The photo at the top of page is a Father's Day gift from Patty Surprenant, who recently paid us a visit. She's the youngest person in the picture; posed between Anne and me. I don't know the exact date of the photo, but from Patty's recollection, it's over thirty years old.
There's no simple
way to describe our relationship to Patty. Way back in the days when everybody
was still skinny, Anne and I were hired to be house parents in a therapeutic
milieu program for adolescent girls. The four girls in the house were no longer
able to live with their own parents for various reasons. We were the subs. We
lived all together as an ad hoc nuclear family suburban style in Lexington, Mass. Our
daughter Sonya was a toddler when we moved in; Patty and a couple of girls were
already living there. In the nature of things we got close, lived close,
learned a lot about each other, endured trials and tribulations.
Patty is a
remarkable human being today. Seeing her recently made me feel good about the
two years we spent as house parents. I was going to graduate school at the time,
reading Shakespeare and Wordsworth and Austen and Joyce. But real life in 'the
house' was teaching me things as well; sometimes more important things.
Since Sunday was
not only Father's Day, but Sonya's birthday, we took a walk in the Arnold
Arboretum, where we were likely to see mountain laurel. Sonya, the first of our
two children, was born on June 15. About a week before her birth, Anne joined
me (for reasons not easily explained) on a walk up a mountain trail near our
house in the Pioneer Valley. The wild laurel -- the flowers look
like wedding cake decorations, spun sugar, white with pink coverings that fade
when the flowers open -- was blooming all along the path we climbed.
When Sonya
was born a week later, hurried into the world perhaps by her mother's strenuous, though
stately outing -- the 'Mountain Laurel Progress,' to name it in the manner of
royal excursions -- some of the flowers we had picked that day were still in
the house, waiting in a vase (on top of the space heater, Anne recalls) when
mother and baby returned from the hospital. So laurel flowers have always been
associated with Sonya's birthday for us.
We spoke to
both Sonya and Saul on the phone today. We have long-distance children; hearing
their voices is always a gift.
It was a
beautiful day -- blue, green, and flowerful. So many gifts.
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