It would have been quite comical if I myself didn't want to start crying with her: "I don't know why it has to be this way, C. I would love for it to be 2003 again. I would love to be 20 again, but it'll never happen. I can only celebrate birthdays as I get older and older. And it's so unfair! I don't understand, either!" Heck, if she had been lying on the floor pounding her feet like a 2 year old, I would've gladly joined her. But even my hedge, putting out the possibility of a parallel universe maybe having March 26, 2003 in the future, didn't really comfort her (though it stopped the wailing). And I know this because several minutes later she asked me, "Mommy, does everyone die?" Well, I'll spare you the answer here.
Oddly the passing of time and the fleeting of years has been on the forefront of my mind lately, too. Maybe it's completely normal with the holidays, the getting rid of more baby stuff, Liz's passing (not to mention an inordinate number of people we know who are seriously ill). That doesn't take away the heaviness of it, though. Being so aware of the finiteness of life can really fuck with one's ability to enjoy it. But earlier today when my writer friend K shared her similar emotional fragility around the subject, it gave me such relief to know I'm not alone in my tortured thoughts. Maybe such sensitivity is the price "poets" or "thinkers" pay. I wonder if it's possible to achieve even a delicate balance between living in the moment, while still appreciating the profound passing of the years. I for one, certainly need to tip the scales toward the former.
Coincidentally, while working on this blog entry I got an email from N, who knows absolutely nothing yet about what I'm writing -- an email entitled "Time Flies" with a video attached:
The choppy, silent, low-res quality, and the simple pan of the horizon suggest how fading memories might replay in our minds. Here we are in 2003 with a baby C, out for a walk on a sunny day in Portland. A simple, sweet memory.
So maybe, in a sense, we can go back in time - just for a quick flash, or a snippet of a visit here and there. And maybe if C asks the question again I can give her a real answer: No honey, we can't ever move backward in time. But if we live well today, we can make good memories for tomorrow. And then, in our thoughts and dreams, we can visit all our years, whenever we like.