When Life Gives You
Orchid Buds, Count Your Blessings
By Carolyn Schuk
Our cymbidium orchid usually starts blooming around Easter,
as the days get perceptibly longer. Its last blooms fade in mid-June, on the
longest days of the year. This year it has five flower spikes. The last time it
was so abundant was 1991, the year my son was born.
Since the millennium, the cymbidium's offerings have been
slim. It's as if the plant knows whether the year to come will be fruitful or
not.
For example, 1991 was a rollercoaster year. When I was seven
months pregnant, the retail chain my husband worked for declared bankruptcy and
the future looked to be an unemployment line.
Portents of irreversible decline were unmistakable at the
software company I worked for. That the management gave my office to someone
else while I was on maternity leave didn't help my anxiety level.
So there we were – a baby on the way and what had seemed
like economic security evaporating like a freak Silicon Valley snowfall.
When Will was born, things didn't look up. We were now
pathetically inexperienced parents with a colicky baby. I remember watching the
sun come up one morning after a sleepless night and thinking, My life, as I know it, is over. One
friend says that the first months with your first child are, quite simply, the
worst of your life.
But as the orchid buds began to open, things, likewise,
began opening up.
My husband landed a job with Whole Earth Access helping to
open the store – now gone, alas – on Stevens Creek Blvd. Now, while some people
– like me – have panic attacks just thinking about a project like this, my
husband likes nothing better than being in charge of a big, complicated
project.
At only five weeks Will began sleeping through the night –
an extraordinary 11 hours from 8:00 at night to 7:00 in the morning. Soon
after, I discovered that as long as we went somewhere — especially at
night — he was a perfectly happy baby. He was like the old disco song,
"I love the night life."
Then my former employer asked me to come back to work as a
contractor, managing the company's newsletters. My mother came out from
Pennsylvania to help. It was the perfect fit.
With my mother to babysit, I could get out of the house a
few days a week, wear real clothes, and talk to grownups. But I could also remain
a mostly stay-at-home mom. A few years later, that contract job was the genesis
of a freelance copywriting business. That copywriting business evolved into
writing for the Santa Clara Weekly, the best job I have had in my life.
By the end of 1991, Bill had a job he loved, Will was
delighted with his two new friends in daycare, and I ended the year making more
money – and getting more sleep – than I had working full-time.
Twenty-eight years later the orchid bounty still lifts my
heart and I still count my blessings – one in particular.
It was Will's birthday this week, and he can now add
"Mueller Day" to the other auspicious event that happened on April
18: Paul Revere's famous ride. A ride that set a new experiment in governance
in motion and an investigation that, hopefully, will put it back on the course
its founders intended.
Will has grown into a fine man, with the patient persistence
to reach any goal he sets for himself, an affectionate husband and (to date) a
fond "parent" to his dog and cat. He has a good and generous heart, slow
to anger or even annoyance — even with his parents.
And so as the Easter buds open, I'm going to count a new
blessing with every one. Happy Easter.
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