Cape Ann: Winter Getaway

Just 24 hours after I return from my road trip down the Oregon Coast, Jane and I turn the luggage around, pack Jordan’s things (half our house contents and life possessions) into the car, and take a 3-night getaway in Gloucester, on Cape Ann. The weather is still fairly snowy and miserable at this point in mid-February, and Jordan has had a run of upper respiratory viruses from daycare (which he dutifully transmits to us every other week), but we are determined to go out as a family and try new things (even if just an hour from home) now that Jordan is reaching a more robust age and size for traveling. We’ve rented the top floors of a little house on the edge of town, a lovely space with several bedrooms (for us and Jordan), a loft (for getting away from Jordan?), and a full kitchen, which I use to cook up a succession of nice pescatarian-friendly dishes for the family (a full ratatouille and Provençal cod baked with olives and peppers on one night, and on another, a salad of seared calamari, peppers, scallions, topped with a sesame vinaigrette and parmesan).

During the day, we make some tiny forays out into the biting cold to walk around Good Harbor Beach and explore Gloucester’s maritime waterfront. Since Jordan is still sick (and in fact fevering on and off during most nights of the trip), we scrap our original thoughts of taking him around Cape Ann, instead limiting our time in the frigid outdoors. We mostly spend the long weekend playing with him in the house (walking around the house with him holding our fingers with his two little hands, and pulling up cozy fireplace music streams on Youtube on the big television screen in the loft). On our last day in town, I sally out to explore Stage Fort Park and get a takeout platter of fried seafood from Seaport Grille on the waterfront, which Jane and I share for lunch. In the evening, we return with Jordan to take golden hour photos of the Gloucester skyline and show Jordan the climbable tractor structure in the park’s playground (he has developed quite the affection for large vehicles and working trucks in the past few months). Then the following morning, it’s a frenetic pack, drive back to Boston, and unpack to get ourselves settled back into routine life at home.

Massachusetts: Year's End

Just like that, we are at the end of yet another year - this one in some ways the biggest, most beautiful, most complicated year of my life-to-date. 2023 was a year of change and challenge. It started with us jumping into the maelstrom of parenthood, and ends with an ongoing search for soul and self, place and peace - a neverending journey, as this blog can attest to over many years. In a year’s time, Jordan has transformed from our tiny newborn babe into our much bigger babe, on the verge of toddlerhood. Already I can see the shades of his personality and temperament, especially where they so closely mirror mine: he is strong-willed but adaptable, always confident yet sometimes so insecure and in need of love. He seems thus far, like me, to be an unrepentant introvert, and his sense of balance and body control is, like mine… not particularly gifted. But he is so beautiful in every way, and I love that he is becoming his own person, that he has favorites (“Mamamamamamuh…”), that he is becoming more creative and expressive as he acquires mobility and cognitive ability, and, most of all, that I can already tell he will not be a perfect child or a perfect person, which will only make me love him more.

As I reflected a few months ago, Jordan’s existence has brought into sharp relief the contours of my life - the choices and tradeoffs I make every day passively or explicitly, and the precious fleeting quality of the time that I have. Ephemeral experiences have been the centerpiece of this blog for many years, often exemplified by the passage of seasons, faraway or familiar landscapes transformed by time, and the changing of foliage over each year’s rhythm. With Jordan, this experience is magnified and amplified; it is like I wake up (and come home) to a new shade of brilliance on my Little Leaf, every day. That, along with a new family illness (my father, who was Jordan’s primary caregiver throughout the summer months, was unexpectedly diagnosed with colon cancer earlier this month, and is beginning to undergo treatment), have led to much soul-searching as the year draws to a close. I have always been a planner, and I have always been aware of my own mortality; now, I have a bucket list, organized by year and half-decade. I have always thought of myself as organized and responsible; now, I have a roadmap for exactly how I want to spend my lifetime’s worth of time and resources. This year has tested my sense of self, shaken up my marriage and family life (not always for the better), and subjected me to a level of physical and emotional exhaustion I thought I left behind in medical training. But, I come out of it in better physical shape than I have been in years (since pre-pandemic), more resilient (so many stressors no longer matter when you haven’t budgeted the life energy to give a shit), and ever more confident of my personal priorities, and the path I want to walk in the remainder of my life. Onward, to the remainder.

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December 15-17, 2023: A joyous weekend spent in Milwaukee, where I was given the opportunity of a lifetime to officiate the wedding of Ali and Ashley, two of my best friends from the Maryland era. It was my first time visiting Wisconsin and first time really spending any significant time in the Midwest. Despite that, Milwaukee engendered a feeling of peace and belonging in me; I walked around downtown each morning before wedding-related programming, getting my meals at the holiday-bedecked public market, and perhaps this is nostalgia speaking, but I was struck by how closely the city resembles Baltimore (right down to the direction and feel of the drive in from the airport, the industrial grit, and the overly ambitious yet charmingly underwhelming waterfront). I was also struck by the genuine and kind spirit of the people I met, not the least including Ali and Ashley’s families, who so graciously welcomed me into the festivities and made this humble introvert feel like part of a big family. A truly special experience I will always be thankful for.

December 22, 2023: Jane, my mom, and Jordan, come down Brookline Avenue to “pick Daddy up” from work on Friday night. We take portraits with the lit trees outside the Shapiro Building. The night is freezing, and poor Jordan’s little fingers are icy by the time we return him to the stroller and get back home.

December 23-27, 2023: A Christmas vacation to my mom’s lakeside house in Plymouth (sans my dad, who is in California recovering from abdominal surgery). On Saturday, we arrive and set up; after I do groceries for the week, Jane and I sneak out for a lunch buffet at Rio Brazilian Steakhouse while Jordan naps with Grandma. On Sunday, we visit Plymouth Beach and Nelson Waterfront Park in the morning before I bake a Christmas ham (served with mashed potatoes, gravy/cranberry jam, and roasted vegetables). On Christmas Day, we take a brief morning walk in Morton Park, where I photograph Jordan playing with pine duff and acorns on the forest floor; in the evening, we see sunset at Plymouth Harbor and take photos with the light display at the Brewster Gardens. On Tuesday, Jordan naps in the car as we drive south to Falmouth. We visit the Nobska Point Light, Nobska Beach, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute’s public aquarium (a lifelong dream of mine since studying oceanography with Jane in high school). After saying hello to Bubba the harbor seal and showing Jordan the fish tanks, we bring Jordan to his first ever sit-down restaurant experience (at Captain Kidd in Woods Hole). My mom has a lobster roll, while Jane and I share a fried platter and clam chowder in a breadbowl; Jordan eats his jar of mashed potatoes and scrambled eggs from home while maintaining eye contact with all the other patrons in the dining room. On Wednesday morning, we return home to Brookline in fairly heavy mid-week traffic.

December 28-31, 2023: A few days of re-centering while experiencing new things. We bring Jordan to do groceries, eat out again (twice - once at a Japanese market and once at an Indian buffet), visit several playgrounds, ride the T for the first time, and even attend his very first “gym” class. The poor child is exhausted and burnt-out after a week of firsts, so we ring in the new year with a very quiet day doing his favorite thing - playing with Mama at home.



Plymouth: Weekend at 阿媽's

On the second weekend of October, due to rain and slow color change in the Pioneer Valley, we jettison our original plans to take Jordan on a weekend bender to the Quabbin Reservoir, and instead drop in on my mom’s little place in Plymouth, to spend a weekend with the grandparents. After a nice drive south along 93S and Route 3 (during which Jordan naps in the car), we arrive at the lakeside house bedside the Barrington Sea, disgorging the baby and our car load of baby equipment. Jordan crawls around in the living room and my parents take him to explore the house as Jane and I set up his travel crib in the downstairs guest room. Afterward, we go out to visit the Pilgrim Monument on a hilltop overlooking Plymouth, followed by a brief visit to the Mayflower in Plymouth Harbour. Along the way, I take some portraits of Jordan and family using my tripod setup. We takeout a nice seafood lunch (lobster rolls, fried seafood, and clam cakes) at Wood’s Seafood; we enjoy this back at home, with Jordan slurping on pureed peach and chicken-and-vegetables in his booster seat. In the afternoon, with Jordan down for his second nap of the day, my mom and I head out to buy groceries for dinner, and a day-early cake for Jane’s 33rd birthday. After a brief visit to nearby Morton Park (and family portraits beneath a tupelo tree with striking red foliage), we cook up a one-pot minestrone with egg noodle pasta and sliced cod fillet. We enjoy this with Jane’s birthday cake (a flowery pink icing-covered affair of a chocolate cake, completed by a shark candle), followed by an early night and a drive back to Boston after Jordan’s breakfast the next morning.