My first boy
In such an ancient way:
By boat.
Shiny, modern airports
Have always been the scenes of
Our parting.
Tears in the security line,
And then the suddenness
Of a plane trip
Away from my boy.
And a mere few hours later
I’m eight time zones,
One ocean,
And half a continent away from my son.
This time was different.
This time, at the end of our
Big family trip through Europe
The five of us
Said good-bye to Victor for
His summer in Finland with his dad,
And we got on a boat
In a harbor in Helsinki,
And set off into the
Baltic Sea for Germany,
Where we would fly home.
Once on the ferry,
After the craziness of getting
The rest of the kids out of the
Car hold and
Our stuff deposited in our
Cabin for the 30-hour trip,
Joe took the kids
And I had a few minutes alone.
I sat on the bed and
Watched out the window as
The boat chugged along the
Pine-forested coast of Finland and
Out into the Baltic Sea.
The steady rate at which the boat moved
Me away from my boy
Felt humane and natural
Compared to the
Otherworldly shock
Of the airplane lift-off.
With every few meters and
Knots the ship moved,
I acclimated to my boy’s
Physical absence.
It was a slower,
Gentler parting.
And I realized,
As I sat cross-legged on the bunk
Watching the sea swirl and foam,
One that I’m not the
First in my family to have made.
At the turn of the century,
My Finnish great-great-grandparents
Left for America
By boat,
Leaving behind their
Teenaged daughter–
My great-grandmother Selma–
And her younger brother Toivo.
A year later, in 1906,
The siblings would make the
Trip together:
A 16-year-old and a 12-year-old,
Traveling for weeks across the
Atlantic to
Meet their parents in
Their new homeland in 1906.
So as I sailed away from Finland,
Leaving my son behind for the summer,
I thought of my great-great-grandparents
Doing essentially the same thing
110 years earlier.
My situation,
Of periodic, international separation
From my little boy,
Feels abnormal from my
Low-boil heartbreak perspective.
But I know it’s actually not.
Parents and children
Are separated in our world
All the time,
And they always have been.
Whether through
Wartime chaos,
Arbitrary national boundaries,
Military service,
Difficult circumstances and decisions,
Sickness and death,
Addiction,
Incarceration,
Parents parent from a
Distance as best they can–
Or are unable to parent at all.
I think about the
Parents I know who
Don’t experience separation from
Their minor children
Sometimes with envy,
Until I remember that
Those of us who do
Endure it
Are only experiencing a
Premature and
Exaggerated
Version of what every parent
Eventually has to do,
Which is
Let
Go
And turn our children over to
The world and
The universe with
Trembling hands.
Whether they’re eight or
Eighteen or
Twenty-eight,
It has to be done.
What was that like for my
Great-great-grandparents,
I wondered as I watched the
Sea pass beneath our ship.
Did parents experience the
Maternal and paternal instinct in the
Same way back then
And back there,
When infant mortality was
30 times higher
Than it is today
And many families lived in
Third-world conditions?
I imagine they
Loved and grieved their children
With the same ferocity
As we in first-world modernity,
But perhaps there was a
Certain resignation
We don’t have today
To the fact of
Tragedy and pain,
Such as through separation from
A child.
It’s always been a comfort to me
To know that,
Though it feels like it sometimes,
I’m not the only one
Enduring the absence of my child
In this world.
The idea for
The novel I just finished the first draft of,
Comes from the stories of
Undocumented worker parents in our country
Deported,
Leaving their children behind,
Sometimes separated from them
Forever.
Those stories hurt my heart
So I wrote about them to
Soothe myself.
I’m fortunate.
I know I can get out my credit card
And my passport
At any time
And be with my boy within
24 hours, if I really needed to.
Not every parent in my
Situation has that luxury.
And certainly my
Great-great-grandparents didn’t.
In a few weeks, it will be time to
Go to the airport and
Wait outside the frosted glass
Sliding doors of
International arrivals,
Craning my neck to watch for him
Every time the doors open.
Maybe this time I’ll
Think about my great-great-grandparents
Waiting at the train station in
Waukegan, Illinois for their
Children whom they hadn’t seen in
More than a year.
How much taller would they be?
Was everything okay on the trip?
And most importantly,
Which train car would they step off?
There my boy will be,
Bigger and wearing new clothes,
Pulling his suitcase and
Pushing his glasses up on his face.
When he sees me
His mouth will twist up into the
Sly, embarrassed smile he gets with a
Rush of strong feeling.
I’ll squeeze his bones like a
Bundle of long sticks
And lift him off the ground,
Which I can just barely still do.
On the car ride home,
I’ll tell him about his
Great-great-grandmother’s journey from
Finland to America.
He’ll probably have questions about the
Boat and the
Train.
Logistics are important to him.
And he’ll know
That he’s not alone
In this family by
Splitting his life between two countries.