Almost two years:
Our big family trip to Europe.
All six of us tooling around the
Continent and Scandinavia in a
Rented R.V. for three weeks
À la “Vacation” and “European Vacation.”
Particularly, for me, Chevy Chase’s epic rant:
“I’m gonna have fun and
You’re gonna have fun.
We’re all gonna have
So much fucking fun
We’re gonna need plastic surgery to
Remove our goddamn smiles!”
We’ve spent nearly two years and
More money than our wedding
On this thing.
It had better be
Fucking
Transformative.
The good news is,
I know me well enough to
Guard against my
Fun-fatal desire to control
Your
Good
Time.
And controlling everything
Isn’t even my biggest problem.
(Although it is one problem.)
I’m prepared for the possibility–
Nay, the likelihood–
That some part of the trip
Will be co-opted by a
Half-day visit to a
Polish or German or Swedish
Urgent Care
For an ear infection or a
Broken arm.
I get how my silly little plans can be
Flung and quashed like
So many cars in a
Godzilla-esque movie called
“Your Jet-Lagged Toddler.”
What I’m actually more
Worried about is that the
Trip will be
Amazing,
That it actually will be so transformative for our
Blended family that’s still
Melding and setting like a
Rainbow Jell-O mold,
That I won’t want to come home.
That I’ll want the experience to go
On and
On and
On and
On…
See, I’m the kind of person who,
Like all persons,
Not only avoids
Unpleasant experiences,
But clings to pleasant ones.
“Clinging” in the Buddhists sense:
The desire to make things stay the same
When in fact,
They’re always
Always
Changing.
This, supposedly,
Is why the so-called good things
In life cause suffering, too.
Kind of a buzz kill
If what you’re going for is a
Perpetual state of
Giddy, feverish
Happiness with a
Capital H.
Which is what I’m going for.
It’s that clinging tendency
That makes me want to
Marshal the six of us to a
Flawless experience of
Family togetherness
In a lovely field at the
Base of a German castle with a
Rainbow cresting overhead and a
Warm breeze tousling our hair and
I want to
Cryogenically freeze us there so
We’ll be deliriously happy in that
Moment of
Family togetherness
Forever and ever,
Amen.
So I guess the lesson here is,
Yes,
It’s about “being in the moment”
(Hate that phrase)
But it’s also about
Letting that moment pass into
The next moment.
And it’ll be about finding some
Goddamn little thing to be
Grateful for as I
Drag our overloaded suitcases and
Jet-lagged toddler back into our
Trusty, boring ol’ St. Paul house
At the end of our trip
And contemplate
Going back to work
Three days later.
Mindfulness and gratitude at that moment?
We’ll see.
Wish me luck.