolate out of teaspoons and crumbled cherry pastries all over the table - into the chill air. For the past two weeks of our European vacation we had been waiting for snow, but nothing. Wasn't Germany at Christmas all about snow? 

The blast of cold air after the heat of the konditerei woke us up. Emily stumbled on the cobblestones, then looked up.

"What's that, Mama?" she asked as a slow smile spread across her face. "Is that snow I just felt?"

I smiled. Hopefully. All signs of the brooding, bruised sky pointed to it. Moments later the air around us was cascading with white stars, leaping onto our eyelashes, christening the tops of our heads with fairy dust, and icing the gingerbread-like houses all around the walled city of Nordlingen.

The children wanted to taste the snow and Charlotte was surprised to find it tasteless.

"I was sure it would be sweet," she said.





Monday, November 30, 2020

Thinking Better Thoughts


I feel so grateful to be here. How did I stumble into this beautiful life that I have? Very deliberately, I think, but it also involved a lot of serendipity. 

I love thinking about what makes me happy instead of what is not going right with the world. I am choosing peace over outrage, good cheese and wine over gloppy food, Handel's Messiah over Christmas schmaltz. And sleep. Tonight I am choosing sleep over surfing for more so-called information. A NYT puzzle will be just the impetus needed to lure me under the covers. That and a few fluffy pillows.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

That Girl


Coming upstairs long after I’ve tucked Emily, in and finding her in her too-short pajamas, bare feet on the cold wood floor, pencil clutched, scratching on a scrunched-up scrap of paper.

Mama: What are you doing?

Emily: Well, it's just that I was trying to sleep, and I cam up with a question about life and I just had to write it down.

Smile. Close door. That girl.

(Four short years ago, and she's still the same.)

Friday, September 4, 2020

Family Rituals

We are not a praying family, at least not in the conventional sense. We are, however, a thankful family. For us, listing what we are thankful for is our grace at dinner time. Some years ago, my parents were due to visit us in Hong Kong and I flew into a little panic. I grew up in a praying family and I knew my parents would expect grace at the table. We were raising socially conscious daughters, but they were certainly not familiar with the God I grew up with.

Truth be told, I love a good routine. It knits a little scarf around the people involved and collectively warms us. After some soul searching and brainstorming, Don and I instituted the “What are you thankful for?” dinner routine that has seen us through the last 10 years or so, with a few lapses in between. In the beginning, it was short and sweet. Each family member said one thing they were thankful for while the food sat on the ready. Over time it has evolved into talking with our mouths full, not letting the food go cold, while the family disseminates their days. I try to keep it short and sweet, but inevitably conversations grow from the thankfuls.

 

The food, the day, the weather and all of you:” This is our standby when we don’t want to talk much. Myrna, who was our beloved helper in Hong Kong, used that one a lot. We have taken it on with enthusiasm. Usually, though, things are brought up that beg more conversation. Charlotte will often monopolize with her thankfuls, and sometimes she manages to subvert them into complaints, in typical teenage fashion. In between Don asking questions and Charlotte regaling us with all the meandering details of her daily minutiae, her thankfuls can often lead us into the second helpings unless I, always the moderator, cut her off.

 

Emily’s thankfuls are of the concise variety and are often about food, time outside, and a good sleep; Don’s meander into storytelling paragraphs quite often, as he tells about his day, the fun encounters he had with his students and always end with how grateful he is to have his three gals in our estrogen-filled home, wherever that may be these days.

 

I usually come up last, and even though I can be a magnificent chit chatter, we are usually almost at dessert time or Charlotte is starting to clear away the dishes while Emily is still slowly pondering through her plate. So I say a thing or two, often about hot baths, cozy rugs, air conditioning, (depending on the season), and always how grateful I am to have manifested this magnificent, funny family who is almost always able to share dinner and thankfuls together.


Monday, August 17, 2020

Doomsday Thinking Rethought

My pandemic mindset has gradually transformed from one of outright panic to one of acceptance. Expending energy on the what-ifs and why-don't-they-justs is not worth it. The never-ending news cycle about Covid-19 and all-things-related is relentless and rarely breaking. There is absolutely no reason to tune in to news more than once a day, if that. It’s more of the same and it’s not good.

I have learned that the doomsday thinking the media propagates is rarely productive. And it is possible to get some perspective on our present situation and see that, for most of us, it’s not quite as dire as we make it out to be.


I'll never forget the day we missed our flight from Hawaii back to the US for our summer break. We were living in China, had just completed the adoption of our second daughter, and we had to (what a travail!) spend several days in Hawaii on the way back to the continent in order to apply for their American citizenships. In between all the paper work, we somehow managed to have a fun-filled time on Oahu where the sky was blue, the ocean was warm and everywhere we went, people smiled at our lovely, new multicultural family. It felt a little bit like heaven might.



Perhaps in all the euphoria (or cacophony) of being a new parent, I somehow mistook the time in which we were meant to depart for Seattle. My memory was that we left at two o'clock in the afternoon, so at nine that morning, after a leisurely breakfast, I went online to confirm our flight was on time. My reaction was unmitigated panic upon seeing our scheduled flight was boarding AT THAT VERY MOMENT!

My frontal lobe went into overdrive. In the midst of wandering toddlers, giggling and with their breakfast still all over their chubby cheeks and pudgy hands, child accoutrements flung everywhere, suitcases open and ready to be packed, I took control as though flying a jet plane out of a hurricane. The children were shoved into the Pack and Play along with all their toys fluffy toys, I had Don find me all possible phone numbers to Delta Airlines and its affiliates along with our credit card company's contact. I started to work the phone like a vacuum salesperson on commission and a deadline. Every time I explained the situation to yet another service representative, I came up empty.

 

I’m sorry, Ma’am. There’s nothing I can do.”

 

“I can’t transfer you to my supervisor: I am the supervisor.”

 

“There are no available flights until next week. I’m sorry, but I can’t help it that you have a wedding to attend. Everything is fully booked.”

 

“You should have checked. You are going to have to pay full price for new tickets and the summer season is in high swing.”

 

 “You understand you will have to pay a penalty for not arriving at the flight.”

 

Each conversation I had was worse than the last, and our hotel checkout time was in two hours. Don had been working the internet while trying to attend to our two demanding toddlers, and there was no room left in Hawaii for under 300 dollars a night.


Following the heart-thudding shock of the unsolvable situation, came the outrage, then the tears, and finally the resignation arrived. When I was finally breathing at a normal rate and had collapsed like a rag doll after all the surging adrenaline of the last hour, I sensed a shift inside of me. I was powerless to control the situation. Once that was acknowledged, a quiet certitude took over.

 

I put on a bra under my pajamas, slipped into my flip flops, shoved the passports into my backpack, and told Don to pack the bags, get them on a trolley and be ready to grab one girl under each of his arms when I called. I left the hotel, took a taxi to the airport, and allowed the wiser, calmer me to continue communing with the frenetic Leah. By the time I entered the airport, I was breathing easier, though still concerned that we would be spending our year's savings on another week in Hawaii and another set of four tickets.

I lined up in the "people with problems" aisle and listened to people yell and threaten and harass the man behind the counter. I was impressed that he took each insult and verbal molestation in stride, dealing with everyone efficiently and kindly. I watched people leave, one by one, as if hypnotized. He appeared to be the angry-passenger whisperer.


When my time came, I stepped up to the counter, took a deep breath, and broke into a Niagara of tears. When I came up for air, he carefully edged his way in to my monologue of sobs with a respectful, "May I ask you two questions, ma'am?"

I nodded in between my heaving sobs and kerfuffling.

"Is anyone dead?"

I took a massive blow into an-already used up tissue and resorted to the sleeve of my shirt for my undignified response. 

"No," I heaved.

"Good, then. Question two: has anyone lost a limb?"

I let out a small guffaw. "No, sir."

"There you go, then. Let's start from there, shall we?"

Let’s start from there, indeed. I managed to pull myself together and recount my story. He listened intently, taking notes and uh-huhing at all the right places.

"I have a third question."

"Yes?"

"Are you packed?"

"Pretty close."

"Fourth question: can your husband and daughters get themselves here within the next hour and a half?"

"I think so," I snuffled.

"Last question."

"Shoot."

"Are you prepared to stop on three Hawaiian Islands before landing in Seattle?"

"Yes, I think so."

"Let's plug this in, then."

He tapped into his computer furiously for a few minutes and announced, "You'll arrive in Seattle at two pm tomorrow. I'm afraid it's going to cost you three hundred extra dollars. I wish I could do better for you. Is that acceptable?"

Acceptable? We were landing three hours earlier than the flight we were actually scheduled to be since the missed flight had a five hour stopover, and he had just saved us our retirement savings.

"Yes, it's acceptable, very acceptable," I answered thankfully.


End of story, pretty much. We got home. We had a wonderful summer. Our Chinese daughters became American citizens. We went back home to China and carried on with our happy little lives.


Lesson learned? Unless someone is dead or missing a limb, it's not worth getting your knickers in a knot over. Things work themselves out.

Thank you, behind-the-counter Delta man. You taught me a valuable lesson that day that I've never forgotten. Aloha style.


My job is to remind myself that for most of us most of the time it's small potatoes. If nobody's dead and nobody's missing a limb, I’m going to try and enjoy the ride, even if it’s a bit rocky these days. 



PS:  My daughters are now 14 and 16, and since the "Hawaii Incident" I have caused our family to miss three more international flights! I have each time channeled the angel-disguised-as-a-Delta-customer-service representative, and managed to get us on the next flight out without any extra expenditure. Clearly, however, I require a personal assistant!







 

 

Saturday, August 8, 2020

Skidding into Gratefulness

Here’s what I am grateful for so far today (and it’s only 10:15 AM):

It’s 10:15 am and I am still in bed!

 

We have a coffee maker in our bedroom, and Emily faithfully makes the coffee every evening before she goes to bed. All I have to do is press “on.”

 

The sky is blue, and in Beijing, every blue-sky day feels like a miracle. This winter, the skies are blue more often than not.

 

There’s a bowl of leftover popcorn beside me (that I popped yesterday for watching Stephen Colbert). 15-hour-old popcorn isn’t half-bad, even when it’s the first thing eaten in the morning!

 

Emily just came and asked me, “Mom, what’s that vegetable I hate? You know the mushy one – it’s like Suzuki or something?” Ha – that would be zucchini!

 

Don is downstairs acting as short-order cook and making us all our custom breakfasts: French toast for Charlotte; bacon baps for Emily and Don; leftover chili and rice for me.

 

A long, comfort-filled sleep, which, for me, is actually a very big deal as sleeping tends to be a stress-filled affair replete with technicolor dreams that stay with me for hours.

 

The radiator is blazing and my covers are warm.

 

I’ve got a massage lined up for later today.

 

I’m flexing my social muscle a wee bit more. I’m a bit of a hermit, but there are so many good, warm, forgiving, delightful people around me, and we all need some community. We all need to laugh. And cry. And empathize. After work yesterday, I went to Fella’s, the bar beside our school owned by an institution-of-a-fella from our school, and just absorbed a whole lot of love and good energy from a contingent of fellow-teachers. It was only an hour or so, but I came away buoyed and optimistic. For me, I receive much peace and renewal from being solitary, but optimism is stirred and shaken when I let myself be welcomed by the peeps who make up the motley crew of our expat teaching community.

 

It appears my list has ended and I’m rambling into paragraphs: I’ve been so touched this week by how many people have reached out to me after my blogs about Emily’s illness on our Christmas vacation. I am so moved by your prayers and best wishes for her: your affirmation of our parenting, and admissions that you too have faltered when it comes to adequately taking care of your kids; and also for your appreciation of my writing. That people have taken the time to read what I write and respond is enormously encouraging. Like most of us, I am a creature driven by approval and encouragement, and it makes me want to continue to flex my writing muscle.

 

Lying on these malleable eiderdown pillows that I spend more time with than any human being, I feel so hopeful. I love lying in bed and writing with popcorn to my right and coffee to my left, and a window beckoning a bracing, bright day. I look forward to meditation and massage and a grocery shop today. I don’t dread writing some report cards or finding common ground with my teenage daughter. I am happy beyond words that Emily is feeling so much better and is busy getting ready to go ice skating as I write. And I’m thankful for a forum such as Facebook where I can post my random, occasional writing and some of you might be inclined to read it. What writer, even 15 years ago, could have imagined publishing and having an audience JUST LIKE THAT?

 

Friends who know we are in Madison, Wisconsin at present, not Beijing, China, will realize this piece is a few years old. And that’s okay. I want to reconstitute some of the things I wrote from times-gone-by if they still resonate with me and I believe they might with readers as well. I am truly humbled and grateful by the immediacy of publication these days and that an audience can be had with the click of a key.



My skidding toward gratefulness today is easy: we are cozily tucked away in a cabin in the North Woods of Wisconsin with a small group of dear relatives. Last night after a campfire replete with jumbo marshmallows that spilled out of our S’mores and Margaritas for my sister, Ellen and I, we all laid on the pier, watching the stars and reveling in the beauty of our planet. As we meandered to bed around midnight, the rain and thunder started, lullabying us all to sleep.

This morning we are all snuggled onto sofas and chairs, looking out on the lake and the varying shades of green foliage all around us, waiting for the sun to come out again. Meantime, we are a cozy mismatch of readers, writers, puzzlers and nappers. A swim or kayak in the lake is going to be a refreshing change later in the day, but I’ll happily take this moment and revel in it.



Thank you for taking time away from news and present-day travails to drift away with me on this little reflection on a moment-in-time. Notice the moments that are making up your life: so many shooting stars!



Friday, July 31, 2020

What Not to Do on Your First Grocery Shop in a New Town

A few weeks ago, we moved to Madison, Wisconsin as COVID-19 refugees of the fortunate variety. We’ve been locked out of China since January 28th and have lived in approximately seven different locations in Thailand and the US before finally settling here in Madison where we have bought a small “covid condo” that we can live in until the pandemic subsides and we can get a flight and visas back to Beijing where we live and are employed as international school teachers (with two international school teenagers trailing along).


Here's the view from the balcony of our covid condo


*If you’d like to read more about our adventures, please go back in this blog to revisit our diaspora.

 

Meantime, imagine starting from scratch in a new house, and I mean from scratch. What we brought with us on our cross-country sojourn from California to Wisconsin were a few suitcases of clothes and some bits and bobs we had acquired along the way. When we left Beijing in January, we assumed we would be returning in two weeks. All we had when we arrived in California to stay at our good friend Laurie’s vacant house, after two and a half months in Thailand, was what we packed for our trip there: tee shirts, shorts, sundresses, flip flops and swim suits. Now, the trunk of the 2003 Toyota Avalon we had purchased while living in the Sierra Nevada Mountains (Sounds a little bit like The Shining, doesn’t it?) had those few items along with a jumble of new and warmer clothes we had bought when the thrift stores finally opened in California.

 

Arriving in Madison with a trunk full of so-much-nothing, we needed to get our 850 square foot apartment fitted out with furniture and the basic necessities of living. My lovely sister-in-law, Ellen, lent us blow-up beds, some pots and pans, towels, sheets, a rocking chair, a coffee table and four fold up chairs with an accompanying card table. Our dear friend Eydie added to the bounty by supplying us with lamps, dishes, mugs and other sundries. We could manage by each day procuring a few more needed items. Utensils, anyone? How about a frying pan? We were camping! (About a month later, it feels a little less like camping, and more like college-living, only with two teenagers thrown in the mix!) We’ve gradually managed to collect pieces of furniture from thrift stores and curbsides and a few new pieces, but our house definitely has a 20-something, bohemian vibe that our half-a-century-plus personas might not have chosen, but we are nonetheless surprisingly delighted by the simplicity and mishmash of it all.



On that first day in our new condo, what we did not have and could not gradually collect were groceries: we needed them and we needed them now. After our inaugural meal of Chinese food delivery (Thank goodness for the plastic forks they provided, though we wondered why there were no chopsticks.), I ventured out to Woodman’s, a Madison institution of a grocery store that is famous for both its abundance and cheap prices. Many moons ago, I had lived in Madison and loved going up and down the aisles, gazing at the multitudes of merchandise: a veritable museum of food. Being a Canadian who lives in Asia, the sheer quantity and choice of foods in America never ceases to amaze and entice.

 

Prior to my evening departure, I made an extensive list: salt, pepper, oil, spices, bread, butter, yogurt, fruit, dishrack, peanut butter, cereal, milk ad infinitum, finding it truly mind-boggling how much one needs just to get the larder stocked when you start with nothing. I set my phone GPS for the store, bid my family adieu, and told them to meet me in the parking lot in a few hours to help me unload the groceries that were sure to fill the trunk to capacity.

 

Mask strapped on, list in hand, I jauntily entered the grocery store at approximately 7 PM, ready to take on the world of shopping like a veritable Mary Tyler Moore ready to dive bomb the TV news industry. I was good at this. I loved it. And so much to see! The cart was soon exploding with merchandise – things I hadn’t imagined I’d need, but truly did. 

 

A few minutes into the shop, I got a frantic text saying “Dad says to buy a plunger – the toilet is plugged.” Already? Well, of course, we needed a toilet brush as well. Oh, and toilet paper. And cleanser. The apartment needed some serious elbow grease. I circumnavigated the aisles like a world traveler exploring back alleys. The aisles were a dizzying array of selection. What fun! At first. Maybe for an hour or so…

 

I didn’t know where everything was so I had to keep circling back to get things from my list that I had apparently missed in aisles that were clear across the store – football fields away. My feet started aching in my overused flip flops and I was parched from wearing my mask. When I finally made it to the checkout, it was 10:15 PM and my cart full in the how-many-kids-can-you-fit-in-a-Volkswagen kind of way. I could barely heave it forward.

 

With the exception of one checkout counter with a cashier, all the rest, at that time of night, were self-checkout. At the best of times and with the fewest of items, I have never had success with self-checking and I knew the Herculean task of unilaterally checking out more than 500 items in my cart, would be tantamount to reaching Everest Base Camp. In short, impossible.

I lined up behind three other folks, whose carts had reasonable amounts in them, at least for America. In China, a daily shop is de rigueur so a small basket usually suffice. As I waited, I noticed a sign that read: “Woodman’s Card of Choice is Discovery.” I had a brief frisson of panic. Surely they took Visa cards. Who doesn’t? I had no checks on me. Did everybody who shopped here deal in cash? Not likely. I was confused. In China, there are rarely cash transactions anymore –from buying a car to a stalk of celery, it is all done by scanning a bar code with your phone. In fact, there is a beggar who inhabits the steps of our local western grocery store in Beijing, and I always make a point of giving him some money. When he sees me coming, he calls out, “Pengyou,” (friend) and pulls a laminated QR code out of his pocket so I can scan it with my phone and give him 20 kwai. The idea of paying cash or writing a check is completely foreign to me these days. My fears were allayed when I got to the checkout and asked if Visa was accepted. The cashier confirmed Visa would be fine, and we started to disassemble the deluge of groceries from my cart, reassembling it into bags on the other side.

 

My cashier appeared to be fairly new at her job, and it was taking her a long time to check out my items. The fresh produce, in particular, presented her with a challenge: she flipped through pages of codes each time, and when I told her, “Never mind, I don’t need those bananas,” or “Forget about the tomatoes. Who needs lyceum anyway?” she let me know she could not escape the apparently-complicated cash register system she was logged into in order to nix the articles. Time crept on. I took a Dr. Pepper out of the convenience fridge across from the till and had her scan it before taking furtive swigs, pulling aside my mask for just seconds at a time, feeling guilty for doing so.

 

About half an hour into this arduous process, I noticed the man behind me had no cart. I asked him why he was even there. “I just want a pack of cigarettes,” he said. I was mortified. I was making this man wait the better part of an hour for one item – even if it was a cancer-causing one?

 

“Just let me buy your cigarettes for you,” I said, marking the first time this naïve girl has ever bought a pack of smokes. He gratefully accepted, the cashier stopped to grab his Marlboro Lights from the back, and she scanned them onto my bill. He left happily. I still don’t know how much I paid for those cancer sticks.

 

Slowly, surely, my cart began to empty and the cart that the bagger was filling on the other side began to bulge. Midway through, I remembered we needed ice so I went running around the store, following the directions of the cashier, but to no avail. The packer finally went and got the ice for me while I continued his unenviable job of bagging my groceries. He was already onto the second cart, and my family necessities were embarrassingly beginning to look like a garbage dump of plastic.

 

Finally, it came time to pay. I pulled out my Visa card and confidently inserted it into the chip reader slot. NOT VALID. I tried again. Same response. People behind me shifted, uncomfortable for me and already annoyed by the inordinate amount of time it had taken to check me out.

 

“Why isn’t my Visa working? You told me you took Visa!”

 

“Is it a debit card?” she asked.

 

“No, it’s not a BLANKING debit card,” I wanted to reply, but did not. The night manager came over when I started to cry and stutter, “I’ve been shopping here for three hours. I just stood in this line for an hour and the cashier assured me that you took Visa. What am I supposed to do?”

 

In that moment, it seriously felt like my world was going to end. In the back of my mind, I knew I’d be able to laugh about this someday, maybe even next week, but in that moment, I felt like I was on a battlefield and my life depended on getting those damn groceries. Visions of coming back tomorrow and slogging through this whole process again made my eyes well up with tears behind my smudged and fogged-up glasses. Tears were now streaming down onto my masked face and I wanted to pull the damn mask off and blow my nose with it.

 

“Do you have any other means of paying?” the boss lady asked. “A check? An ATM card?”

 

“No! I don’t have anything here. Everyone takes Visa in America!”

 

“Well, we don’t,” she stated matter-of-factly. Then she brightened. “How about you go home, see what you can do, and we will put this all in the cooler for you? Come back tonight when you figure out what to do.”

 

Come back TONIGHT? It was barely tonight anymore – it was almost midnight! I couldn’t imagine coming back in a week, never mind tonight!

 

I nodded blearily and conceded that there was nothing more to be done. I gave her my name and she wrote it on a post-it and taped it on the cart, letting me know she would hold my merchandise for the remainder of the night.

 

I walked to the car in defeat, slathered myself in hand sanitizer, removed the mask, and took a giant slug of the diet Dr. Pepper I had bought. Oops. I had not bought it! I was officially a thief now – a soda and a pack of cigarettes had exited the store without being paid for.

 

While on my way to Woodman’s many hours ago, my phone had refused to talk to me. I had plugged the address into the phone’s GPS and it worked fine, only I couldn’t get the oral component to work. I wear progressive lenses and have a hard time driving with them, but I can’t see my phone without them. I had come through a tangle of highways to get here and found it mightily confusing in daylight hours so I wasn’t sure how I was going to manage getting home, especially since I was blurred up from crying and my amygdala was working overtime.

 

I plugged in our home address and began the journey, hoping I’d be able to glance down and see the directions as I proceeded. As I merged onto the first highway my palms were sweaty. Where was my exit? Soon. Had I just missed it? I got off the highway as soon as possible, finding a Walmart to my left and fields to my right. Surely this wasn’t right. I kept driving, and as I crossed over some railway tracks, I saw train lights glaring at me – the train couldn’t have been more than 50 feet away! What-the-what? I gunned my engine, sped over the tracks where the barrier had NOT gone down to warn of oncoming trains, and pulled over to the side of the road, absolutely overcome with panic and fear. I was on the verge of a major breakdown.

 

Dear reader, I know this is a long read and I thank you for your patience and persistence thus far. I have forgotten to mention one other salient item: I thought I had packed a charger for my phone when I left the house hours ago, but had not. My phone was now at less than five percent battery and I knew the GPS ate charge like a bear devours salmon. I was soon to be lost with no idea how to get to our new home somewhere on the East Side of Madison. Also, my phone has a Chinese SIM card so I couldn’t make calls or text with anyone other than my family who also have phones bought in and for China.

 

I gave myself about 10 minutes to sob it out on the side of the road, and then I got to thinking through my options. There was only one left that my limited brain power could muster: go to my sister and brother in law’s house – they lived just a few minutes from Woodman’s. If I could retrace my route to the grocery store, I could navigate my way to their house. By this time, it was nearly one am, and they usually go to bed early. I knew Kal was a deep sleeper, but I hoped I’d catch Ellen up, or at least be able to rouse her from her sleep. I didn’t even know what I’d ask: maybe for written directions? A lift home? All I knew was that they were my only option.

 

I reversed my car, and went back over the train tracks, noticing that the train was actually idling, lights a-blazing, on the tracks. It hadn’t been speeding toward me after all. I felt a sting of embarrassment, relief, and incredulity. Driving slowly and deliberately, I crawled my way back to Woodman’s and then on to Ellen and Kal’s house, pulling up in their driveway next to a completely darkened house. As I approached the front door, I had an impulse to run, as though I were a thief, but I had nowhere to run to. I stood my ground, rang the doorbell and waited. It was loud. If either of them was not deeply asleep, it would be easy to hear. Nothing. I rang again, tentatively. Still nothing. At this point, I had nothing to lose, other than the love and respect of my beloved relatives. I held down the buzzer in the same fashion an irate driver might sit on the horn and honk continuously when the person in front of them at the intersection doesn’t know the light is green.

 

Still nothing. I was at a loss. I went and sat on the trunk of my car. My head in my hands, I wept. I felt about as hopeless as I had ever felt, which was interesting because I was a covid refugee of more than six months, who had been locked out of her host country of China, had lived in six different accommodations on two continents, had taught full time online, and had navigated countless challenges, but, in that moment, this felt like something much worse. The powerlessness that I felt: that I couldn’t get my BLANKING groceries, that I couldn’t get home, that I couldn’t’ even take refuge in the one place I knew how to get to: these things were the straws that finally broke this camel’s back.

 

It must have been moments later that Ellen appeared in the doorway. “Hello? Who’s there?” she asked tentatively. “What are you doing in my driveway?” One couldn’t have expected Ellen to recognize our car OR expect it to be in her driveway at well past midnight. We had just arrived in Madison the day before and she wasn’t yet used to having us around.

 

I jumped up and she startled with surprise upon seeing me.

“Leah! What’s wrong? Are you alright? Come in!” A pajama-clad, bleary-eyed Ellen led me into the house and a fresh and very boisterous bout of uncontrollable sobbing burst forth for probably another five minutes.

 

Ellen later recounted all the horrors that floated through her mind while waiting for me to gain my composure: had Don and I had an enormous blow up and were on our way to a nasty divorce, was one of the kids dead, had I burned down our new house? Many scenarios anxiously blew up in her brain, so when I finally managed to tell my story in heaving gasps, it was all she could do not to laugh. In fact, when I had finished this ridiculous tale, we spent another five minutes or so nearly rolling on the floor with helpless laughter. Telling it aloud made it seem so trivial. She told me how terrified she had been when she heard the doorbell ring and saw a strange woman standing at her door. She had wondered if I was an environmental canvasser (at midnight?) or a drug-befuddled woman trying to find her way home. She had peered out of the window for a long while, trying to figure out what to do. Call the police? Wake up Kal? She had then watched me go sit on the trunk of my car and wondered if this oddly-familiar-looking woman had actually smashed it into the side of her house.

 

After uproarious laughter, we brainstormed together about my next steps. Sleeping pill-befogged Ellen and just-beyond-hysteria Leah decided that she would give me her debit card to go back and pay for the 500-plus-dollars-worth of groceries sitting in the cooler. I would cut her a check the next day. Next step: how to get me home after I retrieved the groceries? Our initial thought was for her to give me her phone with our address plugged into the GPS. She had a repairman who was going to be calling her the next day, but she thought I could just call her with the information. But how would that work if I had her phone? Nonetheless, she got out a pad of paper and wrote her debit card code down for me along with her phone code, in case there was a problem. We fumbled clumsily through a variety of possibilities and in the middle of our brain-fogged brainstorm, Ellen realized she had an Apple charging cord so we got my now-nearly-dead phone up and running. We decided that even if my phone couldn’t talk to me, if she wrote the directions VERY LARGELY with a thick-tipped black Sharpie on a yellow pad of paper, I would be able to read them, even with my night-compromised sight.

 

As the phone came back to life, the texts from my family were coming in.

 

Don: I’m so tired. I have to sleep. What’s going on?

Charlotte: Where are you, Momma? Are you okay?

Emily: We’ll stay up and help you bring in the groceries. Are you coming soon?

 

Who knew if I was coming soon? First things first. I fired off a brief text explaining the situation: I couldn’t pay for the groceries so I left them there; I nearly got hit by a train; I got lost and can’t get home; Ellen is helping me now.

 

Eventually, after much comforting and coddling from Ellen, I got back in my car, backed out of the yard, half expecting to be hit by an oncoming vehicle because, after all, everything else had gone wrong, why not one more thing? But wait, where was the debit card? I stopped the car and decided to double check my wallet. I couldn’t afford one more faux pas. It wasn’t there. I parked and turned off the ignition. Fortunately, Ellen was still on the front steps, waving me off, like a woman waving her soldier husband off to war.

 

“What’s the matter?”

 

“I can’t find your debit card!”

 

We hastily looked around the living room, but it wasn’t to be found. I remembered how my Visa had slipped between the seat and the gear box a few months ago and I’d had to forfeit a shopping trip because I’d thought I’d lost my card. (Oh, I am a slow learner, aren’t I?) Sure enough, the card had slipped into the same place. Same as last time, my fat fingers couldn’t reach down to pull it out. I reversed the seat back, hoping to get easier access, but still no luck. Ellen went back to the house to get a variety of implements: tongs, chop sticks, a kebab skewer…the skewer proved to be the winning ticket: I managed to dislodge the card and tuck it safely into my wallet. As much as I adore her, I hoped I wouldn’t see Ellen again that night. I’m sure she hoped the same!

 

I easily drove myself back to Woodman’s, walking in sheepishly. I saw the boss lady right away. She seemed surprised to see me. She had obviously calculated that I wouldn’t dare show my face there again.

 

“I’ve come to get my groceries.”

 

“Do you have cash?” she asked suspiciously.

 

“No, I have a debit card,” I announced.

 

She took me to a station and had me punch in the number Ellen had fastidiously written on the yellow piece of paper.

 

“It’s not taking the number,” she announced. Déjà vu.

 

Was she serious? I was about to catapult out of my own skin. I tried again. It still didn’t work. It took me a moment, in my one-am stupor, to realize I was typing in Ellen’s phone code, not the debit card number. I typed in the five digits and voila – it worked! I half expected a chorus of angels to launch into the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel’s Messiah.

 

The cashier who had checked me out earlier came running over just as my two overflowing carts were being led to me.

 

“Thank God you are here! I was afraid I would have to pay for the cigarettes and your Dr. Pepper.”

 

“Oh, Honey,” was all I could say. My compassion switch flipped. To her, that could have been just as traumatic as me having to leave my groceries. During our checkout she had been telling me about her three children, her long, late-night hours, her worries about the pandemic, and the struggle her family was under. I know we shouldn’t have, but we hugged.

 

“Can you get those carts outside on your own? We’re kind of busy around here,” the manager said, motioning the cashier to get back to work. I saw about six other people in the store. Busy, my foot. I should have told her I needed help, but instead I cavalierly maneuvered two overflowing carts through the exit and to my car.

 

The 57 bags I had accumulated filled up the trunk and the backseat of my car. I stopped midway through loading to sanitize my hands and take off the mask I had forgotten I was wearing. I was sweating like a roofer on a hot day.

 

Final step: find my way home. I sat in the car a fairly long time before turning on the ignition, staring at Ellen’s directions. I plugged our address into my now-charging phone, willing the Australian-man-voice I had given Siri to talk to me. Why was I so stupid? How is it I had never learned how to turn on the volume for this app?

 

I eased out of the parking lot and back onto the highway, having memorized the exit I would need to get off of. Short minutes later I was off the highway and onto the correct road. I couldn’t see the next street I was meant to take so I put on my blinkers and pulled to the side of the road. Corporate Drive. Okay. I could find that. A few minutes later I was on the next street. Both the directions and the app concurred. The next street? I pulled over again. Starting and stopping. Backtracking and zigzagging, I made my way around the Isthmus of Madison, one of the most convoluted areas I have ever driven in. When I lived here years ago (pre GPS) I would just look to the State Capitol as my focal point and hope I was on the right side of it to get home to our Eastside residence. If I wasn’t, I would recalibrate and start again. I always got home somehow, but I don’t think it was ever easy.

 

What should have been a 12-minute journey home took me 45. Just short of 2 am, I pulled up at our condo, beads of perspiration dripping down my neck. I had turned the air conditioner off and the defroster on because the inside of the car kept fogging up. My windows were down. It was muggy in the middle of the night in Madison.

 

I pulled up to the back of the building where our balcony is located and honked the horn, neighbors be damned. The girls showed up immediately and I told them to meet me at the front parking lot. It’s about 300 feet and two sets of stairs just to get to our apartment building and then it’s another two flights to our second story nest. With the 57 bags and three exhausted females (Don was long asleep), you might imagine it took some time and energy to get the groceries into the house and unpacked. Given that our fridge is just a little bit bigger than one you’d find in a dormitory residence and the light bulb inside isn’t working, it was a feat to fit everything into its place.

 

After a few meager hours of fitful sleep, I was up early to take my sweetheart to urgent care. (Poor fellow, he had been silently going through his very own crisis while I was having mine.) When I turned on the ignition, I noticed the fuel light flashing and the dashboard display telling me I had four-miles worth of fuel. Not everything that could have gone wrong did, but nearly.

 

++++++++++

 

Post Script: A month in, I have become a regular patron of Woodman’s and can easily navigate my way there and back again; my sweetheart’s health crisis has been averted; my sister-in-law and I meet up for regular walks and bike rides and dinners, and we laugh about this experience every single time.


This is Ellen and I running into each other at Woodman's a few days later! Can you believe it?


 

Friday, July 24, 2020

Writing Through the Storm




As I write on the cozy burgundy lawn chair out on our tiny wrought iron balcony, I hear flute and drum music emanating from Tenney Park just down the road, floating across the picking-up wind. There is thunder in the far distance and a few light spritzes of rain. The grey clouds are roiling across the sky, swirling almost. Weather is upon us here in Madison.

Don has just gone out to get two more bicycle helmets so the family will be good-to-go for pedaling adventures. It was our plan to head out this morning: everyone but me on their new-to-them bicycles, and me on a rented electric one from one of the many stations sprinkled across the city.

My goal is to write half an hour a day, though I wonder if today’s allotment of words will be completed on the balcony before the storm bears down. Perhaps I’ll find myself inside in the rather dark living room with the floral thrift store love seats and a mission style lamp that gives it a nice glow, in spite of the grandmotherly feel.

It’s coming along, the decoration and improvement of our house, but not quickly. It’s good to take things one step at a time: we started off simply with inflatable mattresses on the floor and a fold up table and chairs that Sister Ellen had lent us. Friend Eydie gave us a few lamps. We were gifted some old sheets and towels, and just enough to start house. I’ve thought a few times that this is probably the way refugees get started, too: with gifts from the community that may or may not suit their needs or tastes and a gradual building-up of what makes them feel comfortable and at home. There have been a few new purchases, but most of what we have has come from the abundant selection of thrift stores in and around Madison.

20 odd years ago, when Don and I lived here for about a year, I broke into the local writing market by doing a piece on the St. Vincent de Paul store on Williamson Street. It was already an institution in these parts, but The Isthmus, Madison’s alt-weekly newspaper, saw enough originality in my article to publish it, and continue to work with me on a freelance basis for several more articles. Well, I’m right back at that St. Vinny’s and it has barely changed over these many years. Fortunately, there are many more Vinny’s in the region so they have become regular haunts for all things from cutlery to blenders, mirrors to clothes, panini makers (one of the most well-used items in our house at present!) to lawn chairs, tables and chairs to bath mats …well, the list goes on. So long as we are patient, we will eventually get what we want. We pretty much have what we need, though much of it isn’t quite what we imagined or wanted. I’m not worried, though. It would appear we are professional manifesters. If you read my last blog on how we bought a condo sight unseen and traveled across the country to move to it, you’ll know this to be a fact.  We accomplished all this during the covid crisis whilst being locked out of China, our place of employment. Have no doubt that when Don and Leah want something, we make it happen. A friend once said we have “horseshoes up our asses,” but I prefer to think that when we are in alignment with one another and with the universe, that combination is unbeatable.

Of course, this isn’t always true, but during our entire time since leaving Beijing and finding ourselves stuck outside of our house and host-country, we have encountered fortuitous after fortuitous event. It’s been like jade beads on a Buddhist prayer necklace: one bead clicks against the other and good continues to flow our way.

Some would argue, and I would agree, that it is all in the perspective. So many people have said to us, “Oh, my gosh. I don’t know how you do it. Your family has gone through so much.” I look at them and smile and shrug a little, a bit at a loss for words. I don’t want to be self-congratulatory, especially when so many are going through enormous grief and suffering. Even among our fellow international school colleagues, we have fared so well – barely having to pay for our accommodations these past six months, procuring a 2003 Toyota Avalon with less than 100,000 miles on it to manage our daily lives here in the USA, and now this modest condo of ours in what is the ideal location for us, where it seems we will be residing for at least a few more months this year, and for our summers in years to come. For us (I think I speak for my family), it has been more of an adventure than a trial. Most certainly, there have been dips in the road and tricky situations we’ve had to maneuver. Just at this moment, we are trying to figure out how to renew Emily’s passport which will soon have less than six months’ time on it, in order to get back to China, when the borders eventually open. It feels formidable, being that there is at least a 1.5-million-person backlog in passport processing, but I also believe that everything always works out in the end, one way or another. And if it doesn’t, I suppose you are dead. And even that, I suspect, will have a happy ending.

As a family, we’ve been watching The Good Place. Personally, I don’t think I believe in a heaven or hell or good or bad place per se; I believe there will be pure, positive energy that I will be a part of, and that feels rather invigorating to imagine. So, no, even death, I think, will work out wonderfully well for me!

The rain has started here now, but I have enough protection from the balcony above me. I don’t suppose there will be bike riding in our immediate future. Oh, a lightning bolt just flashed across the sky. Here is the thunder, amplified and near now. I rather love this changeable Midwestern summer weather, so long as I am not caught out in it. Me and my cherry tomato and basil and mint plants are settled quite cozily here on this little balcony. The squirrels and birds and rabbits that I always see when I step outside have smartly gone into hiding. I have not seen or heard from any of them since I’ve started writing. I wonder where their refuges are. Mine is in this becoming-cozy little condo that we have manifested for ourselves. No, it’s not luck; no, it’s not hard work; yes, it is saying yes to life and making choices that bring us closer to living our dream. Right now, this is our dream and I feel mightily satisfied with it.

The bike ride happened after all - in the evening!


Monday, July 20, 2020

Starting Again - Covid Edition

Who buys a place, takes a cross country trip, moves into it sans furniture and starts a whole new life in the middle of a pandemic? We do, that’s who!



 We left Beijing on January 28th, anticipating a two week break before we’d be allowed back at school, assuming the COVID crisis would be over by then. Oh, the naivety! Needless to say, we haven’t made it back yet and see no evidence that we will any time soon, nearly six months later.

 

We have finally landed at a longer-term hitching post. After two and a half months in Thailand and the same amount of time in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in Northern California, we have trekked across the country in our new-to-us 2003 Toyota Avalon and taken possession of a condo in Madison, Wisconsin, Don’s hometown.



 About six weeks ago, on one of our evening walks around our hilly and deer-filled rural neighborhood outside of Placerville, California, we revisited the circuitous, never-ending conversation that many internationally employed, displaced people are having: where do we go next? The conversations about when will we finally get to go back to Beijing, what our jobs are going to look like next year and everything related to our lives back in Asia always end in speculation and we had largely dropped even talking about these what-ifs.

 

So, with summer upon us and wondering how we would keep occupied once our jobs wound down and the girls weren’t endlessly busy with their school work, we allowed ourselves to explore possibilities on one of our evening hikes.



 Our BC (Before Corona) plan for the summer had been to spend a big chunk of it in Madison, possibly renting an Airbnb, with Charlotte having the opportunity to get both her driver’s license and her lifeguarding certification, and the rest of us just relishing family and friends and biking and kayaking and drinking beer and eating cheese. A reunion was in the works for all the McMahans – a convergence on Madison in late June, just as we were winding up our school year abroad.

 

Alas, that plan was struck off the calendar many months ago, but we continued to wonder if Madison might be a place we could call home until our callback to Beijing. But the money! So many of our colleagues have spent exorbitant amount of money since being exiled from China. Those who have been fortunate enough to have gracious family or friends to stay with have lost less money but perhaps more of their minds.

 

So what if, we thought, we could find ourselves a little apartment to buy? After more than twenty years abroad together, Don and I were tired of couch surfing summer after summer. Was it time to grow up and find a little place of our own? (We do have a home on Vancouver Island that we will eventually retire to, but we are letting a renter pay our mortgage until the time comes.) Well, the stars aligned almost as soon as they came out that very evening, and within days we had found our modest little ‘covid condo,’ put in an offer and had it accepted. A few weeks later school was out for the year, and with a week-long stop in Seattle to see my sister, an across-the-ditch border visit with my dad and brother and a pedal-to-the-metal trip across the country (with stops in Yellowstone, Mt. Rushmore and the Black Hills), we find ourselves slowly settling into our new life here in Madison.



 I’m still a little bit confused waking up in the morning and remembering that we live in the Midwest now. There is some cognitive dissonance since we are living in a modest apartment where we feel a bit like college kids collecting thrift store furniture, sleeping on an inflatable mattress and hanging our clothes out to dry on the community drying rack outside. The big difference between those days and now is we are 55 and 60 years old, and have two teenagers along for the ride!

 

I am presently sitting on our still-unfurnished balcony with a lone $2.95 plastic lawn chair that I bought from Goodwill a few days ago.  Soon this place will be a haven, once we have plants and herbs a grill and a table and chairs. I can picture it perfectly. Even without the amenities, however, my view is of green grass and tall leafy trees. We are in the city, but it’s so set back you’d never know it. There is no traffic to be heard. We are a two-minute walk from Lake Mendota, one of the lakes on the Isthmus of Madison, and we are surrounded by parks. The Governor’s Mansion is just a short walk from our house. A plump little bright red cardinal shows up nearly every time I go out on the balcony, and I swear it’s my mama. There are squirrels scampering branch to branch and little baby rabbits everywhere.



 For the paradisiacal landscape, there is A LOT that needs doing in our condo. The kitchen appliances are on their way out – there is no light in the refrigerator and it drips steadily, the dryer shuddered to a stop yesterday and the oven has a decade’s worth of grease in and around it. Don is a dreamer, though, and has big plans for kitchen improvements, carpet removal and the like.

 

Yup, our not-quite 900 square foot covid condo is in need of some serious fixing up. That said, we are seriously happy here. It’s our new home for the foreseeable future until we can return to Beijing, and will be our summer bolt hole for years to come. Don and I have been living overseas together for more than 20 years and we have decided that we are JUST DONE with rocking up to various (and generous!) relatives and friends’ houses over the course of our two month summers, having to carefully calibrate the amount of time our guests can deal with our family impositions before it’s time to move on and unpack and recalibrate all over again. Our 1982 Toyota camper van is too small for the four of us to coexist now that the girls are teenagers (This apartment is almost too small for spoiled North American standards, though most Europeans would find it highly manageable and our Hong Kong friends would celebrate it as a mansion.) For me, my main complaint is the one bathroom shared by three other folks who all require their ablutions at the same times of day that I need mine. I also need my “Leah-space” but the balcony will soon become that nest, at least until the cold sets in. Let’s hope we’ve found our way back to Beijing by then.



 May I reiterate how truly blessed I feel despite the modesty of this cozy little place filled with moldering carpet and a tub that scares the bejezus out of me? We are can-do people who love a good challenge. Within the course of a week we have manifested bunk beds for the girls, a dining room table with four five-dollar Mission style chairs, two top-of-the-line love seats (even if they are upholstered with old lady flowers), and a plethora of other necessities. One forgets that when starting out with nothing, that it takes time to realize and accumulate what one needs: pots, utensils, salt, pepper, lamps, shower curtains, hangers a can opener – it is a list that is both added to and struck off daily. Our thrifting skills are becoming honed.

 

Between our buddy Eydie and our Madison sister Ellen, we are set with mugs and coffee tables and dishes and towels and blow up beds and sheets and pillows. It’s been like moving into a dorm with roommates we already know. At least there’s no getting-to-know you phase. It’s straight to the “Get the hell out of the bathroom,” and “Give me some space” phase, niceties not required. Of course, we’ve been living in hotel rooms and smaller spaces than this for chunks of this six-month corona working vacation so this is not new to us. We are old hands at being together 24/7 in small spaces. The fact that we have moved into the non-transient part of our journey and the last place we will live before we eventually head back to Beijing feels like a gift beyond measure.

 

So, long story short: we’re home. For now.