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Crystal Rowe

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Crystal Rowe

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Mama Dreams, Daughter Dreams

May 18, 2022 Crystal Rowe
blank notebooks on a bed of grass

I’m standing in the kitchen, flipping through my planner, when I realize it doesn’t go past June. My husband David and I have just booked a vacation for July. I want to write it down. I toss the deficient planner aside and yell, “I’m going to Staples!”

“I want to go!” my nine-year-old, Autumn, calls, running down the stairs so fast I think she’ll fall flat on her face. She gleams at me expectantly once she reaches the bottom stair.

I take a deep breath; I was hoping to go alone. But arguing about it will be more work than allowing her to come along. “Alright, put some shoes on,” I say. “Maybe you can help me choose one.” A huge smile illuminates her face as she shoves her feet into an old worn pair of black boots.

We arrive at the store and head straight to the planners. I can’t find one I want—something simple yet pretty, with lots of blank space for notes. I rifle through what they have, not noticing that my daughter has walked to the other side of the aisle. She comes up beside me with a sparkly notebook, covered in so many jewels it looks like it’s been bedazzled. “Mama, can you buy this for me? I’ll pay you back.”

“Why do you need that? Don’t we have notebooks at home?” The moment I speak the words out loud, I realize their irony. I have two other planners—at home—that I have deemed “not good enough,” yet here I am, looking for another.

“Well, yeah,” she replies, looking down at the floor, “but I want to write a story.” Her voice is a whisper, as if she’s afraid to even speak it out loud. 

Read the rest of the story in the May/June issue of Literary Mama.


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In Editor's Picks, Writing, Motherhood, Homeschool, Family

Falling in Love: A Pandemic Story

March 13, 2022 Crystal Rowe

“Let’s go for a hike in the snow!” I enthusiastically tell my girls one February morning in 2021. Opening the coat closet, I toss snowsuits onto the ground and urge them to bundle up. I button my snow pants. Zip up my coat. Grab the warmest hats we own, placing one on my head and throwing one to each of the girls. I help them get their gloves on before shoving my hands in David’s heavy-duty snow mittens. 

“Don’t forget a mask, in case we meet someone in the woods!” It feels odd that this has become a normal thing to say, but having something over our face has been nice protection from the cold and biting wind. A silver lining of the outdoor mask mandate, I suppose.

“Can you help me get these things on?” I say to David, as we walk out the door. I found a practically brand new pair of TSL Symbioz Elite snowshoes at the thrift store last week and the freshly fallen snow is enticing me to try them out. With my thrifted snowshoes in hand, I climb down the stairs of our front stoop. “I have no idea how to even work these things.” I titter, turning my head to look at him behind me.  

He laughs, smiling encouragingly. “You just put them on, and then you walk on the snow. Like magic.” He straps me in, shoving my foot harder than I’d like, but promising it will make the walk easier. He bids us goodbye and heads back inside to his newly designed basement office.

I pivot towards the girls, who are making snow angels in our front yard, eagerly awaiting the adventure that lies before us. “Okay, which way do we go?” They point to the path that veers to the right, towards the service road,  and I lead the way. David was right; it’s awfully easy to walk on the snow in my super fancy snowshoes. Walking on a foot of snow feels a little like walking on clouds. 

We take a hundred steps before stopping for the first picture. The trees are blanketed in white. The plow hasn’t been up the service road yet, so it’s nothing but a huge white field, just waiting to be trampled on. A blank canvas waiting for its footprints and snow angels. 

It takes an inordinate amount of time to get just to the edge of the forest. There’s so much beauty, too many photos to capture, too many shots to take. Eden starts to fidget. “Come ON! She says. I want to make it to the pond!”

We get to the trail and I stop in awe. “I have never seen anything quite like this - ever, in my whole entire life.” I look from left to right, soaking in the snow capped trees and the sun’s reflection, making the snow whiter than white. “This is just magical.” I say out loud to myself. I inhale deeply, the smell of winter filling my lungs. Autumn stops beside me and reaches her arms out wide, as if inviting the world into a hug. I continue my musings: “It’s stunning. It’s enchanted. It’s beautiful, don’t you think?”

She responds in a whispery voice. “I don’t even recognize this forest. It looks like a whole new world!” Together, we marvel over nature’s beauty for a few seconds before Eden yells at us to keep moving. Making our way through the forest, we stop occasionally to take slow-motion videos as Eden shakes the tree branches heavy with snow. The morning’s snowy stillness brings us all a sense of peace and curiosity.

******

I never saw snow growing up.  At least not more than an occasional inch. When I left for college in the midwest, my mom bought me extra layers and good boots to keep me warm. I remember the first time I walked to class in the snow. Staring at the snowflakes as they landed on my gloves, I was enamored by their shape; stunned that every snowflake was unique. I would investigate them on my dark colored mittens as I walked on the sidewalk, not caring that people stared at me as they drove by. I imagine they wondered what in the world I found so interesting about my gloves.

But as enamored as I was, I never really fell in love with snow back then. It was too cold. Too wet. I’d rather cozy up by the fire and read a good book. Or write a paper. Even back then I loved writing papers; reading and writing were my favorite things to do.

******

Four years ago, a friend asked me to join a nature club. Desperate for friends, and wanting to make sure my kids had friends too, I said yes without even thinking about what being in a nature club meant. We hiked once a week with ten kids in tow between the ages of newborn and seven. 

I mostly hated it. 

I didn’t love being outside. I didn’t love hiking. I didn’t love hearing kids whine about how tired or hungry they were. 

When it came time to discuss whether or not we would continue with Nature Club in the fall, I said no thanks. I didn’t want to hike every day. I didn’t want to have to put in the work to get my kids out the door. Packing snacks, and gear, and water, and good attitudes felt like too much to do once a week. I was not an outdoor mom. I didn’t want to be an outdoor mom. I wanted my kids to be outdoor kids without me having to be an outdoor mom. Can’t we just send them out to play while we sit inside and drink tea and talk about books? PUH-LEEZE?!

My friends let me off the hook. We agreed to do indoor activities twice a month and nature days twice a month. It felt like a good compromise. Until winter came.

One scheduled hiking day, there was snow in the forecast. Because we were hiking close by, we decided to hike anyway. If the weather turned bad, we’d head to someone’s house and let the kids play indoors the rest of the time. While my kids were excited to hike with friends no matter the weather, I begrudgingly put on my layers, grabbed my favorite hat and boots, and headed out the door. We had been told our backyard connected with the trails we were to hike that day, but we never took time to explore the map and figure out how they connected to our yard, so we drove a mile down the road and parked on the street. 

We were barely even on the trail before the snow started falling. Pulling my hood up over my beanie, I tried to grin and bear it, while sending a snarky text message and picture to my best friend who, like me, preferred to stay indoors by the fire.

Somewhere in the middle of that snowy hike four years ago, I began to fall in love. I just didn’t know it yet.

******

It wasn’t until Covid hit that I began to nurture my love affair with nature. The date is different for everyone, depending on where you lived at the time. For us, the world began to change on March 13, 2020. 

In the blink of an eye, libraries closed. The girls’ activities were canceled. Church went virtual. David began working from home every day, instead of just two days a week. With all four of us in the house all day every day, and emotions and anxiety at an all-time high, we were desperate to find a way to release some energy. 

The weather was mild for March in New England, so I made a list of trails to explore and we began hiking together several times a week. It seemed everyone had the same idea—when we tried to go to places we had been before, we found them packed with people looking for their own way out. 

So we made a new list. We found more obscure places—mostly hidden places—and had some grand adventures. But these adventures still felt like a lot of work. Packing up the car, making sure we had snacks, and water, and a backpack to carry all our things.

One morning I decided we would head to the road behind our house and see if we could find our way to the trails we had hiked with nature club so long ago. We discovered a boardwalk not far from our backyard, and several poorly marked trails. Those poorly marked trails became our refuge when there was nowhere else to go. 

We hiked all Spring. Headed to the beach all summer, when the trails were covered in mosquitos. When the temperatures began to drop, we returned to the forest behind our house. Several times a week we’d walk outside and head to the trails. In sunshine. In rain. And even in snow. The trails we once drove to were now our backyard home.

******

We hike to our fairy place, stopping for a break at the top of the hill. As we gaze out over the pond, the sun reflects off the trees, making shadow art all around us. I can’t help but think this is the stuff picture books are made of. 

There isn’t a cloud in the sky, making it bluer than I ever imagined. A large clump of snow hangs on to a leaf at the top of a young beech tree, holding on for dear life. The wind blows, snow falling from the treetop canopy, making us feel as though we are standing right in the middle of a snow globe. 

Not many people have discovered these woods behind our house. With not a soul in sight, it has become our own little paradise. I think I could sit here in the snow for hours. Except my stomach begins to rumble. And my children begin to whine that their fingers and toes are going numb.

We rise from our snow chairs and make our way back to the trail. As we walk, we chat about how the sun has risen higher in the sky, and how snow has begun to fall off the empty branches of the nearby hickory tree. As we approach the boardwalk leading back to our yard, I think back to that first snowy hike in these woods. I wonder if I’d be here now if it weren’t for that day. Would I have discovered these trails on my own?

Somewhere in the midst of the world falling apart, I fell in love.

Here we are, exactly two years later, and our days are full once again. The calendar is packed with dance lessons and competitions, gymnastics practices, and church activities. Doctor appointments, everyday chores, and dinner with friends. Part of me longs for those early days when there was nowhere to go. Sometimes I long for a blank calendar, full of open space. With nothing to do but explore.

If the pandemic gave me a gift, it was the gift of the great outdoors.

This post is part of a blog hop to share our pandemic stories. It's hosted by www.laurapbass.com and you can read the next post in the blog hop by clicking here.

In Family, Winter, Memories, Editor's Picks Tags Pandemic living
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Love is An Exercise Ball

February 18, 2022 Crystal Rowe

This poem is dedicated to all you mamas out there with babies that won’t sleep. Ever. Unless they are on top of you in some way.

Solidarity, Mama. You are the embodiment of love.

Like a silent metronome I bounce
up and down
up and down
monotonous movement a lullaby

She naps on my chest
breathing in
breathing out
my heart the beat of a drum

Fluctuation brings a finale
to solitude and silence
a screeching wail
a cymbal crash

In the quiet afternoon
with every bob
every breath
my soul swells with tenderness

Love is an exercise ball

Written as part of Like Langston & Emily: A Poetry Workshop with Callie Feyen and Exhale Creativity.


This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in the series "Love Looks Like”.

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In Editor's Picks, Motherhood, Poetry, Parenting
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The Mayonnaise Cake

November 4, 2021 Crystal Rowe

I rarely go to the grocery store but I have a hankering for Deb Perelman’s Pork Tenderloin Agroldoce. It uses acorn squash, which I have an abundance of, and is the perfect Fall Dinner. I walk through the meat aisle to pick out a pork tenderloin and take a detour down the baking aisle to grab a Duncan Hines cake mix. My birthday is in a week and I want to save my family the hassle of finding the perfect cake recipe. (That’s a lie. I’m a cake snob. There are so many bad recipes on the internet. I fear what they might choose.)

I return home from my errand and shake the brown paper bag in my hand. It crinkles with excitement as I pull out the box and proudly hold it up for David to see. “What’s that for?” he asks. “My birthday!” I reply. “Now you don’t have to find a recipe!” He looks at me with a sinister smile on his face. “Eden has something she wants to show you.” 

I walk through the house. “Eeeeeeden,” I yell. “Do you have something to show me?” 

“Yes!” She says, scampering through the sunroom. I follow her to the homeschool room where she’s made a picture using tangrams and wants me to rate it using a checkmark system. Gazing at me with her huge blue eyes, she points to her paper. “Do you like it?” I tell her I do; she points to a line of empty squares is drawn on a piece of paper next to her art. “How much? You can mark it three times.” I give her three checkmarks. Satisfied (and clueless I’m thinking about my birthday cake), she prances out of the room.  

“I bought a cake mix,” I call after her, “so you can make my cake.” David overhears and looks at me questioningly. It’s obvious her math assignment is not what he had in mind when he said she had something to show me. Eden picks up her cookbook. ”We don’t need it! We found a recipe!” She opens the page to show me a Chocolate Sheet Cake sprinkled with powdered sugar and my heart sinks. I want a layer cake, but they don’t know that. When they asked what kind of cake I wanted, I told them chocolate. With chocolate icing.

I stand silent for a moment, thinking about how to tell her this cake isn’t what I want when she interrupts my thoughts: “But we are going to make icing instead of powdered sugar!” I give her a huge smile. She has clearly thought about her recipe selection and cake baking, so a sheet cake I will eat.

I scan the ingredients and see “mayonnaise” in the list. “You know this has mayonnaise in it?” I ask, with an incredulous voice. David looks at me from the sink where he’s cleaning dishes from lunch. “What?!” He throws a spatula down in disgust. Soapy water splashes from the sink. “Ewww, really?” Eden points to the quotes on the page from kid testers and reads them out loud. I really liked the cake! I hate mayonnaise, but I loved this mayonnaise cake! and I thought it was the best cake I’ve ever had in my life. My finger moves down the page and lands on a large heading at the bottom of the page. 

Mayonnaise in a Cake?

We read about the science behind mayonnaise in a cake. Most cake recipes have oil and eggs in them. That’s really all mayonnaise is, with a little lemon juice and a few seasonings. “Mayonnaise is the trick to making this cake super moist and delicious,” I read out loud. I guess we should trust America’s Test Kitchen—they know more about kitchen science than I. 

I’m still not certain this mayonnaise cake will be any good. It’s taken me more than ten years to find the perfect cake recipe and it’s not a recipe I want them to try; but, I take pride in empowering them, so I’ll consider this a lesson in experimentation. “Let’s try it!” I muster excitement in my voice, taking comfort in knowing if it isn’t any good, Duncan Hines will come to the rescue. “Science in the kitchen,” I say, “but you’ll have to buy mayonnaise because we don’t have any.”

The day before my birthday, David and Eden head to the grocery store with a small list. Red wine vinegar (for the pork agrodolce I still haven’t made), hummus (for my birthday dinner), heavy whipping cream (for the frosting), and mayonnaise (for the cake). They come back with the smallest jar of mayonnaise I’ve ever seen. “We picked the best one!” Eden proudly says, when she pulls it out of the paper bag. “It’s organic!” “I’m sure it will be delicious!” I nod my head, keeping my real thoughts to myself: they probably should have bought Hellmann’s for something like this. 

“I’m going outside,” I say, grabbing my book. It’s sunny out—a beautiful 68 degrees—and I don’t want to be in the kitchen when they are. The truth is, I wanted to make my cake. The kitchen is my happy place. It’s where I can create something beautiful (most of the time) and delicious (also most of the time). The kitchen is where I go when I need to stop my brain from spinning in circles over the many things I need to do. In the kitchen, I pull out a list of ingredients, follow instructions, and end up with something to show for my time and energy. Sure, there are times when I have kitchen fails, but the act of creating in the kitchen brings peace to my soul. But my family is unwavering. They want to pamper me. So here I am, outside, while they take over my kitchen and bake.

Fifteen minutes pass. I start to sweat in my long sleeves and scarf. I walk inside to change my clothes and see Autumn sitting at the counter. It’s clear Eden is doing all the work. I can’t help but sneak a peek at what’s happening inside my sacred space. Two round pans lie on the counter, with parchment paper circles nestled perfectly inside. I look at the recipe to see if there’s going to be enough batter to fill two pans. “So…” I say, trying to figure out how to break the news gently; “this recipe is for an 8-inch square pan. Those are 8-inch round pans. Did you double the recipe?” 

Eden looks at David. David looks at me. “Um, no?” My brain quickly turns to problem-solving mode—how can I help them make this work without insulting them? “Okay,” I finally say gently, “Divide your batter evenly. And set a timer. They’ll be thinner than the recipe so they won’t take as long to bake.”

Eden, grinning from ear to ear, nods her head and continues to whisk the chocolate mixture in her large metal bowl. The whisk hits the sides like a triangle in elementary school music class. “We’re going to put icing in the middle!” Her excitement is contagious; I feel my annoyance start to slip away. She loves the kitchen as much as I do, and watching her in action makes my heart leap with joy. “I’m so excited about it,” I reply. “It’s going to be yummy! I’m sure!”

“It’s time for the mayonnaise!” Eden announces, grabbing the measuring cup sitting next to her. “How much, Autumn?” Autumn looks at the recipe, then looks at Eden. “⅔ of a cup.” Eden scoops the mayonnaise out of the jar and into the measuring cup. “Ewwwww—this stinks!” she says, wrinkling her nose. We remind ourselves the reviews say it’s the best cake ever, and I take comfort in knowing there’s a box mix for backup.

They finish the batter and take a taste. That is, after all, the best part of being the chef. Autumn is the first to speak. “Um, this tastes weird.” Eden, so proud of all she’s done to get to this point, says otherwise. “I think it’s delicious! But I don’t want any more.” Usually, they fight over licking the bowl. The taste test doesn’t bode well. I taste it myself and have to agree with Autumn. I move my lips up and down, making a smacking sound. I try to identify the funny after-taste on my tongue. “It tastes herby,” I say, picking up the mayonnaise to look at the ingredient list. Sure enough, this fancy organic mayonnaise is seasoned with mustard seed and rosemary. 

David, wide-eyed, starts to apologize, certain he’s ruined the cake: “I’m so sorry! We tried to get the best!” I tell him there’s no need to apologize and remind him magic happens in the oven. “The flavors may even out when it bakes.” He opens the oven door and helps Eden place the pans in the oven. She pulls a stool over to the microwave over the stove and sets a timer. “Twenty-three minutes,” she says, “that’s ten minutes less than the recipe says. Is that good Mommy?” 

My intention to let them do this without me has totally failed. So much for staying out of my own birthday cake.

Twenty-three minutes later, the timer beeps. Eden runs to the oven. Opens the door to take a look. “Is it done, Daddy?” David delicately pulls a pan out of the oven and helps her check with a toothpick. She looks at him with a big grin, “It’s clean!”

“Now it has to cool for two hours,” Autumn pipes up. Engrossed in a book on the couch, I hear the clang of metal as they wrestle with the cooling racks sandwiched between sheet pans in the tiny cabinet. When they finally get the cooling rack on the counter, and the pans on the rack, I walk back into the kitchen and try to sneak a taste. There’s no extra batter anywhere. I slowly slide a knife into the side of the pan and dig out the tiniest piece.

“Hey Eden,” I call, as she’s running down the stairs to go outside. “Come here!” I split the crumb into two pieces, giving us each but a morsel of a cake. We taste it. Look at each other. “Well, it tastes like chocolate cake!” I say, relieved. “Yummy!” she says and trots down the stairs, pretending to be a puppy. To be honest, the bite was so small I couldn’t tell if it tasted like chocolate or not, but I am determined to like this cake. They’ve put their heart into making it. I won’t allow myself to be disappointed.

“It tastes like chocolate cake. Very dark chocolate cake.” I tell David, once the cakes have cooled completely and I’ve flipped them out of their pans. We taste the tiny crumbs stuck to the parchment paper left behind. “I think once it has icing on it, it will be scrumptious,” I say, trying to resurrect his confidence in this cake they worked so hard on. “But, I think you should use milk chocolate in the icing. Don’t use chocolate chips.”

I can’t help but offer advice in the kitchen. What I want, more than anything, is for them to be successful in their endeavor to make my birthday cake. I want to empower them. But I don’t want them to fail. Figuring out how to achieve both is like walking on a tightrope. It requires just the right amount of balance between being completely hands-off and offering advice.

A few days later, after we eat my birthday dinner and clear the plates away, the girls put candles on the cake. “Don’t put 41 on there,” I tell them; “I don’t think I can blow that many out!” They settle on six, confident I’ll get whatever wish I make. Autumn lights the candles and carefully picks up the plate. My heart jumps as she starts to walk with it in her tiny hands. They start to sing. I’m the starring role in a suspenseful movie. Waiting for the cake to drop. 

She gently places the cake in front of me. All six candles remain lit. I take a huge breath and blow, watching the flames flicker before they go out. Autumn hands me the knife. I cut pieces and pass them around, wondering who will be the first to take a bite. I give in; after all, it is my birthday cake.

One bite of this cake makes me feel like I’ve died and gone to heaven. It is moist like the ground after a fresh rain. The crumbs stick together like pudding, forming a perfect bite on my fork. The taste is deep. Dark chocolate. The frosting is light and fluffy, like freshly whipped chocolate cream. 

However, there is a very faint taste of rosemary. Or maybe that’s just my imagination.

“Next time, let’s try Hellmann’s,” I say. 


Mayonnaise Chocolate Cake

Adapted ever so slightly from The Complete Baking Book for Young Chefs by America’s Test Kitchen

Ingredients:

1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1 cup sugar
½ tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
½ cup cocoa powder
⅓ cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup almost boiling water
⅔ cup mayonnaise (we recommend Hellmans)
1 large egg
2 tsp vanilla

Instructions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350°. Spray inside bottom and sides of 8-inch round pans with vegetable oil spray and line bottoms of pans with a piece of parchment paper.

  2. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, sugar, baking soda, and salt.

  3. In a large bowl, combine chocolate chips and cocoa. Pour hot water over chocolate mixture and whisk until smooth. Let cool for 10 minutes.

  4. Once your chocolate is almost room temperature, add mayonnaise, egg, and vanilla and whisk until combined. Add dry ingredients and mix until just combined.

  5. Scrape batter evenly into two pans and smooth top.

  6. Bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. It will take 20-25 minutes, depending on your oven.

  7. When done, put pans on a cooling rack and let cool completely—about two hours.

  8. When cakes are completely cool, turn them out onto a plate. Frost using your favorite frosting recipe. We like this one best.

In Motherhood, Editor's Picks, Family, Parenting, Recipes
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Gather the Broken

August 15, 2021 Crystal Rowe
beth-macdonald-KCuje9mECbU-unsplash.jpg

Gather the broken 
pieces
unidentifiable and seemingly worthless
deserted and left to rot

Gather the leftovers 
thrown away 
by the ones who have stuffed 
themselves full

Gather the trash 
on the ground 
abandoned by those in a hurry
for something else

Gather the scraps
in the bowl
usually tossed 
to the earth for compost

Gather the broken-hearted 
the injured
the lonely
tired and worn

Gather the fragmented pieces
so that nothing
may be lost.


Inspired by John 6:1-13.

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Photo by Beth Macdonald on Unsplash.

In Poetry, Faith, Community, Editor's Picks, Social Justice
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Ode to the Fisherman’s Wife

May 3, 2021 Crystal Rowe
Photo by Autumn Rowe

Photo by Autumn Rowe

Ode to the Fisherman’s Wife

The salty air sprays my tired face 
as I slowly trudge to the harbor.
The boat was due back yesterday;
yet there’s still no sign of its arrival.

The icy wind whips my hair, 
blowing my dress between my legs
and tearing my heart into shards.
My son holds my hand tightly;
cars whizz behind me; I am completely unaware.

Fog so dense the lighthouse beacon barely glows;
Uncertainty grabs at my soul like a lion in a cage.
The baby I carry on my hip was a chick just hatched 
when his boat left the shore;
the child at my side a young fledgling.
Worry paints new wrinkles on my face.

Angry waves foam against the rocks;
Seagulls sing an elegy;
Ferocious clouds above threaten another squall.
The smell of tulips fill the air;
I long for the smell of rotten fish.

My legs buckle—Will I have to face this life alone?
I stand firm—I must be strong for these children of mine.
I want to fall and weep here on the cobblestone.
Instead I stand tall, looking out, my hope a beacon;
praying for his safe arrival.

IMG_4924.jpg

We had just moved to the North Shore of Massachusetts when we first visited Half Moon Beach. We were driving home through Gloucester in search of the Fisherman’s Statue when we passed a statue of a woman with two children watching over the ocean. I knew very little about the history of Gloucester, but there was something about this statue that made me want to know more.

I instantly knew it would become a favorite place of mine and went home that day to research her. Erected in 2001, the Gloucester Fishermen’s Wives Memorial is just a few blocks away from Man at the Wheel—a statue erected in 1923 in honor of the Gloucester fishermen. At its base, it reads:

“The wives, mothers, daughters, and sisters of Gloucester fishermen honor the wives and families of fishermen and mariners everywhere for their faith, diligence and fortitude.”

When I received an assignment to write an ekphrastic poem in my recent poetry class, I immediately thought of this statue. I thought it could be a good excuse to sit by the ocean for an hour or two, but the weather for the week didn’t look promising. When I woke Friday morning to sunlight streaming through my window, I seized the opportunity.

I called the girls upstairs and told them my plan. I was going thrifting, then to sit by the fisherman’s wife—did anyone want to go with me? They responded with a resounding “YES!” I reminded them I needed to sit there a while and write, so they needed to pack their own activities. They happily agreed, excited for the adventure. We all love going to Gloucester, and it had been far too long since we had taken a day to sit by this favorite statue of ours.

We went to the local thrift store and then out to brunch like I had promised. I thought if I had filled their bellies, they’d be more likely to let me sit for a while. Grateful to find a parking spot in a space with a 1-hour limit instead of 30-minutes, we parked and gathered our things. With backpacks on, the girls raced towards the tulips in bloom. I grabbed my bag and strolled along The Broadway, soaking in the smell of the sea. We stopped to smell the tulips and take some pictures before arriving at our final destination—The Fisherman’s Wife.

We walked around her slowly, taking pictures and noticing details. My kids are great at observing works of art; they love pointing out things they notice and I love hearing their perspectives. After a few minutes of this ad hoc Artist Study, I found a spot on the bench and took out my notebook and pen. Autumn continued taking pictures and Eden sat down beside me to play with the toy dog she packed in her bag.

Just as I found my flow of writing sights, smells, and sounds around me, the littlest quietly said, “Mama, I think I drank too much at lunch. I have to go potty again.” I gathered all of our things and headed to the porta-potty at the end of the street, checking my watch to see how long we had been parked. At that same moment, I got a text from David telling me he needed the van to pick up a couch we bought at the thrift store that morning.

I took a deep breath, gave a final glance of longing toward the fisherman’s wife, and loaded everyone in the car to go home.

Later that weekend I pulled out my notes and tried to recreate the scene in my mind. It wasn’t quite as magical as writing a poem while sitting at the feet of the fisherman’s wife; but as I wrote the words from the safety of my home, I felt a deep connection with this wife and her longing.

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In 1991, a commercial fishing vessel and her 6-man crew were lost at sea. If you’ve seen the movie A Perfect Storm, you know the story. I highly recommend the book. It’s an incredible nonfiction account of the storm and the people involved. It reads like a thrilling novel. I had a hard time putting it down.

In Poetry, Motherhood, Writing, Editor's Picks
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When Home is Where You Are

April 29, 2021 Crystal Rowe
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I park on the street by the newest coffee shop in town and step out of my car, reminiscing about the house we tried to buy a few years ago just down the street. I notice the owner of the shop on the sidewalk talking to another customer. I hear him say he doesn’t want to compete with the Amazons of the world; he wants to be celebrated for what he is. He stops his conversation to say hello and offers me an elbow bump, telling me I’m looking especially fabulous today. That green of your shirt is so beautiful he says, and I say thanks, today just felt like a green day. I think to myself, “He is my people” and I open the door, catching a whiff of cardamom as I walk in.

The minute I enter, I’m reminded of my favorite coffee shop back in my beloved Grant Park. I would walk there a couple of times a week pushing the girls in our bright blue double Bumbleride stroller, treating myself to a coffee before taking them to the zoo to play for a few hours. I miss that neighborhood every single day now that we live in Massachusetts, but this new coffee shop reminds me that places like this exist everywhere. I just have to be on the lookout.

I order a cardamom bun and a latte, and add a loaf of focaccia at the last minute, thinking it will be a good surprise for lunch after I’ve picked the girls up from their pottery class.

My hands full with the goodies I’ve purchased, I head back outside and see the owner walking back towards the shop. He stops me to say hi again and asks how I’m doing on this beautiful day. The way he asks the question feels genuine, like if I wanted to tell him about really crappy things in my life, he would sit with me and listen for however long it took. I don’t, because in this moment, all is mostly right in my world. Just the fact that this stranger is genuinely interested in my answer makes me feel a little more at home. He asks what my plans are for the day and I tell him I’m not quite sure; my kids are in a pottery class, and I’m not usually alone. “Oh how fun!” he exclaims, “So you have some chill time. Go! Enjoy your chill.”

I’m smiling from ear to ear as I unlock the doors to my grey minivan and climb inside. It’s not often that I get time by myself, and this morning’s encounter feels like a gift. I drive down the street and see the ocean in front of me.  The sky is bright blue dotted with cottony white clouds. This view will never get old, I think to myself, and I continue my drive home.

I walk in the door and put the cardamom bun in the microwave before grabbing a notebook and a pen. “I’m going to the ocean!” I call out to my husband who is working downstairs. I share a bite of cardamom bun with him before I walk out the door and climb back in my grey minivan. As I back down the driveway, I open the sunroof and let the brisk air fill my lungs.

It takes six minutes to drive back to the ocean. I lived without the ocean for so long, but I can’t imagine a life without it now. I sit on the sand and watch the waves lap gently along the shore. I can feel the cool wind upon my neck and my troubles disappear into the water like tiny grains of sand. In these rare moments of solitude on the beach, I find myself praying prayers of gratitude that God always shows up in this place. 

I woke at 2:30 this morning, tossing and turning like a boat on rough ocean waves. The wind roared outside my bedroom window and as I lay there unsettled, my thoughts went to my Mom. It was November when I last saw her and my heart aches at the thought. It’s always in the middle of the night that I wake up thinking of my family. Three in the morning seems like the best time to wonder if we should do what it takes to move back home to be closer to my family. 

It’s always when I’m lying in complete darkness in the early morning hours, unable to fall back asleep, that I cry out to God wanting him to make a way for me to go home. It hasn’t happened in a while, but the last year has made me miss my family more than ever. It’s been a year of solitude, a year of sacrifice, a year of feeling alone. It’s been a year that could have been filled with so much more happiness if we had just been within driving distance of these dear people of mine. 

But just now, God has answered my prayers in a most unexpected way. An encounter with a new coffee shop owner who genuinely cares about his customers. The ability to drop my children off at a pottery class and catch a few moments of solitude on the beach. In the kind eyes of the coffee shop owner and the gentle lapping of the waves, God whispers to me, “Crystal, you are already home.” 

In Faith, Memories, Moving, Community, Editor's Picks
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Anatomy of Motherhood

February 22, 2021 Crystal Rowe
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Her brain is the visionary. The place where
dreams are stored, challenges acknowledged,
strategic plans are made.

Her heart the foundation of them all.

Her lungs give breath to their dreams.
Deep, intentional breaths
allowing them to soar.

Her shoulders hold anxieties.
Fear of uncertainty,
of the unknown.

Her arms, her hands, her fingers and toes
They are the worker bees.
The ones that feed, clothe, bathe, prepare.
Without them, no dream will ever thrive.

Her stomach holds their memories.
It knows how to stretch and morph.
It is elastic. It is their flexibility.

Her lips kiss all the hurts away.

Her back carries all the weight.
Not only figuratively, but
sometimes quite literally too.

Her pubic area aches, carrying scars
from surgeries that gave birth so long ago.
Birth to children, birth to dreams,
birth to possibilities.

Her legs and feet contain the muscles
that keep them all moving forward.
One small step at a time.

Inspired by Motherload, by Kate Baer, from What Kind of Woman.

In Motherhood, Poetry, Family, Editor's Picks
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a pandemic love story

February 19, 2021 Crystal Rowe
Photo by David Rowe.

She rolls over and feels a cold space. Her heart skips a beat. Her bed hasn’t been empty for months now. Where is he? What’s happened? 

She hears his voice downstairs and relief fills her heart. His being home every day was the hardest transition of this pandemic life. They didn’t lose much, except his commute. He saw it as gaining time at home. She saw it as a loss of control. She used to be in charge during the day. With him at home, they now have to share.

Over time they’ve learned to talk about their feelings. Sadness over what they’ve lost—her book club and time alone, his commute and city bike rides, their Sunday mornings at church. Gratefulness too—more family time, more rest time, challenges that enable them to grow. They listen to each other more carefully. With more humility.

They’ve learned to respect each other’s dreams. He empowered her to write. She empowered him to play. They’ve learned to be together all the time, and how to take breaks, and that breaks are important.

She’s not sure how many more months they’ll have of this time together. Eventually, the world will go back to how it once was. He’ll wake up early to catch the train, making her coffee and leaving it in a travel mug on the counter before gently kissing her goodbye. He’ll lock up his bike and hop on the train and she’ll stay snug in bed.

One day the world will return to normal and they’ll miss this all-together time. They’ll look back on these days with memories of happiness and bliss. They’ll remember the challenges and celebrate how their love grew.

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This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in this series "280 Words".

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In Family, Marriage, Editor's Picks Tags Pandemic living, Coronavirus, COVID-19
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Then and Now #loveafterbabies

February 11, 2021 Crystal Rowe
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Then, we dressed up in our best outfits and went to the fanciest of restaurants for dinner, eating dishes we’d never heard of, sharing dreams and making plans.

Now, we send our kids outside to play so we can make a fancy lunch for two, sitting around our beat-up table in our comfiest clothes, sharing dreams and making plans.

Then, we stayed in bed until noon, ignoring our hunger for food and feeding our desire for one another.

Now, we stay up until midnight, when the kids are finally asleep and the house is quiet, ignoring our hunger for food and feeding our desire for one another.

Then, we had big dreams of one day changing the world. You believed in my dreams and encouraged me to live them, sometimes more than I believed in them myself.

Now, we know our small actions add up and change the world just a little bit every day. You believe in my dreams and encourage me to live them, often much more than I believe in them myself.

Then, we traveled on exotic vacations with nothing but a simple carry-on. Books, a camera, an outfit or two, and bathing suits would do. Just me and you, making memories that will last a lifetime.

Now, we travel on family vacations with a van full of gear. Books, a camera, too many outfits to count, and food to last for days. Me and you, plus two, making memories that will last a lifetime.

Then, we accidentally fell in love, despite what people warned. We ignored insults and together faced challenges, knowing our love was true and our relationship was worth fighting for.

Now, we purposely fall more in love each day, living a life grounded in family and in faith, ignoring insults, facing challenges, knowing our love runs deep and our relationship is always worth fighting for.

In Marriage, Parenting, Family, Editor's Picks
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