Posted in Fragile Life, Insight, Milestone Moments, Nuts & Bolts

Ode to a Mini-Van

Succumbing to a mini-van (or any “family” vehicle) is a road all parents have to cross in their own time. My husband and I held out for years…but the hardest part, was saying–goodbye.

open clip art.com

Kelly Salasin

I’m filled with sadness after abandoning our mini-van for better mileage and $4,500 from the government. I’m like one of those people that others belittle because they can’t get over the loss of a pet–and my loss isn’t even a living thing.

It’s a half-hour drive home from the Honda dealership where I abandoned our vehicle so I have lots of time to ponder this inexplicable grief over a hunk of metal.  I never felt like this over my blender or even a dishwasher so maybe it has more to do with the fact that my kids grew up inside the walls of this car–and so did our family.

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I didn’t succumb to the whole “mini-van” thing until our youngest was almost 2; and  I immediately regretted my stubborness which left me without the convenience of a spacious vehicle through the early infancy months of nursing and diapering.

I can still see my son’s chubby legs dangling out of our Jetta in a parking lot as I quickly diapered him in Vermont’s twenty-degree weather.  Breastfeeding in the bucket seats wasn’t much better and afforded little privacy.   I still daydream about all the nursing naps that we could have taken in the back seats of the van’s tinted windows.

I held onto our small sporty cars as long as I could.  I loved the powerful feeling of shifting into higher gear as I accelerated; and  after two kids, “driving” was about the only thing left of my original identity.

Once relinquished however, I quickly softened into the ease of an automatic.  I could pass out snacks, change a cd and even cross an intersection on a steep hill without threatening our safety.

Given how much of our day-to-day lives are lived inside our vehicles, maybe it’s a no-brainer to be sad about saying goodbye.

I remember sitting on the curb outside my apartment in tears when my first drive was loaded on a flatbed for the dump. And although that Lynx was a pain in the rear-end, it was also a dear friend.  When my family was falling apart during high school, I could always jump into that car and head to a friend’s house for the night.

The truth is that I was ready to let the mini-van go–and  have been for years.  With both boys in school, I’ve spent a lot of time driving in it–alone.  It’s one thing to go from independent young woman in a sporty little car to a mother in a mini-van–and it’s quite another to be a middle-aged woman driving in a mini-van all by herself.

And yet, I imagined a different legacy for the van than the one we gave it.  I imagined it passed on to another young family who would benefit from the extra space for diaper bags and cars seats and strollers; family trips and friends and winter gear.  I never imagined it turned into scrap metal just because we no longer needed its trusty service.

I remember the kind father of two who sold us the van for less than its bluebook value with only 30,000 miles under its hood.  His own kids had grown up; and he was happy for ours to have the use of it.

As fate would have it, the mini-van’s longstanding good health took a turn for the worse in the weeks before the Cash for Clunkers program went through.  Suddenly, it wouldn’t drive more than 20 miles an hour.

On its last day as part of the family, we all said our goodbyes in the driveway as we emptied all signs of our lives from inside it.  A lost library book, a hammer, a family photo–these were among the things found within its seats. As is true in every mini-van, there were enough food crumbs on the floor to feed several families of mice, not to mention: toys, rubberbands, pens and pencils–all the stuff of the parenting time of life.

Perhaps this is what it truly means to say goodbye to this particular car–it’s saying goodbye to a precious chapter of our lives.

As we finished the emptying process, my youngest asked, “What about the bumper stickers?”

Until the mini-van and motherhood, I didn’t believe in defacing a car with stickers, but gradually, they too became a part of our growing family identity with slogans like: “Grow Slowly,”  “Food Not Bombs,” “Bernie,” and “HOPE-Obama 2008.”

After expressing his own feelings of loss for the only vehicle he has ever known, my son asks, “Can I see it get crushed?”

I am always surprised at the ability my youngest has to hold both compassion and reality with such ease.  Unlike my husband and I, our sons have grown up in rural Vermont–around hunters and farmers– who kill the animals they eat.

I am much more conflicted in sending our mini-van to its death.  After two bouts of unemployment, we need that $4,500 credit toward a more economical car, and of course, we want to protect the environment for future generations; But even with this awareness, I’m not at peace with the ending my car is forced to face.

On my ride home from the dealership, I get nostalgic about our life together.  I remember the first time we drove into town and how the word got out that our van had a television and VCR inside–when most of our friends and our own family didn’t have a television in our  homes.  The kids in our neighborhood started calling it “The TV Van.”

As I imagine it being scrapped, I wonder what of us is left inside. I’m sure we missed tiny treasures under the carpets.  It’s such a dramatic ending to this period of our lives, but it’s also been a bit magical.

Not only did the MPV show an uncharacteristic display of deterioration in the sudden loss of its transmission, but the new car which would replace it, seemed to reach out to us–just as the van was letting go.

We spent weeks trying to figure out what car to buy when the dealership called to say that they had a silver Honda Civic on the lot.  It wasn’t of any particular interest to us–until we visited the library that afternoon.

Just as I was about to check out books for our summer vacation, the librarian uncharacteristically raised her voice over the hushed room and announced that someone with a “silver Honda” had left their lights on.

My husband totally missed the coincidence until we stepped outside onto Main Street and right in front of us was: a silver Honda.

We were tickled, but not convinced–until we got home.  While surfing the net for other options, I detoured to Twitter to check my messages, coming upon a great quote shared by a friend.  “Look at this,” I said to my husband, who seemed more interested in the author than the words.

That’s the same name as the salesman that called about the silver Honda,” he told me, and we knew–this was our new car.

Actually, we tried to get a bunch of different colors because my first car had been silver and it was such a lemon; but in the end, after the goverment’s deal went through, there was only one manual Civic left in a hundred miles–and it was the silver one–and now it’s ours.

When I sat behind the steering wheel of my mini-van one last time, I felt all the energy that had been lived inside–all the laughter and tears and arguments; the story tapes played, the family trips taken, the drives to and from school.

I remember my own mother behind the steering wheel of our family van when it faced yet another cold Colorado morning.  She’d tell us to offer it nothing but words of gratitude as we prayed for it to start–one more time.

As silly as it may sound, it’s gratitude that I feel for our mini-van.  Wherever it is now, I want to say, “Thank you and God speed.  May you reincarnate into something spectacular!”

Posted in Fragile Life, Insight, Takes a Village

Death as Entertainment

PeterM_Feather, Open Clip Art

This letter to the editor of my local paper was one of my earliest pieces of public writing, provoked by a series of school shootings which are now so common place as to be listed on Wikipedia.

Yesterday’s attack on Democratic Representative Giffords (at a grocery store!) resulted in the death of a 9 year old girl (among others), and is yet another wake up call–this time with regard to the inciting nature of our country’s political discourse.

Whose responsible for the attack? We all are. Just as I was responsible for my toddler’s exposure to killing as a form of entertainment.

See below.

To the Editor

I was glad to see the issue of violence in schools addressed in the health column last week. I appreciated the related commentary he shared from Vermont Public Radio. In reflecting on the number of shootings in schools across our country, I too felt the “wake up call.”

Now that murder has found its way into our classrooms, we can no longer “distance” ourselves from the effects of the violence that is so much a part of the outside world. The VPR commentator spoke of a new commitment to getting violence out of our children’s lives. As a parent and educator, I fully agree, but I think it is ironic that we work so hard to monitor our children’s world without changing our own.

Just this past week, my two-year old began talking about death and shooting. He picked that up from a clip of a movie my husband and I were watching over a month ago. It left a huge impression.

As a society, we are fooling ourselves if we think we can separate the world of adults from the world of children. The number of deaths in our country’s schools this past year is proof that this line no longer exists.

Kelly Salasin

Wilmington, Vermont, 1998

Posted in Fragile Life, Insight, Mid-Life Mama, Milestone Moments, Teens

Two Paths Diverged

I was relieved to find myself awake at 3:00 am in order to realize that the tragedy of what I had enacted was only a dream.  But that didn’t help me shake the trauma.

After checking to make sure that my son was safely asleep in his bed, I reluctantly woke my husband to soften the burden of my nightmare.  Even now, it hurts to retell it.

We had pimped our younger son so that we could attend some affair. It was only a single time and we were paid well for it, but the anguish on my ten year old’s face afterward was heartbreaking; and when I put him in the shower to wash away the disgrace, he complained of a sharp pain that felt like a knife in his buttocks.

What were we thinking,” I hissed to my husband.  “We could go to jail.  How could we do something like this?”

Larionov,visipix.com

This is so far from any reality that my husband and I would ever create, but that doesn’t matter.  The dream was that strong.

No one needed to interpret this one.  We both knew what it meant, right away.  I had a job interview in the morning, and I was afraid of what this new position would mean for our family–particularly my younger son.

I finally drifted back into a troubled sleep around 5:00 am; this time dreaming of my teen.

I had returned home to see him, realizing that I didn’t want to miss the opportunity to connect; but no matter how I tried I couldn’t find him in the house.

There were escalators and staircases and doors, but just as I arrived to the place where he would be, his friends told me that I had missed him.  He had left in the time that it took me to get here.

Isn’t it convenient when our dreams are so transparent? Isn’t it terrifying when we realize just how deeply we our connected to our kids–and how fragile that connection can be?

The funny thing is that I’ve always worked.  I’ve just never found a position that might capture my heart and soul in a way that has me looking toward the future–without them.

This is the tenth post that I’ve written in ten days around the tectonic shifts this consideration has evoked in me.  All of these are posted on my Life Path series, but this post distinctly belonged here.

Gaugin, visipix.com

This post is about saying goodbye to one rich role in exchange for another.  It’s not a goodbye that will happen today or next week or even next year; but the seed has been planted and the roots are digging deep, and I’ve always known, that this love story, of mother and son, would some day diverge on different paths.

Kelly Salasin, November 2010

Click: TWO OWLS CALLING, for my blog on my personal path.