Loving, Long-Distance

I wasn’t there for my friend when her father died. Nor was I around when another friend separated from her husband. I couldn’t be there to physically comfort my cousins when their children were very sick or be there for my mother and father when their parents were dying.

For people like me – an out-of-town daughter, sister, cousin and friend – a sad turn of events for a loved one slathers on another layer of sadness: I need to find ways to comfort them, between my bi-annual visits, without being there.

Expressing love, long distance, is a lot easier when you are responding to happy events. I learned about that from my grandparents.

Grandpa Ruby kept our relationship alive in spite of a six-hour car drive and a disinclination to travel with typed letters containing word puzzles. He would send me Kennedy half-dollars if I answered them correctly. I can count on my left hand how many times I saw him in my life, but I can still hear his voice and his humor and feel his love through those paper correspondences.

Grandma Jane was a voracious letter writer, who, when I moved out of the state for college wrote me regularly about nothing in particular. But she always acknowledged the changes in my life with a handwritten letter that oozed with love, along with an occasional $10 bill.

When it’s a birthday, anniversary, birth, graduation, confirmation or other happy life-cycle passage, it isn’t difficult to find a way to respond in a celebratory way.

But for a hospitalization, illness, end of a marriage or death, I’m not going to be on the meal rotation or the carpool schedule or the hospital visiting guest list. I can’t bring over groceries, home baked muffins, offer a ride to physical therapy or even take them out for a cup of coffee.

Because being there –in the flesh – is best. Gifts are nice, but showing up is the best thing you can do for someone who is sad or suffering. One remembers the faces of who circled around them and light things up when things were really dark.

Or so I’ve been assuming.

Since it has been on my mind lately, I’ve been asking women I know who have recently been on the receiving end of bad news about what provided comfort for them during or after that time. And their answers were a not-so-small revelation to me.

One friend, who lost both of her parents within seven months, told me that in addition to the flowers people sent – the freshness and aliveness gave her a sense of renewal and hope – it was the phone messages that kept her going. Simple ones that said “I’m thinking about you,” or “I’m sending you love,” and most importantly, “No need to call back.” These voices of love were her salvation.

When she was released from the hospital after a heart attack and a subsequent surgical procedure, food baskets and home visits were very appreciated by another friend, but the phone figured prominently in her healing too. Every day since then, her father, who lives just a few miles away and is now 88, calls just to tell her that he loves her.

I was struck that in both of their accounts, the distance of the loved one was not an issue at all. In fact, I got the sense that these short, frequent check-ins were more potent a contribution than a long visit would be, in which they would have to muster the energy to make conversation or feel compelled to play hostess.

It wasn’t my intention to marvel at the ways in which the cell phone shortens the physical distance between us – though I am aware that this is a huge part of the story. What I am noting, however, is how potent our voices can be when people we love are suffering. How little needs to be said. And how grateful we are to simply be thought about.

These are what really transcend all those miles.

Ellen Blum Barish is an award-winning syndicated columnist, mother of two daughters and author of “Views from the Home Office Window: On Motherhood, Family and Life,” available at  www.adamsstreetpublishing.com. Copyright 2008. Ellen Blum Barish.

A (Not-So) Modest Proposal

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If you haven’t heard of Elizabeth Gilbert, you have most likely heard of her best-selling spiritual memoir Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman’s Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia. It’s the story of her yearlong search for pleasure, spirituality and balance after she discovered that a married life  — with the possibility of children in the suburbs  — was not for her. She set out for gastronomic pleasures in Rome, Italy; communion with the divine in an ashram near Mumbai, India and a balance between the two in Bali, Indonesia.

The fact that all of the countries’ names begin with the letter “I” was not lost on her as she was in search of herself.

It’s a wonderful book. Honest. Insightful. Funny. But as a married woman with children who lives in the suburbs – one who also has spiritual curiosity and an adventuresome spirit – I wondered why she felt that the two worlds had to be mutually exclusive. I began to fantasize about writing a book of my own based on Gilbert’s model but with mothers in mind. And so, acknowledging  (and apologies for lifting) Gilbert’s idea, I present the following proposal:

I’d title it: Eat, Pray and Sit Down for a Minute, Will You? My readers would be busy mothers because I believe this population is hungriest and neediest for pleasure, spirituality and balance. The book would be far fewer pages than Gilberts’, honoring a mother’s lack of time, and would be something I could produce if, and only if, a combination of the following events and support mechanisms coalesced:

  • a stretch of time that doesn’t collide with my husbands’ or two children’s work and school schedule;
  • my husband’s support and time;
  • a reliable sitter, driver or neighborhood mother materialized to fill in for emergencies;
  • a working car;
  • a tank full of gas – and a stretch of reasonable gas prices;
  • and a good GPS system.

I couldn’t take a whole year off like Gilbert did. I could only spare a long weekend. Four days tops.

Like Gilbert, I am in search of pleasure, spirituality and balance, especially as I look ahead to my empty nest years. Because of time and budgetary considerations, a cross-continent trip is simply out of the question. Since I am a Midwesterner, I would travel to Illinois, Indiana and Iowa for this adventure. (Note that these states begin with the letter “I.”)

In Chicago, Illinois — my Rome — my first stop, I’d visit the best hot dog joints and deep-dish pizzerias and ponder their flavors, aromas and digestibility. I’d consume large quantities, just like Gilbert did in Italy, and be forced to unzip the top of my pants at the end of the day. I’d interview the folks at the Vienna beef factory and ask them what makes their dogs different from Oscar Meyer’s and I’d save room to compare Malnati’s pizza to Giordano’s and Uno’s. I’d talk to locals with the most authentic Chicago accents and befriend one so I wouldn’t have to eat alone.

Stop two would be Richmond, Indiana — my Mumbai —home to Quakers and their quiet meetinghouses. I would attend Meeting for Worship and interview Friends about how their silent worship and emphasis on a simple life keeps them so peaceful and calm. I would ask for advice about how to apply these ideals to the life of a busy suburban mother’s and I would quote them liberally just like Gilbert did of her ashram friend in India, and one, maybe two, might become oft-referred icons of spiritual advice.

The final stop – my Bali – would be Iowa City, Iowa. There, in search of balance between the orgy of taste buds and expansion of my waistline and the peace from silent worship, I’d feast my eyes on the Iowa flatlands and finger the hard and soft cover reading material generated by the writers on the campus of University of Iowa. I would lose myself in the inspiring and thought-provoking sentences and soulful readings and vow to read and write more.

Upon my return home to my red brick and slate gray Georgian in the suburbs, I’d write about my journey during the available working hours when my children were at school and after-school activities. At this pace, and with this schedule, it would only take a few years to get the manuscript into presentable shape, but I believe that once pulled together, like Gilbert’s memoir, it could be a potential best-seller and may also have the added benefit of doing a little something for Midwest tourism, too.

And the end of her journey, Gilbert found love. After her memoir was published, she married him, though I am pretty sure she did not return to the suburbs.

I may discover something equally as surprising at the end of my journey. For instance, I may uncover a previously buried desire to farm the land and I would move to Idaho to become a potato farmer. (Wouldn’t this make a great epilogue?)

Eat, Pray and Sit Down for a Minute, Will You? would answer the question: Who says suburban mothers can’t find pleasure, spirituality and balance in a four-day driving trip through the Midwest? It would address the idea that you never know where you’ll find a pearl of wisdom or a moment of clarity.  Not so surprising, really, that Gilbert experienced  transcontinental epiphanies after back-to-back Italian meals, conversations with a Balinese healer and long periods of meditation at an ashram in India. Isn’t it more compelling to find spiritual clarity in the middle of the United States? Having left one’s family to fend for themselves, interrupted by frequent cell phone check-ins? Gilbert’s aha moments would pale in comparison to the ones I would certainly have after chowing down a Vienna hot dog or deep dish pizza, sitting silently on a wooden bench in an Indiana meeting house and standing in the back of a crowded university auditorium in Iowa City listening to writers who would do almost anything to exchange places with me and my big advance.

This is something adventure-hungry mothers could get excited about. Something with which spiritual seekers could resonate. Something that both editors and marketing departments could work around. The book could not only be marketed as a hot new memoir, but as a how-to manual for localizing one’s own low cost, do-it-yourself spiritual quest … recession version.

And then, for the sequel (because you know there would be one),  I would travel in a similar but expanded manner to the east coast to Maryland, Maine, and Massachusetts, then south to Mississippi, and perhaps onto Missouri, Michigan, Minnesota, and then west to Montana. Because with my previous book’s success, it will be all about me.

First published June 2008. Copyright Ellen Blum Barish