Andiamo a Roma… Finally

I’ve been meaning to write this next blog post for the better part of the last four months, but somehow I just couldn’t get pen to paper. Pandemic, newborn, Christmas, return to work, then… move to Rome! Now, finally, on our loaner Roman Ikea couch, with Aleksander sweetly sleeping and local Italian radio playing in the background, I can write.

The next major event we were anticipating after my last post about Aleksander’s first month, was Christmas. One of the few obvious benefits of our posting to Rome being cancelled last summer was the fact that we’d be able to spend more time with our families in Canada and Aleksander could meet his grandmas, uncles and aunties. In that regard, Christmas was the holiday that we had circled on our calendar for months.

Alas, life in the covid era side-swiped another well-intentioned plan as we made the difficult last minute decision to stay home and not travel to Toronto to spend the holidays with our families. At the time, this was devastating in the way that this year has been filled with many lowkey devastating micro-moments. But we pivoted quickly, I ran down to Ottawa’s Polish grocer and organized my best attempt at the traditional 13 course Polish Christmas Eve feast. Needless to say, the two of us were stuffed beyond belief and the final spread was but a weak imitation of my mom’s many decades old, perfected holiday table. But we had a gorgeous natural Christmas tree, dressed up Aleksander for some photos in cute Santa outfits and exchanged gifts and wishes amongst ourselves. Made the most of it, as 2020 life was wont to do.

Christmas also marked the end of my relatively short two month parental leave – a time, that without hyperbole was amongst the best of my life. Being able to single-mindedly focus on family, support Dalia, and witness all of Aleksander’s first two months of moments, was absolutely brilliant and something I’ll always be grateful for.

A few days after we quietly rang in the New Year, I returned to work (from home). Anticipating in advance how ideal this set-up was, Dalia and I were both surprised at how disruptive my return to gainful employment was, even if I was mostly within earshot, working from the dining room table. We had developed a fine-tuned daily rhythm and weren’t entirely prepared for my newfound duelling dual responsibilities.

I have to also add, for me personally, that the mental space work occupied in my head pushed out many other pleasurable concerns and musings. I no longer freely tweeted the daily joys of being Aleksander’s dad, I felt rushed being with him during the day as work-related tasks loomed nearby, and I watched as Dalia bore more of the parenting burden, increasingly tired as she was. It was not easy and it was not awesome. And it’s probably also one of those parenting truths that you only learn from the school of life. We have to work in order to provide the plenitude of things required to raise a human – diapers, beds, clothes. But this same endeavour detracts, pretty much proportionally, to the time, energy and emotion that you can devote to your little one. If anyone ever figures out this fundamental crux, please drop me a line.

Otherwise, the new year took on its own set of novel routines, and to add to the mix, my offer of posting to Rome was reinstated. Aleksander began to discover his hands and toes, and then slowly the rest of the world outside his grasp. And Dalia and I began to dream of journeys and adventures, pizza and gelato, beaches and Tuscan villas, in a way that had become completely muted in the latter half of 2020.

We plodded through the first quarter of the year, in and out of changing colours, urgencies and levels of lockdown; out from under the occasional seasonal Ottawa snow dumps; and on top of the million tasks one needs to do when changing their country, city and apartment during a global pandemic. All while watching and helping Aleksander grow.

He started to smile, then laugh. Look around, then look at us. Reach out for things, hold our fingers. Make pseudo-conversation sounds and cry only when he had a reason. We continued to parent and learn to parent moment to moment. Googling things in the middle of the night. Asking occasionally for advice and more often than not, getting more unsolicited (well-intentioned) tips than we were able to absorb or implement. Looking at each other often, saying: ‘he’s ok, he looks ok, everything’s ok right?!’ Somehow things kept being ok and we kept figuring out what to do as needed. That also included how to be married alongside a baby who seemed to need more of our attention and time than there were hours in the day.

Our families snuck in as many visits as they could muster to acquaint themselves with the newest arrival to the brood. Grandmas treasured their moments and provided timely relief with their expert holds, walks and lullabies. Our siblings got unfettered glimpses into the joint joy and exhaustion of child-rearing. And the odd friend dropped by and mostly said: I can’t believe you have a kid now. Ya, us either.

As my posting date drew closer, a feeling of disbelief mixed with waves of excitement and anxiety dropped into our already complicated stew of daily emotions. There were so many administrative details to take care of that suddenly my to-do list was keeping me awake at night instead of Aleksander’s cries. But, alas, things kept progressing. Before we knew it, the entirety of our belongings were packed up, leaving only stacks of boxes on which to change diapers. We checked into a downtown hotel with a cinematic evening view of the Canadian Parliament and did our best to line up the timings of our covid tests to get us through France and into Italy.

The stress persisted as we debated and advocated to board our flights in the empty airports of both Ottawa and Montreal. We finally collapsed into our seats and flew over the Atlantic in what somehow felt (again) like the first flights of our lives. Once landed in Europe, no one thought to ask for our covid test results and, in a long-awaited jet lagged haze, we were dropped off at our new Roman apartment, home for the next two years.

Aleksander definitely handled the journey the best out of the trio. “He’s born to travel,” said one of the flight attendants. Oh lady, you don’t even know the half of it!

Andiamo a Roma!

This Quiet Life

The world is such a quiet place.

Not quite as quiet as April,

that was like life on the moon.

But the quietest late July

that is almost imaginable.

I had this thought inside the gym.

And I couldn’t be happier to be back inside a gym.

But it rather felt like somewhere

that has been rediscovered after a meteor strike.

No vibes, not much energy, certainly no sweaty high-fives.

Similar to newly spread out patios

and coffee shops where you feel like frogger

jumping on socially distanced standing markers.

I know that the birds and trees are still happy,

and hopefully those dolphins in Venice too.

But this quiet cloud of distance,

hovering longer than we expected,

is snuffing out our social tendencies.

Making seeing and talking to people

feel awkward and almost dangerous.

I’m ready to unspool from the cloister,

eat a pizza with strangers,

plan a trip further than I can drive,

accidentally bump someone’s elbow in the supermarket.

I guess that’ll all have to wait for a vaccine,

or so they say,

then we can get back to socializing

like any other ordinary and forgettable

Thursday in July.

One Hundred Something Days Later

We went to the mall today, because it’s possible.

I got oddly emotional browsing ties in one of my favourite shops: why would anyone need a tie? I properly choked up.

Dalia tried on a sandal without a sock and they took the pair away for immediate quarantine. Whatever exactly that entails.

I picked up two pants from the tailor, about four months late, having forgotten that they exist. Looking at the jeans realizing I haven’t worn any in about 100 days. And that I have about eight pairs.

The mall music made me feel like I was in a nightclub. A long ago pre-pre-covid memory for me. Life has become so silent, bird chirps and time ticking mostly.

Everything is weird.

It seems very important that we shop. That I spend. Like all that we’ve saved during this time never belonged to us in the first place. And should just be handed over. Tip the restaurant, tip the driver, tip the poor server double time – on the sad half re-opened sidewalk patio – to keep them smiling under the mask.

Buy spring and summer shirts even now that we’ve finally realized that we have too many already. Buy sweaters from last winter because stock needs to keep moving. Buy sweaters for next winter because we don’t know what’s coming.

The greatest civic duty seems to have become buying things. More than washing your hands, more than staying apart, maybe even more than saluting frontline workers, and the fallen, and the forgotten families of the fallen. Global salvation lies in consumption. More than before, more than ever. Buy online, buy in-store; buy it twice.

The world and the markets and their recoveries depend on us. The local economies and the international ones and everything in between. Rent cottages again, fly domestic, book international flights and hope that you can actually go anywhere. Because they need help everywhere.

We need smoke stacks spouting again. China producing knick-knacks again. Restaurants cooking for us again. Schools taking care of our kids again. Nature bending to our will again.

I am exactly the hypocrisy that I’m angry with. I’m fighting for both my sanity and my humanity – by going to the mall.

I gave in and bought new shorts. And then a sandwich at the bottega. And I might even add my name to the long list to sit on a patio and pay three times more for a beer than what I would to have it on my balcony. And soon I hope that this will all be normal again. Whatever exactly that means anymore.

Baby Steps to Fatherhood

Dalia has started to show in the last few days. Not majorly, but in the way that’s just noticeable enough to us. Her stomach is bulging and rounding more than just from too many tacos. Our baby is in there growing!

We’ve been following the expected weekly growth plan of our baby since the beginning. From poppy seed to orange seed to sweet pea to blueberry to raspberry and now somewhere near a green olive. Making more space before becoming a prune, plum, avocado, squash and watermelon. Bursting into our lives later this year as a crying, squirming ball of energy, sweeter than any fruit in the world.

Somehow this change has moved me more than the others beforehand. Dalia felt all the symptoms and I just observed. But now I can tangibly see and feel evidence of this new life growing too, and it’s incredible.

Dalia’s mom turned 60 today and we’re in our sixth week of Covid lockdown. So much has happened and is happening in the world our child will enter. But his/her job is to grow in peace, absorb what he needs and do what she’s gotta.

While we do the same out here. Washing hands, making puzzles, bingeing shows from the comfiest corner of our couch. Laying down our last set of memories as a duo, soon to open the page on the family album from here on in.

Slow Sunny Days on the Inside

Watching beautiful sunny days pass by from the inside

Tracking the shape-shifting shadows slide slowly along the walls and floors

Seeing the sun kiss each leaf of every plant, uniquely at its own daily scheduled time

Stringing together meals like Christmas lights

From pang to idea to assessment to exploration to preparation to plate-setting to eating to cleaning to washing and back to waiting for the next tingle of hunger

Watching shows minute by minute, episode by episode, season by season

Puzzles piece by piece

Work type by type

Cleaning every nook, rediscovering every dusty book, refolding every wrinkled t-shirt

Counting all my socks, scrolling all my picture posts, reading all my blogs

Listening to all the tunes, lifting every weight, remembering every taken trip

Embedded, embraced, sometimes overwhelmed, by the slow, slow days of Covid-19

now well into 20

Doing what we can, in order to distract from all that we cannot

Like fly to Abuja, or drive to California, or share a hug

I’d give anything to elbow bump a colleague, or coach, or old friend

To have lunch with my folks and brother, linger over plates of noodles and pots of green tea,

like germs were still invisible

Plan a trip, book a cottage, try on new jeans

Remember when Tom Hanks got it? When the NBA cancelled the season? The Iranian Minister of Health?

Seems like a lifetime ago in Covid years. But it’s only been months. Dozens of weeks. Hundreds of days. Thousands of hours. Millions of minutes. Billions of seconds.

Since those simple normal outdoor times

Now it’s all bad quarantine haircuts, zoom meetings with one person unmuted (so their dog and kid as well), and live streams for an audience of three

At least, for once, we have each other,

and by that I mean everyone on Earth

Hunkered down, unsure, better or worse

Watching the sun pass by on the floor under our feet,

illuminating all that is found

on the inside.