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Last night, I stood by the gate with my mother and took this picture in one direction. Then I turned around in the other and took this one:

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Lest you think that with time and repetition, the beauty here at our house in Italy stops having an effect on me, let me assure you: It leaves me speechless every time. Every time.

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And getting to see Hugo crawl through the grass, finding snails and dry leaves and little sticks and chamomile blossoms and beetles and fallen cherries to pull into his chubby, dimpled hands and hold aloft triumphantly, right here where I used to crawl myself, is better than words can say.

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I suppose these days I'm at a loss for words in more ways than one.

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When I was in high school, a classmate of mine named Rhonda looked at me coolly one day and told me she didn't like people who were always so damn happy (her words, not mine). It didn't come across as an insult, really. It was just a blunt observation. I remember looking back at her and wondering how to respond.

Years later, towards the end of my time in New York, when things in my life were going up in flames and I felt like I couldn't see even one foot in front of me for all the pain and confusion and sadness fogging my vision, I thought a lot about Rhonda and that comment she made that day. And about the girl she'd been talking to. I was so unhappy, had been so unhappy for so long, that I couldn't even remember what it felt like to be happy. How strange, I used to think, that someone used to see all that happiness in me.

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Last night, after the baby was asleep and my mother had gone to the movies with her friends and my aunt was inside with the newspaper, I picked my way around the house at dusk, stopping to photograph every stunning sight I could see, like I have a million times before. The sun was very low in the sky and the churchbells up the hill were ringing. I could hear a tractor in the distance finishing its rounds and the grass pricked at the edges of my feet, but not unpleasantly. I thought about all the years I'd been coming here, since I was a baby Hugo's age. The house looked so different then, lying in ruins when my grandfather bought it, the land neglected completely. Over the years, my grandfather planted fruit and nut trees, rose bushes, creeping vines and jasmine, plate-sized dahlias and rosemary hedges. Our friends made a roof, my grandfather built a shed.

I was a child here and then an adolescent, a teenager who came home late under the speckled canopy of the Milky Way, a college graduate with little time to spare for this lovely place, and then, one day, a very sad young woman who was trying her darndest to figure out her life and how to be happy, and failing completely and miserably.

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Now, my days are filled with things like meeting Hugo's needs – hunger, thirst, a diaper change, a cuddle, three cuddles, a bump to be soothed, more hunger, another cuddle – reading an entire book in stolen moments throughout the day, planning time for a sunset cocktail with my husband on the grass, sitting at the dinner table and talking with my mother and aunt long after dinner is finished, and there is so much goodness here, so much to feel blessed by and lucky to have, that sometimes I find myself literally screwing up my face with the effort of finding the right words to describe it all.

The funny thing is, it wasn't so hard finding words when I was in pain. In fact, it was all I could do some days. Despair was my midwife. But to capture in writing that warm, round feeling of everything being right, of being filled up with happiness, is much harder. Every phrase I choose seems overblown and clichéd and ridiculous. People will roll their eyes, I think. Also, it's bad luck.

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So instead, I knock wood, I spit three times, I do what I must. But then I say to myself, hold tight when you feel your heart brimming over, when you can barely breathe for all the glory coursing through you as you look into that flaming sun and smell the wild mint underfoot and feel the microscopic hairs on a bee's wings as they touch the skin on your arm for just a moment. You are lucky, you are blessed, you are loved. You have everything you could ever want. Maybe one day in the future you will look back at these days and wonder how you were ever this happy. Maybe. Probably.

But for now, it is everything.

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86 responses to “The Days of Our Lives”

  1. Dale Avatar

    beautiful ,writing and images where oh where in Italy is that hillside ?
    Happy Summer

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  2. annton Avatar

    thank you. with a little tear on my cheeck and a deep and warm feeling at the bottom of my heart. thank you for this post.

    Like

  3. Ladomestique Avatar

    Such a touching post! I read something yesterday that has stayed with me, “Anger is a habit.” It was a reminder of how easy it is to be unhappy, to get in a rut– but we can break the habit if we choose. Your post touches me in the same way. I’ve been struggling for a few weeks since my husband and I moved abroad, but then I read about emotional habits, and then the next day my husband unexpectedly brought me breakfast in bed (which he has never done in our 10 years together). All of these little things have come together at the same time and I feel it’s time to break the habit and hold onto happiness for awhile. 🙂

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  4. Catherine Avatar

    Perfect. (But also? You can’t believe it, but it will just get better and better.)
    xo

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  5. Eleana Chou Avatar

    “Years later, towards the end of my time in New York, when things in my life were going up in flames and I felt like I couldn’t see even one foot in front of me for all the pain and confusion and sadness fogging my vision, I thought a lot about Rhonda and that comment she made that day. And about the girl she’d been talking to. I was so unhappy, had been so unhappy for so long, that I couldn’t even remember what it felt like to be happy. How strange, I used to think, that someone used to see all that happiness in me.”
    That paragraph struck such a cord with me. Thanks for sharing your amazing writing, family and life experiences with us. Don’t ever stop!

    Like

  6. Eleana Chou Avatar

    “Years later, towards the end of my time in New York, when things in my life were going up in flames and I felt like I couldn’t see even one foot in front of me for all the pain and confusion and sadness fogging my vision, I thought a lot about Rhonda and that comment she made that day. And about the girl she’d been talking to. I was so unhappy, had been so unhappy for so long, that I couldn’t even remember what it felt like to be happy. How strange, I used to think, that someone used to see all that happiness in me.”
    That paragraph struck such a chord with me. Thank you so much for sharing your writing, family and life experiences. Don’t ever stop!

    Like

  7. Molly Avatar
    Molly

    Beautiful. Isn’t it sometimes the smallest things that might count as trivial that give you the biggest jolt of joy? So unexpected, so deep, so fleeting.

    Like

  8. linda goldware Avatar
    linda goldware

    I’m not rolling my eyes. I’m going to bookmark this post and read it every single day. So beautiful!

    Like

  9. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Luisa, I’ve been reading and enjoying your writing for five years, and there is something truly special about how you express yourself. As I too have been that girl in New York who feels like her life is falling apart for a good portion of that time, this really struck a chord with me. Thank you for this.

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  10. evy Avatar
    evy

    Beautiful

    Like

  11. Maria Avatar
    Maria

    Thank you for this. I feel I am that girl whose life has fallen apart, who is trying to put it back together and isn’t quite, quite sure yet that it will go back.
    I agree, hard moments are much more eloquent. Why is that? Thank you for trying here to capture the good ones.

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  12. Amanda Avatar

    Good God. I am much too like Rhonda. I’d have asked such an awful thing if I’d been in school with you. But, my dear, you pull it off. Please let yourself be happy. Please, write about it. There’s nothing more soothing than a blissfully contented, brimmingly ecstatic person who knows both the high and the low, and the high again.

    Like

  13. nicole Avatar

    This is so beautiful — and the photos, gorgeous. It is a gift to be able to hold on to the little moments, and you definitely have it! I also knock wood a lot these days, and try to stay in the wonderful moments for as long as possible. Perhaps we are able to appreciate them even more because of that previous sadness? The bitter and the sweet, always.

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  14. ganda Avatar

    Beautiful! Preserve your happiness for the winters. I’ve been there before, and reading this makes me remember that I will be there again someday. xoxo

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  15. Anna Avatar
    Anna

    What is the food item spread onto the tea towels? Polenta? Lovely images…

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  16. Tricia Avatar

    Thank you for sharing these glimpses of Italy and your happiness and memories of past sadness, making joy all the sweeter – that’s one of the gifts of pain, I’d say. Love, love, love seeing these photos and hearing of your wanderings at dusk. I can smell that beautiful spot. Miss Italy. And you describe happiness just fine! Delicious.

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  17. anna Avatar

    i love this. i often struggle myself with how to write about the good and beautiful things, as well as the sad and painful things. to balance! to not depict my life as perfect (while there are these perfect little moments to enjoy, totally and fully), nor to be too bitter or heavy (up to point where it might sound pitiful? ugh!). in any way, i loved this post. and i miss europe! thank you for posting.

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  18. anna Avatar

    ps, i little post i wrote about (childhood and other) memories and the warmth and encouragement they give: http://onebigapple.wordpress.com/2013/05/31/who-i-am-past-present-future/

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  19. Imen Avatar

    Thank you for sharing your gift of beautiful, honest writing + recipes with us. I am new to your blog, and have just ordered your book as well. Cannot wait. Imen x

    Like

  20. Nuts about food Avatar

    Beautiful.I am feeling exactly as blessed these days, although for a very different reason. I am in awe of the beauty of this country – Italy – and the world and the love in it and am grateful for all I have. Because life is fleeting.

    Like

  21. Cara Avatar
    Cara

    Really beautiful post. And never feel ashamed or somehow embarassed to admit to such blissful happiness… it is one of the loftiest goals in life, and to be able to experience it is to live and love life to the fullest. I love that you are in the middle of it right now!

    Like

  22. Kathryn Avatar

    Gorgeous post. And so reminiscent of my feelings every time I go home to the Idaho farm where I grew up. As a teen it seemed like a pokey, confining place. After living away for 37 years with only a few days a year back in the place I was so keen to flee, I realize what a miraculous place it was to grow up in. Blessings are blessings even if you count them much later than you should.

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  23. Amy Avatar

    Thank you

    Like

  24. Brooke Avatar
    Brooke

    Simply beautiful. You deserve it. We all do, but too often forget.

    Like

  25. Luisa Avatar

    No, but now they are on my list!

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  26. Luisa Avatar

    In the Marche region, near Urbino.

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  27. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you! Hope you enjoy.

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  28. Luisa Avatar

    Breadcrumbs! My Sicilian uncle (who divides his time between Brussels and Nice) only likes Italian breadcrumbs, so when my aunt visits my mother, she buys 3 kilos of bread, has the bread ground to crumbs and then lets the crumbs dry out for a week before packing them up and taking them home. 😉

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  29. KateS Avatar
    KateS

    “Despair was my midwife…but for now, this is everything”. Such beautiful, genius words. Godspeed, dear woman.

    Like

  30. gloria Avatar

    love this post just beautiful!

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  31. kickpleat Avatar

    This is such a gorgeous, colourful post! I read it when it came up in my reader the other day, but was distracted and came back again tonight. Wonderful. And I have to say I loved that book too!

    Like

  32. Mandy Davies Avatar
    Mandy Davies

    Hi Luisa .. Could you possibly send the bread recipe that you received again from 5 different people . Every time I try and follow the link on my iPad it says it is not there .. Weird, all your other links on that post worked beautifully … It have just made your yeasty plum bun and your ragu sent us all to the moon and back again . Loved reading about your wonderful time in Italy, we had the most fortunate experience to live in a small village in Umbria, we only missed April and May and loved the change of seasons and all the festivals to celebrate such things as ‘black celery’ saffron and chestnuts !! Only in Italy ! Just a suggestion if you have not already raced out and bought one .. The long reversible ‘Le Creuset’ ridged pan is amazing . Mine did set me back a few pay packets but is well over 10 years old and indestructible .. Fabulous for lots of vegetables etc and the smooth side makes perfect galettes and little pancakes and pikelets and savoury fritters etc .. Just a thought .. It is very heavy .
    Bravo on all you share and write
    Mandy .. Adelaide .. Australia

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  33. Luisa Avatar

    Weirdly, I think her site might be down? I can’t access that page either from my computer. Maybe try again later – it’s My New Root’s Life Changing Loaf of Bread.
    I’m so glad you liked my recipes!

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  34. Caroline Avatar

    Lovely post. Thank you for sharing and finding just the right words.

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  35. Luisa Avatar

    That is wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. Thank you, Jessica.

    Like

  36. Myndi DeVore Avatar

    Goosebumps! This was the loveliest post, Luisa. You captured it perfectly.

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