Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Ten Things

Due to the Giant Storm, I decided to skip my Tillich class today and drove home from seminary last night ~ apparently a good idea. The last 25 miles on the interstate were treacherous, an hour-long trip with cars every which way, since no one could see the lines, and judging from the looks of things, I would not have been able to come home tonight. I thought that I would spend the day holed up in the house finishing a paper, but I am still procrastinating (actually, I just got up) and have given myself a 10:00 am start time.

Therefore . . . since I see that my friend Stratoz is playing one of those list memes, I thought that I would make one up for myself. I am 55 so: ten things about myself, one for every 5th year starting with age five (and ignoring this one, which has nothing to recommend it):

1. When I was five, I went to the second half of kindergarten in a church in Vero Beach, Florida.

2. I rode a horse for the first time, on the trails of Grand Teton National Park, when I was ten.

3. I went to the Harvard-Dartmouth game in Cambridge when I was fifteen, which was followed by an unfortunate double date involving my boarding school rommate and two Dartmouth freshmen.

4. When I was twenty I used to wake up in my dorm room in Williamstown, Massachusetts listening to classical music on Morning Pro Musica with Robert J. Lertsema of WGBH-Boston.

5. When I was 25, we lived in an apartment two blocks from where we live now and one of our upstairs neighbors, now a city councilman who lives two blocks in the other direction, led our tenants' revolt when the furnace broke down during a storm like this one.

6. When I was 30, we had a large and silly black dog, named Renko for the character in Hill Street Blues.

7. I don't remember many details, but I would venture that 35, with two four-year-old boys and a year old daughter, was one of the most perfect years of my life.

8. When I was 40 my three children were in Montessori school and I opened my family law practice.

9. When I was 45, we took a family trip to Italy. Our favorite parts were ~ everything! The Duomo, the monastery out in the middle of nowhere, Pompeii, the Cinque Terre, the Vatican Museums, the Roman Forum, the gelato, St. Peter's, the full moon over Florence. Lots more.

10. And when I was 50, I had one of those completely unexpected and life-changing encounters, when I resignedly signed up for a graduate class with the Jesuit who would a couple of years later guide me through the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises and become the mentor, counselor, guide and spiritual father who would nurture me through the seminary process and now through this horrible past year.

I see that I did not make my 10:00 deadline. Guess I'll procrastinate a bit more and look for photos of Florence.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Snow days are good for procrastinating, daydreaming, and a good cup of hot chocolate. Treat yourself well today, GG. I find it hard to believe that Hill Street Blues was 25 years ago! My dh and I were newlyweds and watched it religiously every Thursday night.

Jennifer said...

May this meme in the future somehow reflect that when you were 55, you were true to your experience, as horrific as it was, and walked yourself gently, honestly and faithfully through the darkest of paths toward some new light. And may the memory of Chicago Son somehow be hollowing out its space in you, even as the emptying of all you have known and understood is so painfully experienced. Hugs to you....

Ruth Hull Chatlien said...

Interesting meme. I remember Renko. And I would love to go to Italy some day.

Stratoz said...

good to get to know you. I have much hope that 55 has hidden treasures that will rise to the surface and greet you in moments, if only in moments. I can imagine this for you.

christine said...

i didn't know you had been to the cinque terra--do you remember manarola? it is where sarah died. such a pretty land.

Gannet Girl said...

Christine - yes, only for a short day - it has since been my dream to go back for a week, walking slowly between villages. I can't remember whether I told you or not - I find that my memory is slippery these days -- but I'm sure it's one of the reasons I was captivated by Sarah.

Anonymous said...

I still miss Robert J. Lurtsema on the radio . . . . and his birds.