One month. That’s somehow four weeks which is really 31 days. (Kind
of like how pregnancy is nine months, but 40 weeks, which I have never
quite figured out.)
One month means four movie nights with my kids.
One month is about two dozen loads of laundry, assuming someone pees on something unexpectedly, which is a safe assumption.
Over the course of a month I get to watch my son point out the entire cycle of the moon.
Over the course of one month I notice my hormones push waves of
sadness over me at predictable times that I try to keep in perspective.
One month is four sets of violin lessons to take my girls to.
One month is supposedly how long it will take to build my new garage.
It costs $20 to rent a violin from my store for one month, $35 for a cello.
One month is four mandolin orchestra rehearsals.
One month is about 500 trips around the block for Mona on her scooter.
One month is how long it took me to just watch all five seasons of Angel on DVD.
One month isn’t long enough for me to learn the piano part to the Minuet Aden’s working on.
A tank of gas lasts me about a month if we don’t travel anywhere special.
This month there will be four free concerts in the park near our house.
One month is enough time for the digital clock running slow on my oven to drive me batty.
In one month there will be four opportunities to participate in neighborhood recess.
One month is about 200 kisses I will plant on my son’s head that he
will try to wipe off while he laughs and tells me to stop it.
One month is about two jugs of bubble solution and a good size pack of sidewalk chalk.
One month is at least two dozen calls home to chat with my mom or dad just because.
One month is about eight trips to the grocery store.
One month isn’t long, unless it’s the approximate amount of time
before this tour is over and my husband comes home from Iraq. I
struggle often with the concept of time when my husband is deployed
because on the one hand I want the time we’re apart to go quickly so
that we can be together again, but at the same time I want the time with
my kids to stand still. I can’t hope for any time to slip by me
because life is short and there is so much that I am sad to lose. Even
as I exchange the toothless baby smiles for adorably gap-toothed grins
and crawling for biking and coos for combinations of words I never could
have come up with myself, I love being a witness to it all and the
changes are exciting but each milestone is as much a loss as it is a
gain. It’s all so interesting and wonderful and it goes by so
heartbreakingly fast. With small children the days sometimes seem
endless but the years go by in a blink.
So there is one more month that I have to operate as a single parent
while worrying about my husband’s safety. It’s exhausting, but there is
also something satisfying about having gotten this far with all my kids
in tow. There is much I could have done better during this time, but
overall I think I have a lot to be proud of in terms of getting our
family through this unscathed.
One month. I’m sure in retrospect it will go by quickly, but right
now? One month seems like forever. In some ways that hurts and in some
ways that’s okay.
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