Footprints

Idle boats

Today I walked on the beach in the footprints of past walks with Nancy. We were in Chatham, Cape Cod, for the winter holidays. Chatham was the home of Nancy’s brother and his family, as well as the village where she had spent many blissful summers as a child.    Nancy’s brother, Jack, his wife Beth, and their five grown children would be joining us for various of the festivities: Christmas Eve, Christmas day, and Jack’s birthday the day after Christmas. But the festivities were all a bit much, just shy of three months after Nancy’s death. I would have to walk alone in my grief, trying hard not to spoil the enjoyment of those for whom the Christmas festivities should not be marred by tears and lamentations.

One morning I rose before the others and walked down to the fish pier, just a short walk from the house. The winter sun did not warm but illuminated the sharply evanescent cold blue of the sky, with the promise of lightening the dark blue of early morning waters.

This brief walk to the fisherman’s pier was one we had taken time and time again. From the pier you could see not only boats, small spits of sand, and sea birds, but even seals, especially after the fishermen had brought in their haul.   It was an annual pilgrimage for our family to arrive just as the fisherman came in and discarded their trash fish to the hungry seals that awaited them.   I don’t think that the children were more excited than we were, when we saw the seals diving for fish, playing with each other, going down deep and seeming to disappear before they popped up again right in front of your eyes. Now that the children are aging into young adulthood and Nancy is gone, how many more such walks will we take as a family?

Chatham-Fish-Pier-07686

Walking down the beach, I noticed the foot prints of other walkers: a child’s footprint next to the three-legged print of a sea bird, then a larger footprint, maybe that of a father.   Now I saw what I took to be a father, his dog, and his child. Did they realize the memories they were making? Nancy and I and the children had made many such footprints through the years.   The footprints, so finely etched, would be washed away, but what would happen to our memories?  Without these written words would they too gradually or quickly lose their contours?

I heard the seabirds calling, some of them sounding almost ethereal, like ancient musical instruments. Once I had seen them as ordinary sea gulls, too ordinary to notice. Now I forced myself to listen and look not only for the remarkable but for the ordinary, newly realizing how attention to the ordinary is one of the great blessings of being alive.

Flock_of_Seagulls_(eschipul)

I stopped to take photographs of the lonely boats, idling in the cold waters at the fish pier. I found some boats to be beautiful floating vessels on the sea, but to Nancy boats were more than just physical constructions but embodiments of pleasure.   She dreamed of boats, constantly cruising Craig’s list for the perfect little sunfish she could find to putter about in Nantucket Sound in Cape Cod, then bring home to put on Lake Lansing. I worried about the finer details of bringing the boat from the Cape to Michigan, let alone whether her health was good enough to maintain and use a boat during the summer, which would end up being her last one.   If she had lived, she imagined joining the skipper of a sailboat and navigating the waters off the East Coast or even some more remote area for some lengthy period. When she verbalized these wishes, I was secretly skeptical of the possibility, given her poor health, but felt guilty about my inability to dream along with her.   And, worse still, I knew I could not remain on a sailing vessel for long and feared that I would miss her were she to take off on such a trip.

What she saw in sailboats continued to elude me. During my one stretch overnight in a sailboat of her friend’s, we all got seasick from the swells of an unforeseen storm, the friend’s baby throwing up and crying endlessly.   I was struck by claustrophobia.  Day trips off the shores of Cape Cod with Nancy’s brother were delightful, but I dreaded the experience of actually living on a boat for more than one night. But this was not my dream, but Nancy’s.

Nancy was a big dreamer, always imagining the possibility of having spectacular adventures, while I limited myself to more mundane and affordable visions of the future. Although a dreamer, more than most people I know, Nancy really knew how to partake of the pleasures of the world, putting petty issues behind her to focus on what was really important: like the first bloom of spring or the first warm rays of the sun after a tough Michigan winter. While I worried about laundry on a Sunday morning, Nancy wanted to sit on an easy chair in the sun with a cup of coffee and experience a day without being encumbered by my trivial annoyances.

The ordinary moments, the extraordinary ones, and even the ones we may or may never have speak to me in new ways as I seek to experience and remember all that Nancy has left behind.   I mourn the footprints of where she been, as well as all the new ones she will never make and the rays of the sun that will never warm her back again.

.

8 thoughts on “Footprints

  1. Donna January 12, 2015 / 9:29 pm

    I hear your grief, Julia, and I think of you daily.

    Like

    • juliagrant1 January 13, 2015 / 10:54 am

      Thank you, Donna. Your words of encouragement and comfort mean so much.

      Like

  2. lakeshoreta January 12, 2015 / 10:09 pm

    Beautiful reminder of my steps in life. How each one is so important.

    Like

  3. juliagrant1 January 13, 2015 / 10:55 am

    Thank you, Kathryn for the insight, which eluded me as I was writing this.

    Like

  4. magdalena viktoria January 13, 2015 / 3:53 pm

    Beautiful reminder and sentiments… I see the hope in your words, even if there is so much pain. xx

    Like

    • juliagrant1 January 13, 2015 / 9:06 pm

      Magdalena, Thank you. I do find hope amidst the pain…and the gift of realizing how amazingly fortunate we are to live in this world.

      Like

  5. Mollie Callow January 14, 2015 / 10:00 pm

    Every blue sky now reminds me of Nancy, how she’d come to my desk and prod me to go for a walk. I always felt refreshed and happier being in her company for 15 minutes on a sunny day. I so miss that.

    Like

  6. Lea January 15, 2015 / 11:28 am

    ” It only takes a gesture, a touch, a glance, to change the ordinary to the extraordinary “

    Like

Leave a comment