This essay originally appeared on Susan Dugan’s blog on January 26, 2014.
My daughter was packing her car again. We planned to catch a quick lunch—hot dogs, at Steve’s Snapping Dogs on Colfax–our shared guilty pleasure. During which she would give me the crash course in using my new iPad she had not had time to, until now, this last day of a winter break from college that seemed to have whizzed by, often without her.
Our little dog Kayleigh spun in mad circles of frustration as Kara’s bags, evidence of yet another impending defection, accumulated on the ice-crusted lawn. I had planned to take her for a walk as my daughter finished up. But Kayleigh dug in her tiny heels, stubbornly attempting to anchor all six pounds of her heft, staring up in mute helplessness as Kara piled yet another belonging into her little blue car. And I found myself somehow similarly stalled. Riveted like a bystander at the scene of an accident. Engrossed in witnessing the impending departure of a well-loved form that seemed to come and go lately (mostly the latter) with a frequency that tested the strength of human and canine hearts. .
Once we finally got going and headed up the street in the unseasonably buttery sunshine, I found myself once more inwardly “meeping,” a word I invented to describe the curious combination of silent muttering and tear-less weeping to which I seemed to suddenly succumb lately when I thought about Kara. Consumed by thoughts filled with regret for something I couldn’t quite put my finger on, a kind of deficit I couldn’t defend but nonetheless kept inwardly trying to. Although I thought I was so over with this parent-child separation thing, I realized I had completely underestimated its ongoing nature. Nonetheless, I seemed unable to resign myself to the continuing process.
As we turned the corner toward the park, I glanced up at one of the old, giant trees lining the sidewalks and spied yet another large nest, resting, relic-like among the leafless branches. I had been noticing them for weeks now as I walked and drove about these familiar streets. In my nearly eleven years in this neighborhood, I could not recall once observing an abandoned nest, leading me to wonder if some uncommon species of predatory hawk had settled in among us over the past year, perhaps to take out the burgeoning coyotes. But now this particular nest, backlit against a glazed blue sky, seemed a sign I could no longer refuse to heed, but an outer reflection of the gaping, vacant nest within.
“Jesus Christ,” I said. And he was instantly beside me, my imaginary inner teacher. Adjusting the hot pink shades I had given him a few summers ago against the glare.
Kayleigh staggered about on her hind legs, little paws curled in pleading position, as if sensing his presence, too.
“Where on earth have you been?” I asked. Because it seemed like months, it really did; since he’d deigned to heed my call.
“We’ve talked about this,” he said, smiling. Reading my mind again. Reminding me of who had really gone missing. (His consistency could get on your nerves, if you let it.)
Still, I had to smile, too. “Anyway, long time no see with,” I said, stealing his usual line.
He laughed. “So how’s it been working out for you lately in dreamland?”
“Oh, my God,” I said. “You have no idea.”
He nodded.
I thought about bringing him up to speed on the seemingly random, incoming forgiveness opportunities firing like a meteor shower in my twisted little imagination. But I had at least come far enough along on this journey without distance to the place we never left to know the problem and the solution lay side by side, right now, in my puny willingness to look on this illusion du jour, right now, with him.
Kayleigh had exhausted herself and lay coiled at my feet.
I pointed to the nest above. “She’s leaving again,” I said.
“Ah.”
“It’s like when I was pregnant,” I said. “Everywhere I looked there were pregnant women, I’d never noticed before. And now these.”
He nodded.
I tugged Kayleigh to her feet and we trundled on toward the playground, weaving in and out of more towering trees brandishing empty nests like trophies, mentally reviewing the last few weeks. My husband and I had both harbored high hopes for spending quality time with our daughter over the holidays and beyond. But she was 21 now, actually, in case we’d forgotten, and had made many other plans, as healthy young adults will. Filled with the bravado of growing independence; the promise of new people, places, and adventures beckoning from every turn. And not yet face-to-face with the impending challenges of making her own way in this seeming world. I thought about how unkind it was for me to take this very normal step in human development so freaking personally, and yet, the dull ache of longing remained. And I realized I had no clue whatsoever about how to let go of this, but someone very close at hand did.
We watched the children swinging on the swings and digging in the sandbox, smacking each other with their little plastic shovels and bursting into tears. Screeching and hollering as they slid down the spine of a purple dinosaur, ignoring the calls of their harried-looking parents stabbing at cell phones
“I know what you’re thinking,” I said.
“You always do.”
“ ‘It’s an insane idea to believe we can lose what we love,’ just like Ken Wapnick said in one of his academies.”
Jesus nodded.
Just as insane as thinking we can “hold onto it,” or even know what that means. “There are no empty nests in truth, is what you’re really trying to say. Just the one in the mind that remains chirpingly full.”
Jesus was swinging the hand I must have given him as we turned back toward home. Skipping along like a little girl with angel eyes who once thought I hung the moon. Kayleigh had fallen in at my heels, as if responding to the commands of an inner dog whisperer.
We walked back to find my daughter all packed up.
“One second,” she said, dashing back into the house for a final possession. (No doubt appropriating another one of mine. :))
It was time to show Jesus what lunch was all about. “Have you ever had a Snapping Dog?” I asked.
He glanced down at Kayleigh.
Her eyes widened.
His brows shot up and down the way they do.
I picked her up.
We threw back our heads, and laughed.
“Relate only with what will never leave you, and what you can never leave. The loneliness of God’s Son is the loneliness of his Father. Refuse not the awareness of your completion, and seek not to restore it to yourself. Fear not to give redemption ovcr to your Redeemer’s Love. He will not fail you, for He comes from One Who cannot fail. Accept your sense of failure as nothing more than a mistake in who you are. For the holy host of God is beyond failure, and nothing that he wills can be denied. You are forever in a relationship so holy that it calls to everyone to escape from loneliness, and join you in your love. And where you are must everyone seek and find you there.” (A Course in Miracles Chapter 15 VIII. Paragraph 3)
Susan Dugan’s books – Extraordinary Ordinary Forgiveness, Forgiveness Offers Everything I Want, and Forgiveness: The Key to Happiness – are available at RMMC and on Amazon. She writes about ACIM based on Ken Wapnick’s teachings at ForaysInForgiveness.com and teaches Tuesday nights at RMMC.