Boston: Urban Wilds

Jane and I have our own little place in the city. After a tumultous year of our lives - almost exactly one year to the day since we made our long drive up from Baltimore with Charlotte in the backseat - we made a much quicker move a few blocks down the street, trading our tiny one-room apartment for a little condo in an old brownstone building on the edge of Brookline just across the Muddy River. With a year under our belts, we rejoice in the little cycles of nature that are re-emerging like old friends: the hydrangeas blooming in showy blue, white, and pink clusters all throughout the city. The lushness of the Emerald Necklace on my morning meander toward the hospital. The rapid and reliable downpour that relieves each muggy summer afternoon. It’s beginning to feel, thankfully, like a familiar place (emphasis on beginning). Our jobs are busy as always, but in between work commitments, our days and nights are filled with little novelties and new beginnings, like installing the window AC, filling the back deck with houseplants, and assembling a king bed from scratch. And all the while, still walking and exploring, eyes and heart open to possibility, trying our very best to understand this thing we’re building, these roots we’re putting down, this place we find ourselves calling home.

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July 5, 2021: A casual holiday ramble on my own, from Brookline straight into the heart of the city along the Emerald Necklace. What felt like an adventure a year ago feels like a routine stroll now. I stop in three bookstores, buying J.A. Baker’s The Peregrine and a collection of poetry by Gary Snyder, before walking all the way to Seaport, and from there along the water up to the North End for lunch.

July 14, 2021: A morning stroll down the other end of the Necklace, to Jamaica Pond and the Arnold Arboretum before getting lunch in Jamaica Plain. Off the beaten path, there is a wealth of urban greenery and wild landscape even in the confines of the city.

July 17, 2021: A weekend visit to the Franklin Park Zoo with Jane. Our second visit to the Zoo, and first since August 2009. Surprisingly little has changed; we take some selfies with the animals for old times’ sake, and get our favorite Dippin’ Dots (banana split) to share, just as we did twelve years ago.


On Home

We all have an origin story. Or a creation myth. For me, it starts with a house on top of a hill. The hill looks out westward upon a tawny expanse of chaparral, its neighboring slopes dotted with scrub oak and toyon and manzanita. The power-lines that crest the hillside are always receding into the distant light. They look quite lovely in the late afternoon sun.

Surrounding this house are the desert foothills and flatlands of coastal California. On a pristine day (which is rare), you can see straight from the hilltop to the Pacific Ocean, a blue haze on the horizon. In between, you can see the million homes and strip malls and backyards and industrial parks and little places where you grew up. They emerge from the arid landscape, suspended above it like a mirage. They are disbelievable. They are familiar.

I spent many years explaining why I cannot go back to this place. It is a ritual, a byproduct of medical training – friends and mentors ask constantly where you are going next, and why not back. Until more recently, I would laugh, and joke about the traffic, the sprawl, the in-laws. I did not fully understand the explanation myself. But an answer for the unexplainable, repeated often enough, becomes a creation myth. And a myth is just that – partly real, partly imagined, a story to place oneself in the cosmos.

I was born in that place. We moved into the house around the time I began forming memories. My grandparents lived with us throughout my childhood, and my parents were around more than most. I slept in the same bedroom from when we moved in until I moved out. The wallpaper had a rectangular pattern of pastel pink and blue and green lines. At certain places where the blue and green paint intersected, there would be a neat square of teal or turquoise, pleasing to the eye. Feverishly sick, or awake late at night, I would lie in bed and soothe myself with these squares. I am no longer as sickly, though I am still a fitful sleeper. Nowadays, without the wallpaper to soothe me, I write.

Daytime brings the concentric circles of suburbia, warm and protective. Lying in the backseat of the family minivan, I lean into the curve of the road and watch it all go by. It is ever-expansive. It is stifling. I am sculpted by school districts, extracurriculars, traffic patterns. I become fiercely quiet, comfortably lonely. I am worse at holding onto friends than memories. I imagine the future before me. Somewhere in the ebb and flow, the memories shine through like droplets of sunlight. Lawnmowers on a Saturday morning. A pool party down the street. An Easter egg hunt with mother. A serious conversation with father. You can treasure these things, and hold them close, and still not want to go back.

I left when I was 17. For the first time in my life outside of the warm protective circle, I saw the beauty of the wider world. I experienced seasons and mountains, forests and rivers. I fell in love in a wild place. I got lost in the city and hitchhiked home. I lived above a fish market. I stopped in cathedrals to rest and listen. I held hands with the dying. I learned about loss. I learned to find solace in it, to see grief as freeing, suffering as universal. I wore my heart on my sleeve. I kept my sleeve to myself.

In my loneliness, I wandered. With each step came the infinite, cold stream of loss, the music and language and meaning and friendship flowing past me. I found it better at times to drift with the current, at others to climb ashore and rest awhile. I called these moments home – defined not by time spent, or rent paid, but by the way they grounded me, gave me perspective, allowed me to root myself and grow – the concentric circles ever-widening. I can see them, even now, like keyframes in the record of my life. A pine-clad island. Snow falling from a clear blue sky. Sunset on red brick. Any number of dimly-lit rooms, quiet nights awake and dreaming. Mist on a lake, rising.

This is how I was created, and why I can no longer go back. I have been too affected to go back. I have seen too much worth seeing. I have become too enamored with the world, too connected with its spirit, in awe of its potential, aware of its mortality, to go back. To be small and safe again. To be warm and protected. To only imagine the future.

And so, in my thirties, I’m searching for home. I’m building a new life, and putting down roots like a hesitant sapling after a thousand-year flood. I’ve done it before, placing brick by brick atop foundations real and imagined, imbuing the rooms with memories that blend together, adorning the walls with cherished loves and landscapes. Still frames, with my heart squarely at center. I thought I’d found that place before, not so long ago, but the current never stops. Wading through the shallows, I set one foot on the grassy riverbank and peer through the trees, looking for something I hope I’ll recognize. Heart expectant, mind grateful, with no thought of turning back. I’ve found it once before. I’ll find it once again.

Massachusetts: A New Leaf

A year ago, just as the weather was just beginning to warm, the world was beginning to close in on itself. Before we had fully wrapped our minds around the scale of pandemic - before any talk of vaccines, or masks, or even social distancing - we put ourselves in quarantine, hoping things would blow over after a couple of weeks of “flattening the curve.” I remember the jarring juxtaposition - shut indoors and isolated, robbed of my final months in my home city, just as the trees were budding and flowers were blooming. In some ways, it felt like I’d entered a parallel universe right then and there and never exited again. My usual spring rituals became tense rather than jubilatory. From one afternoon away from palliative care consultation in a nursing facility, I remember more the act of removing my homemade cloth mask, to eat ice cream on a bench in Patterson Park, than hardly anything else from that brief, sunny reprieve. Less than two months later, we jettisoned our belongings, uprooted our lives, and left behind our home of eight years. The whirlwind - political, personal, metaphysical - has been raging inside me since.

Which is why this spring, one year later, has been special. The vast majority of Bostonians have been vaccinated, and the world is finally opening again. On the first warm day of March, I and seemingly the entire town of Brookline find ourselves outdoors, partaking in New England’s little rites of spring: strolling aimlessly, marveling at the beautiful lawn beds of daffodils and tulips, enjoying each warm ray of sunlight, and watching the joy on our neighbors’ faces (their faces!). Jane and I take our origami canoe and plop it in the trunk, going for paddles and hikes on the weekends between house and condo viewings. Finally, after a year of uncertainty, it feels like I’m finding my center again, my sense of direction. It feels like we’re finally moving forward, ready to turn over a new leaf in our lives.

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March 20, 2021: The virgin voyage in our new canoe. After awkwardly unfolding and assembling it on the muddy riverbank, we paddle several miles down the Concord River, through Minute Man National Historic Park and the Great Meadows Refuge. And (painfully, slowly) back upriver again.

March 27, 2021: An early morning trip to the south shore of the Ashland Reservoir near Framingham. Too cold (and self-conscious) to break out our origami canoe in front of the anglers and other boaters, we take a walk along the shoreline and watch sunrise light upon the pine trees across the water.

April 4, 2021: A springtime stroll down the Emerald Necklace, exploring homes and side streets in Jamaica Plain and the Moss Hill neighborhood. The cherry trees are just beginning to bloom here in the city. We have lunch at Cafe Beirut, followed by ice cream at J.P. Licks on Centre Street.

May 1, 2021: On May Day, we make a pilgrimage to Cape Cod to see the famous herring run up Stony Brook. We spend all morning perched over the fish ladders, watching the beautiful, silver bodies swarming in the pools, leaping up the falls and slamming themselves against the stone walls in a race toward survival. Partway through the morning, the gulls join us for their breakfast buffet.