Tuesday, January 6, 2026
I stay in my bedroom listening to the family pack up their suitcases and establish order back in the house. They have a noon flight back to New York. They leave the house in better condition then before. Two healthy young men and two charming talented middle aged women. We hug, take pictures, say good by and they are off. I walk through the house. Nothing of theirs is left behind. They are gone and the house is quiet. My daughter roommate and I check in with each other and then spend most of the day in silence as we adjust to our quiet life.
Garbage day. The tall young man drags my over full bins to the curb before getting into the rental car. Can’t forget garbage day even during the good by rituals. Garbage can’t wait. Garbage doesn’t care.
My writing friend comes at 4 and we decide to just talk. We catch up with stories of current family life. I start a fire in the fireplace that peters out before it really catches.
I finish reading NEXT OF KIN, a memoir by Gabrielle Hamilton. A powerful writer about her family and growing up and growing old. Lots of it is unsettling as I think back to my childhood and my times as a parent. No escape from that clutching feeling that we may not have understood what was actually going on.