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feelings

family history

My aunt role model came to town. Or, more specifically, returned to the city she called home for 8 years. A sad occasion brought her here, but we decided to make the most of it.

We shared a hotel room and uber-ed to Home Depot and to Sears and to furniture stores. She learned about uber while I learned what to look for in a sofa and what makes a good washer/dryer and what it means to be a Mumford. We ate delicious meals and re-arranged the hotel room and sipped fabulous wine. We spilled our emotional guts. Amaro became frenet and she showed me how to turn an unexpected twist into something you actually wanted.

There’s something about advice given to you by an adult that’s not one of your parents that makes it easier to swallow.

I had always used my Aunt A as a role model of the kind of aunt I want to be to my nieces and nephews, but what I hadn’t realized was that I’d also been using her a barometer for the type of adult I want to be.

Her generosity and intelligence and practicality and toughness and insight (into herself, into those around her, into her job) are fierce. Her firsthand knowledge and recall abilities of family history are top notch, but mostly, it’s her ability to be vulnerable and to share and to give. She wants me to know as much about our ancestors as she does, but it’s important to her that the facts be shared face to face because it creates a new memory for us, in addition to, a cold tale is easier to bear when you have a warm body next to you.

The more I learned about her, the more I learned about me. And not because we’re super similar, but because in her sharing about herself, it made me dive deeper into what I know to be true about myself.

“I’m still not used to this reflection,” I said.

“What? Why?” she said. “When’d you dye your hair?”

“Tuesday,” I said.

Without pause or thought, she said, “When I walked in and saw you, I thought, ‘There’s her Mumford side.'”

And she was right. The red hue is more my father’s side while my natural blonde is my mother’s. It never occurred to me that I was dying my hair a color anything other than something I liked. It turns out my hair is the color of my past.

I have my Aunt A to thank for introducing me to the past, present, and future of me.

general

11.4.16

After missing two Tuesday calls due to international travel, I made sure to call Maga as soon as I returned, even though it was a Friday.

“Hi, Maga. It’s Abby.”

“Oh, Abby dear. Hello! We were just leaving for dinner. We’re late. I mean it’s not late. It’s early for dinner, but we’re late. Could you call back in one hour?”

I cast a wary eye on the clock. I’d gone to bed at 3am London time, woken up at 5am London time, flown for 7 hours with 1.5 hour subway trips on both ends of the flight, and it felt like 11pm, though it was 7pm EST. “Sure,” I said. “I’ll call back in an hour.”

One hour later.

“Tell me all about the trip. Did you take many pictures?”

“You know,” I said, “I really didn’t.”

“Why not?”

“I guess I was too busy just enjoying being in the moment and chit chatting with friends. I’d seen all the touristy buildings before and I know what my face looks like, so I just used my eyes to drink it all in.”

“Are you going to make an album?”

“No. The pictures are just on my phone. I can look at them whenever I want.”

“I hope you’ll bring that phone with the camera on it with you the next time you visit because I’d love to see what you were up to and what you were doing.”

“I sure will.”

“Where did you stay in London?”

“With my friend A.”

“Is she from there?”

“No. She’s Bulgarian.”

“Bulgarian? Oh, how interesting! How do you know her?”

“We used to work together.”

“At one of your publishing jobs?”

“Yes, at my current one.”

“Well she’s certainly very worldly.”

“Yes, she is very accomplished.”

“And do you have to go to work tomorrow?”

“No, tomorrow is Saturday, so fortunately I don’t have to go in.”

“Oh, lovely. You can catch up with yourself before work on Monday.”

And that’s the exact right description of jet lag. One version of myself in one time zone and another version in a different time zone and me trying to juggle them both.

Her physical therapist came in and so we had to end our call early because now it was Maga’s time to juggle two versions of herself: one 95.5 year old recovering from a variety of illnesses and one 95.5 year old who still wants to see the world.

general

10.24.16

Maga was sharp tonight. After a reminder of where I was and why I was calling a day ahead of usual, she knew exactly where I was going and why. She was full of compliments and fractured memories of her own time in Boston.

The one thing she couldn’t seem to grasp was why the loudspeaker kept going off or rather why I couldn’t move away from underneath it. (The only available outlet was underneath a speaker + a plane to Iceland was boarding and taking up lots of loudspeaker space.)

She was happy I wasn’t going to “colder than cold” Iceland, though I was not necessarily. The Northern Lights are still on my life to do list and having been to Iceland once before, I’d happily go back.

One international trip at a time, I suppose. And hopefully one domestic trip to visit her in the near future.

feelings

10.18.16

Me: How are you feeling?

Maga: Not on top of the world. I’m sorry my TV is so loud. I don’t know how to turn it down.

Me: It’s not too loud.

Maga: Any more trips coming up?

Me: Actually, yes. I leave Monday and return on a Friday. I’ll be sending you a postcard for every Tuesday phone call I miss.

Maga: That would be nice. You leave on Thursday?

Me: Monday. I’ll call you from the airport so it’ll minimize our time between calls.

Maga: And you come back on Monday?

Me: Friday.

Maga: I’m sorry my TV is so loud. I don’t know how to turn it down.

Me: Is there a button called VOL?

Maga: COL?

Me: V as in Victor or volume. There should be a + and – button.

Maga: Oh, why yes. There is.

Me: Push the – button.

Maga: When?

Me: Right now.

Maga: Oh, I think that worked. Thank you for explaining that to me!

Me: And when you want the TV loud again, push the + button.

And then we went over the itinerary of my upcoming trip a few more times because she somehow had gotten a hold of a pen and paper.

Maga: They must think highly of you to send you on your own.

Me: I hope so. I work hard.

Maga: You leave on Friday?

Me: Monday.

Her worrying over my itinerary made me feel like I was part of the in crowd because I’ve only ever heard her worry so hard about my mom and my Aunt J’s travel schedules.

Maga: And you come back on Tuesday?

Me: Friday. Just in time to vote!

Maga: Oh, yes. It’s terribly important to vote.

Me: It sure is. Who are you voting for?

Maga: I’m going to vote for the lady. I’ve never voted Democratic in my life, but Trump is just the pits. I don’t like him at all.

Me: I agree. Hillary for the White House.

Maga: I’ve voted Republican my whole life, but not this time. Let’s hope it works.

I’m with her.

feelings

10.13.16

Me: Hi, Maga. It’s Abby.

Maga: Abby, dear. Hi! Hello! Has it been a week already? You know I’m in a rehab facility, right?

Me: Yes, I know and no, it hasn’t been a week. Today is Thursday.

Maga: You’re calling on a Thursday? Oh how wonderful! Did anything exciting happen in the two days since we talked?

Me: Nope. I’m fighting a cold, so I’ve been laying low. I think it was the plane I was on last weekend. They’re so full of germs.

Maga: Oh, yes, they are! I used to wear a mask occasionally. It would depend on where I was going or where I was coming from or what the season was. It was sort of embarrassing to wear it, you know.

Me: Did Jobo ever say anything when you wore it?

Maga: Oh, no. He said nothing. He was too kind. This rehab center is the pits.

Me: Does it make you miss Lowry? (The care center she moved into in July, which she doesn’t like.)

Maga: Oh yes. Lowry looks so good to me now. I don’t know a soul here.

Me: My mom will be there in a few hours. Early in the morning.

Maga: Yes! She will. Do you know if she changed her plans to come out here?

Me: She did, yes, but she wants to visit you and help you get better. I wish I could too.

Maga: Oh, so do I. I’d love to see you. How is she getting here from the airport?

Me: She’ll either get a ride with C or maybe rent a car. I’m sure she has a plan.

Maga: Yes. I’m sure she has a plan. Your mom is very smart. She has good plans most of the time.

Me: Did she get that from you or Jobo?

Maga: Probably, Jobo. He was very smart. He did well at everything he attended to. Have you moved yet?

Me: Oh, no. Probably not until December. There’s so much to do before then.

Maga: Do you have all the furniture you need?

Me: *laughter* Absolutely not. It’s going to be bare bones for a long time because all my money is going into buying the condo.

Maga: Maybe you could get some folding chairs. That’ll make you more comfortable. I’m so happy you called because I am so lonely.

Me: Me too. I mean I’m glad I called not that I’m happy you’re lonely.

Maga: *talks over me* Not that you’re happy I’m lonely. I know what you meant, dear.

Switching topics a mile a minute, distraction by the Broncos playing San Diego, finishing my sentences, it’s good to have my Tuesday night girl back (even on a Thursday).