Writing by Yvonne Watterson

~ considering the lilies & lessons from the field ©

Writing by Yvonne Watterson

Category Archives: 9/11

In the Bluest Sky

11 Wednesday Sep 2024

Posted by Editor in 9/11, Anything can Happen, Billy Collins, Healing Field Tempe, Memoir, Remembering September 11th, Seamus Heaney, Terrorism, Themes of childhood

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9.11, American Airlines Flight 77, Billy Collins, Healing Field, Irish DIASPORA, Juliana Valentine McCourt, September 11 2001

The sky above Lake Chapala is blue this morning. I wonder is this the same blue that hung over the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. Cloudless, infinite—and in the parlance of aviation—it was a “severe clear” sky.  Intensely blue with seemingly unlimited visibility and air so pure, such a sky can blind a pilot.  With the previous day’s storms blown away from New York city that morning, it was the quintessential Severe Clear sky. Conditions were perfect for the ordinary travel that would take thousands of people to business meetings and conferences and end-of-summer vacations.

A little girl only a few months older than mine was on board United Airlines Flight 175 that morning. Just four years old and a nature-lover, little Juliana Valentine McCourt, and her mother, an Irish immigrant from Cork, were on their way to Disneyland, the happiest place on earth. They were close. Close. Like my daughter and me on our numerous trips from Phoenix to Newark, Newark to Belfast, and back again. Close. Even when rendered illogical and unreasonable, she by adolescent hormones, me by the unrelenting effects of cancer treatment, we were – and we remain – close. Two peas in a pod.

Sophie and I have the same piano hands. We love Sephora and dark chocolate-covered almonds, mashed potatoes, the smell of books, Derry Girls, and the little dogs that love us. We are ‘friends’ on Facebook and Instagram, where I have promised not to gush too much in ways that embarrass her. We binge-watch – for me it’s The Bear or Yellowstone, while she is on re-runs of Law and Order, and most recently, Breaking Bad, which she tells me holds up well even after all these years.  She’s in Arizona, I’m in Mexico, and we love each other madly, bound forever by knowing that we once filled the heart of the man who died when we were far away from him and from home one November a decade ago.

We’re not pessimistic. We’re not. We just know the other shoe can drop at any time. As such, we’re ready for it. Then again, we also tell ourselves that that kind of thing is the kind of thing that only happens to someone else.

I watched on TV when United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Juliana and her mother and everyone on board died instantly.   In Washington, D.C., sisters  Dana and Zoe Falkenberg, died too when terrorists hijacked their plane and crashed it into the Pentagon. Just 3 and 8, they had boarded American Airlines Flight 77 with their parents to begin the long journey to a new life in Australia. Surveillance footage from Dulles airport would later reveal that little Dana Falkenberg was carrying an Elmo teddy bear. Also on their flight, three exceptional 6th grade students, traveling with their teachers to the Channel Islands Marine Sanctuary on a special trip awarded  by National Geographic.

“Every one of the victims who died on September 11th was the most important person on earth to somebody.”

–President George W. Bush, 12/11/01

Until that too-bright morning, I suppose I had taken for granted the sense of security I felt as an immigrant who had traded Northern Ireland for the United States of America. Foolishly, I had too quickly dropped my guard, forgetting anything can and does happen. I had reached that point where I’d almost stopped reassuring myself that the sound of a car backfiring on the freeway was not a gunshot; that a clap of Monsoon thunder in the mountains was not a bomb timed to go off in the heart of a village on the busiest shopping day of the year; and that a backpack forgotten on the bus was not packed with explosives.

Twenty years ago, my daughter and I first visited The Healing Field, a 9.11 memorial in Tempe, Arizona, heart-achingly beautiful, each of its 2,996 flags a reminder of a life taken.  Wordless, undone by the sheer enormity of the memorial and her diminished stature within it as she walked deep into a field of red, white and blue, I forced myself to look up and away, to recollect the way we had been that September morning when I dropped her off at pre-school. To remember the blueness of the sky …

In a blink of an eye, Sophie is out of sight, deep in the Healing field. Row upon row of flagpoles are set five feet apart enabling us to stretch out our arms and touch two lives at a time, lest we forget what happened.

From somewhere, a mournful “Taps” pierces the air and then Amazing Grace.

Out of sight.

Under that expanse of desert sky, I knew my daughter was not lost. I also knew that such a thought is the one that scares me most.


Colorful tulle butterflies are attached to the flagpoles in the Healing Field. Stuffed bears sit on the grass. Yellow ribbons wrapped around those flagpoles encircling the field represent the valor of those “first responders,” those sworn to protect and serve those within.  Ribbons, blue as that September morning sky are wound around flagpoles in the heart of the Field, for the flight crew members who perished. And, on the grass, for the veterans who perished that day, pair after pair of combat boots.20130911_3446

On the anniversary of September 11th 2001, from New York to  Arizona, and in cities across the globe, wreaths are laid, bells ring out, and names are rubbed in pencil on cherished scraps of paper.

We say their names. 

Juliana Valentine McCourt.

She would have graduated from college by now, trips to Disneyland perhaps less appealing than thoughts of a new car or a promotion.  Such a trajectory is only in my imagination. For Juliana, there was no Disneyland, no first day of school, no soft place to fall.

For a moment or more on September 11, we remember those lost. We fly our flags at half-mast and watch as footage of the World Trade Center’s final moments are replayed on television retrospectives. Keyboard warriors wax conspiratorial about what they think “really” happened at the Pentagon. Politicians pay their respects before they resume election campaign trails that are not always respectful. Family members of 9/11 victims gather on the Memorial plaza in New York to read aloud the names of those killed in the 9/11 attacks and in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Others carry out personal observances.

9.11 is history.

I remember that on September 11 in my daughter’s  final year of high school, not one of her teachers remembered 9-11 out loud. Ostensibly, it was no different than the day before, no different than September 10, 2001, when Ruth McCourt was packing for a trip to Disneyland with her daughter, Juliana.

I read on Facebook or Instagram that on September 10, 2001 “246 people went to sleep in preparation for their morning flights. 2,606 people went to sleep in preparation for work in the morning. 343 firefighters went to sleep in preparation for their next shift. 60 police officers went to sleep in preparation for morning patrol. 8 paramedics went to sleep in preparation for their morning shift of saving lives and 1 K9 went to bed a good boy. None of them saw past 10:00 am the next morning ”

Someone will say all their names today.

So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart. 


“The Names” is in dedication to all the victims of September 11 and their survivors.

The Names – Billy Collins

Yesterday, I lay awake in the palm of the night.

A soft rain stole in, unhelped by any breeze,
And when I saw the silver glaze on the windows,
I started with A, with Ackerman, as it happened,

Then Baxter and Calabro,
Davis and Eberling, names falling into place
As droplets fell through the dark.
Names printed on the ceiling of the night.
Names slipping around a watery bend.
Twenty-six willows on the banks of a stream.
In the morning, I walked out barefoot
Among thousands of flowers
Heavy with dew like the eyes of tears,
And each had a name —
Fiori inscribed on a yellow petal
Then Gonzalez and Han, Ishikawa and Jenkins.
Names written in the air
And stitched into the cloth of the day.
A name under a photograph taped to a mailbox.
Monogram on a torn shirt,
I see you spelled out on storefront windows
And on the bright unfurled awnings of this city.
I say the syllables as I turn a corner —
Kelly and Lee,
Medina, Nardella, and O’Connor.
When I peer into the woods,
I see a thick tangle where letters are hidden
As in a puzzle concocted for children.
Parker and Quigley in the twigs of an ash,
Rizzo, Schubert, Torres, and Upton,
Secrets in the boughs of an ancient maple.
Names written in the pale sky.
Names rising in the updraft amid buildings.
Names silent in stone
Or cried out behind a door.
Names blown over the earth and out to sea.
In the evening — weakening light, the last swallows.
A boy on a lake lifts his oars.
A woman by a window puts a match to a candle,
And the names are outlined on the rose clouds —
Vanacore and Wallace,
(let X stand, if it can, for the ones unfound)
Then Young and Ziminsky, the final jolt of Z.
Names etched on the head of a pin.
One name spanning a bridge, another undergoing a tunnel.
A blue name needled into the skin.
Names of citizens, workers, mothers and fathers,
The bright-eyed daughter, the quick son.
Alphabet of names in a green field.
Names in the small tracks of birds.
Names lifted from a hat
Or balanced on the tip of the tongue.
Names wheeled into the dim warehouse of memory.
So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart. 


by Billy Collins, June 24, 2005

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once in a blue sky

11 Monday Sep 2023

Posted by Editor in 9/11, Anything can Happen, Billy Collins, Healing Field Tempe, Memoir, Remembering September 11th, Seamus Heaney, Terrorism, Themes of childhood

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9.11, American Airlines Flight 77, Billy Collins, Healing Field, Irish DIASPORA, Juliana Valentine McCourt, September 11 2001

The sky above my house in Mexico is blue this morning, the kind of blue sky that hung above the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. Cloudless, infinite—and in the parlance of aviation—a “severe clear” sky.  Intensely blue with seemingly unlimited visibility and air so pure, it can blind a pilot.  With the previous day’s storms blown away from New York city, it was the quintessential Severe Clear morning – a perfect morning for the ordinary travel that would take thousands of people to business meetings and conferences and end-of-summer vacations.

A little girl only a few months older than mine was on board United Airlines Flight 175. Just four years old and a nature-lover, little Juliana Valentine McCourt, and her mother, an Irish immigrant from Cork, were on their way to Disneyland, the happiest place on earth. They were close.

Close. Like my daughter and me on our numerous trips from Phoenix to Newark, Newark to Belfast, and back again. Close. Even when rendered illogical and unreasonable, she by adolescent hormones, me by the effects of cancer treatment, we were – and remain – close, like peas in a pod.

We have the same piano hands. We love Sephora and dark chocolate-covered almonds, mashed potatoes, the smell of books, Derry Girls and the little dogs that love us. We are ‘friends’ on Facebook and Instagram, where I have promised not to gush too much in ways that embarrass her. We binge-watch Netflix originals  – me on The Bear or Yellowstone, she on re-runs of Law and Order, and most recently, Breaking Bad, which she tells me holds up really well after all these years.  She’s in Arizona, I’m in Mexico, and we love each other madly, bound forever by knowing that we once filled the heart of the man who died when we were far away from him and home one November a decade ago.

We’re not pessimistic; we just know the other shoe can drop at any time. We’re ready for it, but sometimes we tell ourselves that that kind of thing is the kind of thing that only happens to someone else.

I watched on TV when United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Juliana and her mother and everyone on board died instantly.   In Washington, D.C., sisters  Dana and Zoe Falkenberg, died too when terrorists hijacked their plane and crashed it into the Pentagon. Just 3 and 8, they had boarded American Airlines Flight 77 with their parents and their favorite stuffed animals to begin the long journey to a new life in Australia. Also on their flight, three exceptional 6th grade students, traveling with their teachers to the Channel Islands Marine Sanctuary on a special trip awarded  by National Geographic.

Surveillance footage from Dulles airport would subsequently reveal that little Dana Falkenberg was carrying an Elmo teddy bear – a lasting reminder of the hijackers’ littlest victims.

“Every one of the victims who died on September 11th was the most important person on earth to somebody.”

–President George W. Bush, 12/11/01

Until that too-bright morning, I suppose I had taken for granted the sense of security I felt as an immigrant who had traded Northern Ireland for the United States. Foolishly, I had too quickly dropped my guard, forgetting anything can and does happen. I had almost stopped reassuring myself that the sound of a car backfiring on the freeway was not a gunshot; that a clap of Monsoon thunder in the mountains was not a bomb timed to go off in the heart of a village on the busiest day of the year; and  that a shopping bag left behind on the bus was not packed with explosives.

Twenty years ago, my daughter and I first visited The Healing Field, a 9.11 memorial in Tempe, Arizona, heart achingly beautiful, each of its 2,996 flags a reminder of a life taken.  Wordless, undone by the sheer enormity of the memorial and her diminished stature within it as she walked deep into a field of red, white and blue, I forced myself to look up and away, to recollect the way we had been that September morning when I dropped her off at pre-school. To remember the blueness of the sky …

In a blink of an eye, Sophie is out of sight, deep in the Healing field, where row upon row of flagpoles set five feet apart enable us to stretch out our arms and touch two lives at a time, lest we forget what happened. From somewhere, a mournful “Taps” pierces the air and then Amazing Grace.

Out of sight.

Under that expanse of desert sky, I knew my daughter was not lost. I also knew that such a thought is the one that scares me most.


Colorful tulle butterflies are attached to the flagpoles in the Healing Field. Stuffed bears sit on the grass. Yellow ribbons wrapped around those flagpoles encircling the field represent the valor of those “first responders,” those sworn to protect and serve those within.  Ribbons, blue as that September morning sky are wound around flagpoles in the heart of the Field, for the flight crew members who perished. And, on the grass, for all the veterans who perished that day, pair after pair of combat boots.20130911_3446

On the anniversary of September 11th 2001, from New York to  Arizona, and in cities across the globe, wreaths are laid, bells ring out, and names are rubbed in pencil on cherished scraps of paper.

We say their names. 

Juliana Valentine McCourt.

She would have graduated from college by now, trips to Disneyland perhaps less appealing than thoughts of a new car or a promotion.  Such a trajectory is only in my imagination. For Juliana, there was no Disneyland, no first day of school, no soft place to fall.

For a moment or more on September 11, we remember those lost, our flags flying at half-mast, footage of the World Trade Center’s final moments replayed on television retrospectives. Keyboard warriors wax conspiratorial about what they think “really” happened at the Pentagon. Politicians pay their respects after which some of them will resume election campaign trails that are not always respectful. Family members of 9/11 victims will gather on the Memorial plaza in New York to read aloud the names of those killed in the 9/11 attacks and in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Others will plan personal observances.

9.11 is history.

My daughter recently told me that in her final year of high school not one of her teachers remembered 9-11 out loud. Ostensibly, it was no different than the day before, no different than September 10, 2001, when Ruth McCourt was packing for a trip to Disneyland with her daughter, Juliana.

Someone will say her name—all the names.

So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart. 



“The Names” is in dedication to all the victims of September 11 and their survivors.

The Names – Billy Collins

Yesterday, I lay awake in the palm of the night.

A soft rain stole in, unhelped by any breeze,
And when I saw the silver glaze on the windows,
I started with A, with Ackerman, as it happened,

Then Baxter and Calabro,
Davis and Eberling, names falling into place
As droplets fell through the dark.
Names printed on the ceiling of the night.
Names slipping around a watery bend.
Twenty-six willows on the banks of a stream.
In the morning, I walked out barefoot
Among thousands of flowers
Heavy with dew like the eyes of tears,
And each had a name —
Fiori inscribed on a yellow petal
Then Gonzalez and Han, Ishikawa and Jenkins.
Names written in the air
And stitched into the cloth of the day.
A name under a photograph taped to a mailbox.
Monogram on a torn shirt,
I see you spelled out on storefront windows
And on the bright unfurled awnings of this city.
I say the syllables as I turn a corner —
Kelly and Lee,
Medina, Nardella, and O’Connor.
When I peer into the woods,
I see a thick tangle where letters are hidden
As in a puzzle concocted for children.
Parker and Quigley in the twigs of an ash,
Rizzo, Schubert, Torres, and Upton,
Secrets in the boughs of an ancient maple.
Names written in the pale sky.
Names rising in the updraft amid buildings.
Names silent in stone
Or cried out behind a door.
Names blown over the earth and out to sea.
In the evening — weakening light, the last swallows.
A boy on a lake lifts his oars.
A woman by a window puts a match to a candle,
And the names are outlined on the rose clouds —
Vanacore and Wallace,
(let X stand, if it can, for the ones unfound)
Then Young and Ziminsky, the final jolt of Z.
Names etched on the head of a pin.
One name spanning a bridge, another undergoing a tunnel.
A blue name needled into the skin.
Names of citizens, workers, mothers and fathers,
The bright-eyed daughter, the quick son.
Alphabet of names in a green field.
Names in the small tracks of birds.
Names lifted from a hat
Or balanced on the tip of the tongue.
Names wheeled into the dim warehouse of memory.
So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart. 


by Billy Collins, June 24, 2005

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severe clear – september 11

10 Saturday Sep 2022

Posted by Editor in 9/11, Anything can Happen, Billy Collins, Healing Field Tempe, Memoir, Remembering September 11th, Seamus Heaney, Terrorism, Themes of childhood

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9.11, American Airlines Flight 77, Billy Collins, Healing Field, Irish DIASPORA, Juliana Valentine McCourt, September 11 2001

Severe clear: an aviation term airline pilots use to describe a bright blue sky with seemingly unlimited visibility.

Twenty years ago, my daughter and I first visited The Healing Field, a 9.11 memorial in Tempe, Arizona, heartachingly beautiful, each of its 2,996 flags a reminder of  a life taken.  Wordless, undone by the sheer enormity of the memorial and her diminished stature within it as she walked deep into a field of red, white and blue, I forced myself to look up and away,  to recollect the way we had been that September morning when I dropped her off at pre-school, to remember the blueness of the sky.

In that blink of an eye, she is out of sight, deep in the Healing field, where row upon row of flagpoles set five feet apart enable us to stretch out our arms and touch two lives at a time, lest we forget what happened. From somewhere, a mournful “Taps” pierces the air and then Amazing Grace.

Out of sight.

Under that big desert sky, I knew my daughter was not lost. I know the very thought is still what scares me most.


Twenty one years ago,  September 11th arrived on a Tuesday, and for a little girl only a few months older than mine, it began with her boarding United Airlines Flight 175. Just four years old, nature-lover Juliana Valentine McCourt, and her mother, an Irish immigrant from Cork, were on their way to Disneyland, the happiest place on earth.

Juliana and her mom were best friends, close as sisters. They were traveling together to California.

Close. Like my daughter and me on our numerous trips from Phoenix to Newark, Newark to Belfast, and back again.

Close. Even when rendered illogical and unreasonable, she by raging adolescent hormones, me by the effects of cancer treatment, I recall we were – and are – as two peas in a pod.

We have the same piano hands. We love Sephora and dark chocolate-covered almonds, mashed potatoes, and the smell of books, Derry Girls and our dogs. We follow each other on Facebook and Instagram, where I have promised not to gush too much in ways that will only embarrass her. We binge-watch Netflix originals  – me on Ozark or Yellowstone, she on re-runs of Law and Order, and most recently, Breaking Bad, which  she tells me holds up really well after all these years.  She’s in Arizona, I’m in Mexico, and we love each other madly, bound forever by the knowledge that we once filled the heart of the man who died when we were far away from him and home one November.

We know anything can happen, but sometimes, like everyone else, we forget.


Juliana and her mother died on the plane that plunged through the South Tower of the World Trade Center with horrifying velocity.  In Washington, D.C., sisters, Dana and Zoe Falkenberg, died too when terrorists hijacked their plane and crashed it into the Pentagon. Just 3 and 8, they had boarded American Airlines Flight 77 with their parents and their favorite stuffed animals looking forward to a new life in Australia. Also on their Flight, three exceptional 6th grade students  traveling with their teachers to Channel Islands Marine Sanctuary on a special trip awarded  by National Geographic. Surveillance footage from Dulles airport would subsequently reveal that little Dana Falkenberg was carrying an Elmo teddy bear – a lasting reminder of the hijackers’ littlest victims.

“Every one of the victims who died on September 11th was the most important person on earth to somebody.”

–President George W. Bush, 12/11/01

All gone.

So many dead, so many names:

So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart

Reminders that terrorism is an awful equalizer, colorful tulle butterflies are attached to the flagpoles in the Healing Field. Stuffed bears sit on the grass. For the terrorist, children, parents, grandparents, and those without names or families or homes or good health are all legitimate targets.

Yellow ribbons wrapped around and around those flagpoles encircling the field represent the valor of those “first responders,” those sworn to protect and serve those within.  Bright ribbons as blue as that September morning sky are wound around flagpoles in the heart of the Field, for the flight crew members who perished. And, on the grass, for all the veterans who perished that day, pair after pair of combat boots.

Today, from New York to  Arizona, and in cities across the globe, wreaths are laid, bells ring out, and names are rubbed in pencil on cherished scraps of paper.

We say their names. 

Juliana Valentine McCourt.

She would have graduated from college by now, Disneyland days with her mom perhaps less appealing than thoughts of a new car or a promotion.  Such a trajectory is only in my imagination. For Juliana, there was no Disneyland, no first day of school, no soft place to fall.

We will remember her. We will remember them all, as we lower our flags and watch again the footage of the World Trade Center’s final moments on television retrospectives. Keyboard warriors will wax conspiratorial about missing footage of what they think happened at the Pentagon. Politicians will pay their respects after which some of them will resume election campaign trails that are not always respectful. Family members of 9/11 victims will gather on the Memorial plaza in New York to read aloud the names of those killed in the 9/11 attacks and in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Others will plan personal observances.

9.11 is history.

My daughter told me that in her final year of high school not one of her teachers remembered 9-11 out loud. Ostensibly, it was no different than the day before, no different than September 10, 2001, when Ruth McCourt was packing for a trip to Disneyland with her daughter, Juliana.

Today, someone will say her name – all the names.

So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart. 



“The Names” is in dedication to all the victims of September 11 and their survivors.

The Names – Billy Collins

Yesterday, I lay awake in the palm of the night.

A soft rain stole in, unhelped by any breeze,
And when I saw the silver glaze on the windows,
I started with A, with Ackerman, as it happened,

Then Baxter and Calabro,
Davis and Eberling, names falling into place
As droplets fell through the dark.
Names printed on the ceiling of the night.
Names slipping around a watery bend.
Twenty-six willows on the banks of a stream.
In the morning, I walked out barefoot
Among thousands of flowers
Heavy with dew like the eyes of tears,
And each had a name —
Fiori inscribed on a yellow petal
Then Gonzalez and Han, Ishikawa and Jenkins.
Names written in the air
And stitched into the cloth of the day.
A name under a photograph taped to a mailbox.
Monogram on a torn shirt,
I see you spelled out on storefront windows
And on the bright unfurled awnings of this city.
I say the syllables as I turn a corner —
Kelly and Lee,
Medina, Nardella, and O’Connor.
When I peer into the woods,
I see a thick tangle where letters are hidden
As in a puzzle concocted for children.
Parker and Quigley in the twigs of an ash,
Rizzo, Schubert, Torres, and Upton,
Secrets in the boughs of an ancient maple.
Names written in the pale sky.
Names rising in the updraft amid buildings.
Names silent in stone
Or cried out behind a door.
Names blown over the earth and out to sea.
In the evening — weakening light, the last swallows.
A boy on a lake lifts his oars.
A woman by a window puts a match to a candle,
And the names are outlined on the rose clouds —
Vanacore and Wallace,
(let X stand, if it can, for the ones unfound)
Then Young and Ziminsky, the final jolt of Z.
Names etched on the head of a pin.
One name spanning a bridge, another undergoing a tunnel.
A blue name needled into the skin.
Names of citizens, workers, mothers and fathers,
The bright-eyed daughter, the quick son.
Alphabet of names in a green field.
Names in the small tracks of birds.
Names lifted from a hat
Or balanced on the tip of the tongue.
Names wheeled into the dim warehouse of memory.
So many names, there is barely room on the walls of the heart. 


by Billy Collins, June 24, 2005

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separation anxiety

15 Tuesday Mar 2022

Posted by Editor in 9/11, Awesome Women, cancer, Children's Books, Education, Emmylou Harris, Family, favorite teacher, Love Actually, Memoir, Memoir, Mother Daughter Relationship, Ordinary Things, Pre-school, Soundtracks of our Lives, summer camp, Teaching, Themes of Childhood, Van Morrison, Van Morrison, Women and careers

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Tags

airports, Antrim, baby, bookstores, Cancer, children's books, children's literature, Dolly Parton, heroic teachers, Ireland, ironing, Jane Dyer, laundry, life-work balance, Love Actually, Motherhood, Northern Ireland, parting, stay-at-home-mom, Sweet Sorrow in the Wind

I stayed at home with my daughter the year after she was born.  It was the best year of my life, with Sophie attached to me in one of those baby carriers without which I would have been unprepared for motherhood. That’s what the salesperson in Babies R Us said.

Some days I made it out of my pajamas, but only if I felt like walking out to the mailbox. I was usually bare-faced unlike Dolly Parton, who is always  in full-make up, “ambulance, tornado, and earthquake ready” – and who is always – always – ready with the right words at the right time.

Some days, I showered. Most days, I resembled the child I once was, the one who had to be reminded more than once to wash her hands or brush her teeth because she was so absorbed in play; the child who made wishes on dandelions and chains out of buttercups and daisies. I loved playing with my very own and very real baby girl, feeding her, dressing her in miniature clothes with impossibly tiny buttons, brushing what little hair she had with the softest toothbrush, and bathing her in the kitchen sink. For twelve idyllic months, with her dad off at work, she was all mine. Drunk on new baby smell, I danced in the afternoons around a house filled with sunshine and Van Morrison’s “Bright Side of the Road.” Over 25 years later, I can still smell it.

In those first months of her life, I  spent interminable hours looking at her. Just. Looking. At. Her. I examined every tiny feature and flicker across her face, searching for resemblances to me, her father, her grandparents. I often paused to ponder how it was that two imperfect people had made perfection.  She would stared back, cooing like a little bird, babbling and gurgling before discovering the beautiful hands that fly with expression today. We called it hand ballet.

Mostly, Sophie bounced with joy and curiosity. When she cried, it was for food or comfort or maybe just to let us know she was there. I couldn’t bear it. I hovered. I still do, albeit virtually and to her chagrin. I was one of those mothers who picked her up the minute she began to cry at night. My mother encouraged me to do this, reminding me there would be plenty of times as an adult when Sophiewould have to cry herself to sleep without me there to make it all better. My mother was right. 

If only we could deposit all those hours of holding and comforting in some sort of emotional savings account, to be withdrawn years later in case of emergency – like the night I spent in the ICU following eight hours of surgery while my daughter wept in bed and rocked herself to sleep.

 I hate cancer.


When it was time for me to return to work after that year at home with her, I was unprepared for the crying – hers and mine – that came immediately before and continuing some time after I placed her in the waiting arms of Bonnie, a cheery classroom assistant at a Montessori school where all the other mothers appeared not to have jobs outside the home. Every morning, they loitered in the parking lot in their shorts and Birkenstocks, drinking coffee from mugs filled at home. This was in that time before a Starbucks occupied every corner. While I was not dressed like Dolly Parton for a turn at the Ryman, I imagine I conveyed a vague impression of adulthood with Anne Klein suits bought on sale at Lohemanns and my hair on the verge of sensible.  An assistant principal at the time, I was trying to impress on someone – most probably myself – that I was “A Professional Working Mother” who could do it all and have it all and “lean in” blah, blah, blah.  I’ll tell you. I’ve had my fill of leaning in. 

Sophie was unimpressed with this version of me and showed it by crying, daily, all over my dry-clean-only blouses. I made this a much bigger deal than it was, eventually discovering that if I didn’t put the blouses in the tumble dryer, they survived. Realizing there must be a lucrative pact between dry cleaners and the fashion industry, I took a lasting umbrage against the dryer, rarely feeding it anything other than towels and jeans.

For all the years I lived in sunny Arizona – where any Northern Ireland mother will tell you there’s “great drying” most every day – I never understood why I owned a dryer. Where I grew up, everybody hung the washing out on the line and then ran like hell to rescue it when the rain invariably began. The first thing I bought for my mother with my first real pay check was a tumble dryer from the Northern Ireland Electricity Board.

I remember I once asked my late husband about the logic of owning a dryer in Phoenix. He looked at me like I had two heads. He loved that machine so much that he used it to dry all clothes, regardless of fabric. His favorite setting was Permanent Press, and he used it for all my favorite clothes too. I’m not sure I know today what  this setting means. It doesn’t press anything permanently, but it has done a bang-up job of reducing some of my skirts and shirts to napkin-sized deformities. To be fair, when I was pretending to be a grown-up with a real job that required more than pajamas, he didn’t do my laundry. I did. All my clothes were safe. I was too. 


My safe clothes and my sensible job held no clout with Bonnie.  Mortified and avoiding eye-contact with her, I handed her my wailing, flailing girl, and Bonnie attempted to placate me with repeated reassurances that Sophie would be fine as soon as I left. If only I would just leave . . . Although she had to say it at least three times,  Bonnie showed restraint and never once rolled her eyes as I stood there wild-eyed and fretting about the impending separation. I wrestled with the reality that Bonnie had other children to attend to. She would not be spending hours  like Madonna – mother of Jesus, not Lourdes – at my perfect child or cheering with delight and recording on film and in writing when Sophie did something for the first time. Anything.

I would miss the first time Sophie watered a plant in the school garden or threw a rock or blew bubbles or cracked a nut in the classroom nutcracker. Not your typical developmental milestones, but Bonnie’s boss deemed them important. I would miss telling my husband, my parents, my friends – just falling short of alerting the media – that she had experienced another genuis-level achievement like that time she spoke her first word – daddy – or when she clapped her hands for the first time, or let go of our hands and stood straight like a little warrior to an ovation, “Sophie’s standing! Sophie’s standing!”

If I’m honest – all these years later – I could have and maybe I should have stayed at home for another year. And another.

I was jealous that it would be the magnanimous Bonnie, with some magic trick up her sleeve, who would  charm Sophie’s tears away. Every day, I walked away from the little girl writhing in the arms of “the other woman,” pretending to leave but I stayed in the car with the air-conditioning on and the window down, prolonging the agony, listening to Sophie cry. When the wails gave way to worn-out sobs and a final shuddering stop, I reapplied my makeup until my face matched the boring business suit and no glimmer of guilt-stricken working mother remained. Off I went – to work for other people’s children.


images

Around this time, I discovered a book by Kathi Appelt who understood the rhythm of these daily separations – and reunions – and experienced it again when her son was 12 and going off to summer camp. Bracing herself for how she would feel as he prepared to go off to college—and inspired by Emmylou Harris’s Sweet Sorrow in the Wind—she wrote “Oh My Baby Little One.”

I found it on a discard table in a Borders when central Phoenix still had a real bookstore where I could also get The Irish Sunday Times albeit on a Wednesday.

image_1Every bedtime, I read to Sophie the story of lovely Mama Bird who reassured Baby Bird that every day when she was off at work, her love would still be with him. Magically—and in the shape of a little red heart— it would slip inside his lunch box or sit on his shoulder during playtime or nestle on his pillow at nap-time. At the same time, it would curl around Mama Bird’s coffee cup as she went about her daily business.

And every night, before closing the book and kissing her goodnight, I would ask Sophie, “Where’s the love?” and she would whisper as though it were our secret:

All around, mama. The love is all around.

It eased the morning goodbyes when I left her with Bonnie and all the other teachers throughout the years. There were lots of them. I was never satisfied with her teachers because they never seemed to understand that I was Sophie’s first teacher, that I knew her best. By the time she was in 2nd grade, Sophie had become a tourist in Arizona’s public education system, hopping from school to school, becoming ever more resilient, while I kept searching for that one teacher who would change her life as Mr. Jones had changed mine. We never stopped looking. I’m not sure the superhero teacher ever showed up, and Sophie’s formal education is now over with her post-graduate program completed.


One summer morning, I watched from my car as she strode onto a community college campus to study art with students who were ancient – at least in their twenties. As tall as me but braver, I knew she knew I was watching and waiting for her to turn around and wave. She did. She never lets me down.

So blow a kiss and wave good-bye – my baby, don’t you cry. This love is always with you. Like the sun is in the sky.

sophcollege

Sometimes, in an unguarded moment – me in Mexico, Sophie in Arizona –  between emails and Zoom meetings, home improvement projects and grocery store runs, things that matter and things that don’t, we’ll each wonder what the other is doing and pick up the phone.

She’s only a phone call away, a couple of hours on a plane, and although I miss her terribly, I can’t help but smile as I recall her as a three-year-old, fighting sleep with all her might and poring over Jane Dyer’s watercolor illustrations, searching for the tiny red heart leverly hidden on each page.image_3

Those drawings inspired a growing collection of hearts found in unexpected places over the years. Scatted around my home – and hers – are  little reminders in stone and glass and fabric that the love actually is all around – something we have known long before Hugh Grant’s Prime Minister told us so in. If you’re looking for love, you  can always find evidence of it at the airport, where those who stay and those who go are often telling the only truths that matter:

Whenever I get gloomy with the state of the world, I think about the arrivals gate at Heathrow Airport. General opinion’s starting to make out that we live in a world of hatred and greed, but I don’t see that. It seems to me that love is everywhere. Often, it’s not particularly dignified or newsworthy, but it’s always there – fathers and sons, mothers and daughters, husbands and wives, boyfriends, girlfriends, old friends. When the planes hit the Twin Towers, as far as I know, none of the phone calls from the people on board were messages of hate or revenge – they were all messages of love. If you look for it, I’ve got a sneaky feeling you’ll find that love actually is all around.


In the Mexican village I call home, the weather is perfect for a clothesline strung across the backyard. Reminiscent of the rhythms of rural County Derry, it is a place peopled with the kind of characters that fill Seamus Heaney’s poems – men like my father, makers of things.

The other day, the stonemason working on the wall around our house, asked me about the corazón shaped stone in the pile of rocks on our street. Would I like to use it on the new wall?

I would.

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From there to here . . .

Yvonne hails from Antrim, Northern Ireland, and has lived in the desert southwest of the United States for almost thirty years. Married, with a daughter who is navigating her path through the "teen tunnel," and a haughty cat, Atticus, she has spent the better part of the last three decades in the classroom as a student, teacher, and administrator. Her mid-life crisis came as a sneaky Stage II invasive breast cancer diagnosis which subsequently sent her to the blogosphere where she found a virtual home away from home . . .
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