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Katrina Kenison

celebrating the gift of each ordinary day

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Home » Blog » 4th of July

July 4, 2011 7 Comments

4th of July

The newest citizen in this morning’s 4th of July parade was less than three weeks old; the oldest arrived on the planet over one hundred years ago. The span of years between the tiny, swaddled infant riding in his mother’s arms and the frail old man waving to the crowd from a vintage Chevy was astonishing — a century’s worth of Independence Days come and gone for one, a very first public outing for the other.

The fact that they were both on hand to be honored on this steamy summer day seemed cause enough for holiday spirit. The sight of these two, the innocent babe and the proud centurion, put everything else into perspective: the down-home joy of a small town’s annual celebration, the comfort of tried-and-true traditions, the preciousness of this particular, never-to-be-repeated morning, the inevitable passage of time.

I tried to take it all in: my own parents, cheering on their two youngest grandchildren on their decorated bicycles; my brother and his wife, gamely marching alongside the trikes and training wheels; my husband snapping pictures; the multigenerational crowd gathered along Main Street; the antique tractors, the Shriners in their funny little cars, the kids with water balloons and squirt guns; the bagpipers, boy scouts, and baton twirlers; the fire trucks and vintage cars.

The 4th of July always feels poignant to me, a day when my heart lifts and, at the same time, feels heavy in my chest. It is the too-soon turn of summer, the moment when this brief season suddenly starts to feel over instead of still beginning. We go from one first after another — the first dinner on the porch, the first day it’s still light at nine, the first ripe strawberries, the first hummingbird at the petunias, the first nasturtium blossoms in the garden — to a glimpse of endings. The baby robins leave the nest, the foxgloves drop their blossoms, the furled goldenrod appears alongside the road, the school forms arrive in the mail, the sun sets a little earlier.

I guess I’m greedy. There is never enough summer for my liking, never a long enough day, never an afternoon that fully satisfies my yearning for more. “The strange part about being human,” Verlyn Klinkenborg wrote the other day in a reflection in the New York Times, “is that that ‘life’ so easily comes to mean a quantity of time, an allotment of experience. We note that we are alive, without recognizing that we are, for a time, indomitable organisms sharing a planet with indomitable organisms of every other kind.”

I’ve thought about those words all week. The mystery that delivers us into existence, the luck-of-the-draw allotment of time, the very fact of our own insignificance in the large scheme of things. And yet, because we are indeed human, we do need to invest our time on this earth with meaning. More and more it seems to me that the real meaning is not in the big moments, but in the chain of interconnected small ones, the ones we might miss altogether, so eager are we to get on to the next thing. A parade is a pretty good time to slow down, take a good look around, and remember the blessing of our being here. What we tend to forget, unless we are the awe-struck parents of a newborn, or the venerable holder of the Oldest Citizen cane, is that every moment in life is big.

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Comments

  1. Karen Maezen Miller says

    July 4, 2011 at 7:20 pm

    Amen. Every moment the cresting summit of all time and space and popsicles.

    Reply
  2. Lindsey says

    July 4, 2011 at 8:05 pm

    Like you, this day always feels like the top of the roller coaster, the beginning of the turning. And I always find myself blinking back tears at the parade, in particular at the World War 2 veterans.
    Sending love, and hoping we both live deeply in the days that are still long. xox

    Reply
  3. Pamela says

    July 4, 2011 at 11:02 pm

    What a beautiful portrait of the Fourth of July! I agree that the time between the first strawberry and the goldenrod is too sweet and too short. How evocatively you captured summer in those few beautiful lines. Actually, how evocatively you captured all of those sweet moments in a life. Thank you!

    Reply
  4. Pam G. says

    July 5, 2011 at 12:56 pm

    as usual your writing is extraordinary-it always makes me think and often brings tears to my eyes-thank you

    Reply
  5. Privilege of Parenting says

    July 5, 2011 at 1:43 pm

    The 4th had me winking back tears as well, and I so appreciate coming to your words on the 5th—and always feeling like I get the privilege of hearing your kindred voice from the other side of our great and baffling country, as if you’re right next door and whispering, as if we’re quasi-consciously awakening within some ongoing eternal rendering of “Our Town.”

    Reply
  6. Thomas Lister-Looker says

    July 7, 2011 at 11:49 am

    Even though the 4th of July is a big holiday and celebration for our country, filled with parades, fireworks, and apple pie, your eloquent post reminds me that it’s the small, quiet moments that we capture in photographs and in our hearts that need to be cherished and swaddled.

    Reply
  7. nancy kreitner says

    July 10, 2011 at 9:12 am

    Bravo, when scanning through my in-box I almost always just zoom through. It’s mostly LL Bean, and Ann Taylor Loft sales etc. I always stop when your name pops up.. I LOVE to read the way you put words together, whether a blog or a book.

    Reply

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Katrina Kenison
I’m a wife, the mother of two sons, a passionate reader, a former editor, a slow writer, a friend, a seeker. Somewhere along the way, I realized that a good life is made up not of peak moments but of many small ones – imperfect, fleeting, ordinary, precious. And so I slowed down and began to pay attention. Writing, it turns out, is a way of noticing.

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Last year on my 67th birthday, just a week after f Last year on my 67th birthday, just a week after finishing breast cancer treatment, I told my kids I wanted to take a trip with each one of them before I turn 70.  My friend Randy reminds me that we must think now in terms of QTR — quality time remaining — and so I do.  Ten days in Italy with @hlewers89 have reminded me just how vast and precious the world is, how travel can bring us home to ourselves, and how important it is to step out of our daily routines and into challenges and adventures while we’re strong and healthy enough to enjoy them, and also just how fun it is to spend time with my 36-year-old son. When we arrived in Milan we discovered our luggage had been  lost in a massive breakdown at Heathrow that could take days to untangle.  And so we spent our first day buying new everything— from underwear to dental floss to walking shoes. By dinner time we had our Italian  capsule wardrobes and tiny duffel bags to pack them in.  There was something kind of liberating about starting from scratch and assembling what we needed for a week of walking in the Lakes district. And I come home not only with new clothes but with some new intentions, too: take the trip, travel light, climb the mountain, drink the good wine, make new friends (what joy!), eat the gelato (and the cheese), make memories with the people you love, ask for help, embrace cultures and people and places that stretch you, learn a few words in the language you don’t know and speak them with all your heart.  Life is short.
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