The Thanksgiving holiday is
over now. I am flying back north as I
write this with my head full of very poignant, sweet moments for Thanksgiving
2012.
Holidays don’t come cheap for
me anymore. When I leave my home up north
to fly to the warmth of my birthplace and my family, it comes at a price. The calculation goes something like $80 a day
for the housesitter/dog walker who stays with my two older dogs (remember that
the cost of living in Chicago is higher than most places). That is really the deepest discount I get on
the list.
Wrinkles and Emmy-Lou are
getting older now. They sleep a
lot. One walk a day is fine and they
never have the stress of leaving the confines of what they know: their
home. Because they have been with me so
long, there are certain things that I can rely on from them. They are my steady, easy, and somewhat wise, canine companions. I take comfort in
that when I leave them with someone who is unfamiliar to them, I trust them to
do the right thing…and they do just that.
At their age, I treat them with a tad more care because I understand
that as much as I love them and whatever attentive care I give…they won’t last
forever. So despite the extra expense, I
open my wallet. I love them that much. It’s just that simple.
My other two dogs, Eden and
Lily are not so lucky. While I wish they
could stay
home, they are young and excitable…even careless you might say. Because they are young and have less
experience to draw on, their reactions to things are sometimes less than
best. In fact, sometimes their reactions
are just plain awful. They haven’t yet
reached the seasoned maturity of my senior citizens. They can screw-up. I plan accordingly for that. I pack them into the car with their toys,
food and beds and drop them at the boarding facility. Their big, sad eyes watch me walk away and my
heart is wrenched to do it, but know I am keeping them safe from themselves;
from any lack-of-wisdom kind of quirk in their otherwise usually good days
that might put them at risk. I get them a suite, not a cage. They have playtime. They have
treats. That usually runs about
$100 a day.
Flying is, roughly, $1300 for
the three of us: me, my husband and son.
That doesn’t include cabs to and from the airport or parking. Like I said, holidays are not cheap, but if
you have to assign a price to being with those you love, then that is mine.
But that momentary financial
reflection started me thinking about other costs associated with how we love our
families; of the intangible costs. I
have been lucky enough to say that every one of my siblings is someone I would
choose as a friend. Each brother, each
sister, has been and is, there for me in the deep waters of my life. They make me proud of them…of us, in a way that
I can barely articulate. We are all
quite different and don’t agree on every point, but for me that is one of the
treasures of us. The love means so much,
that it is no sacrifice to agree to disagree. When it is "us," we turn our heads. It is a love that means more than my ego feeling of wanting to be right
about something. Now I have some mighty
strong opinions about things, but when I might take exception to a thing said by one of my family that strays far from my center, my
mind wanders to the million other wonderful things that outweigh having my nose
ajar at a perceived slight or misunderstanding: the widowed sister who left her
own two children to fly to Mayo Clinic to hold me up and care for me or the brother who slept
on my couch when I had chemotherapy and slept for two solid days. This is who we are, this small circle of us, whose biology reads
the same. These are memories that only we understand...a special bond to have in a
world that is often unkind. I try to
handle that circle delicately and with the Corinthian Biblical description of how to protect something so fragile:
4 Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5 It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs.6 Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
1 Corinthians 13:4-13
New International Version (NIV)
We are all growing old
together now. I guess that you could say
that about our whole lives really. We
were always headed towards the older selves we wear right now, though time seems to be moving faster as we age. I understand that in the same way I
understand about my sweet, predictable, reliable senior canines; that these family
relationships are precious to me and that they won’t last forever.
I realized some of these things while I
was home this year. And when I lay my
head on my pillow at the end of every day I know this:
whatever it costs, I am
willing to pay it. And I
am looking forward to Christmas-time with the wonderful circle that is my
family.
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| Wrinkles |
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| Emmy-Lou |
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| Sisters, brothers, mom and dad |
| Eden |









