about
Erin's in her thirties, married and in graduate school in the Pacific Northwest. Her first child, a girl child, arrived after many hours of contractions and massive pain in early November 2005. Slowly, more of the archived entries will be added (they go up through Oct. 2004), you may be waiting until summer 2006 for this to happen. So if you like to see what she's pondered or blathered about in the past you can look forward to those...some day.


links
archives
recent entries
other blogs
search
credit
Design & Skinning by: m2webstudios
Encryption by: Deltus
Powered by Expression Engine

Login   •   Register   •   Member List
Thursday, February 22, 2007

The last few entries from months ago were about my uncle. He’s now at a rehabilitation center and recovering, albeit slowly. He has been surrounded by friends and family through all of it. It is truly heartening to see.

In December I started a part-time job—the kind of part-time job that does not come home with me and turn into a full-time job. For now it is great. My side projects eat up a lot of my free time so I couldn’t handle a job that cut into that time anyway. I also get to talk to and deal with people (a bit of customer service) which I didn’t realize I had missed so much. Certain retail jobs can sure kill that enjoyment, I guess. Luckily this is one that mostly doesn’t.

My daughter is growing and walking and fabulous. When we are out and about, people comment on how well-behaved she is and how adorable and sweet. I love that other people get to experience her. She is all of those things and more. A joy in my life that I’m grateful for.

A professor and poet in my MFA program lost his twenty-year-old daughter six or so years ago when she drown while studying abroad. She was also a poet, and her father compiled poems from her 20+ notebooks of poetry that she had been writing since the age of, I think, three. Those poems have been published in a collection by the university press I’m interning at, and there was a reading last week of her work. And though it was an emotional night, it was more of a celebration than anything else of her talent and spirit. I, however, being the often super-sensitive person that I am, cried a little. Couldn’t help it. A poem was read; there was a postcard, a desire to be near her father, the awareness of distance and beatiful, beautiful language. Even now thinking about it, tears are welling up in my eyes. I usually just accept that I’m an emotional goob, and don’t worry about what people think. But a few minutes later, after dabbing my eyes with a tissue, I glanced back at the father, the poet, my professor and he was looking in my direction. I turned back to the front. And for a split second felt a little foolish being caught out crying, even though there was no judgment in his eyes whatsoever. A thought flickered… I didn’t even know her, what right do I have to cry? It was just a flutter of a thought though and I decided that it was more of a gift that her poetry and insight could touch me so much.

Later I would think about my daughter and the gaping hole that would be born should I ever lose her. And even now there’s a small voice in my head saying don’t type this, don’t share this. If you do you may jinx it; it may come true. But rationally all I really think this shows is how much I love her and how much she brings into my life. And that is worth saying.

Posted by Erin at 10:37 AM.
Filed under:
(0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink