• oops!

    Yesterday afternoon, I asked Eucefe to bring in the cows. Every evening we separate the two calves from their mamas, so the cows get ushered up one side of the field, and then through a couple paddocks. Juniper and Mickey are held in one, and the rest of the cows meander on through to the other side for their evening munchies.

    From the kitchen window, I noticed the cows didn’t seem to be moving much, or at all, so I told my younger son to go out and help. But that didn’t seem to be doing much either. And then I heard my son yelling.

    “There’s another calf! We have three now!” 

    “We have two,” I shouted back. “What are you talking about!” 

    “Nope! There are definitely three! It’s still wet!”

    My son was holding something. I squinted. It was a calf. It did not have white spots and it wasn’t black. 

    HOLY SHIT THERE WAS ANOTHER CALF.

    I sprinted down to the field and, sure enough, a new calf was wobble-prancing about, its brown swirls still stiff from amniotic fluid.

    photo credit: my younger son

    But who was the mother? We didn’t have any other pregnant cows. Did the calf belong to a neighbor? Did Butterscotch or Gracie deliver a twin — several weeks after the first? Was that even a thing?

    I was utterly bamboozled. Staggered. Flummoxed. Gobsmacked. I just stood there and stared.

    My son pointed out that Imogene had mucus and bloody discharge. What the heck? She was only 15 months old. Hadn’t she been in a separate pasture when the bull paid his visit? And she hadn’t been pregnant. We would’ve noticed if she’d been pregnant.

    photo credit: my younger son

    The boys got the calves and Imogene separated from the cows. Imogene was mildly bagged up (but not nearly as much as the other mamas), and she didn’t seem particularly interested in the calf. She just stood there, chewing hay like it was a wad of Bubbalicious. I half expected her to blow a bubble.

    When I told my husband, he was surprised, but also not really. He’d noticed all the signs . . . without noticing. He’d chalked her added weight up to a good appetite. The enlarged udder probably meant she was ready to breed. He’d even noticed that her vulva had been super swollen that morning but dismissed it without even thinking.

    Isn’t it crazy? If we don’t expect to see something, it simply isn’t there — until it sprouts legs and takes off walking.

    photo credit: my older daughter

    There’s a name for this phenomenon: inattentional blindness. There are tests you can take that demonstrate it, including this one:

    Kinda makes me wonder what else I’m not seeing…

    P.S. I named the new one Little Miss Oopsie. Imogene is turning out to be a fantastic teen mom.

    This same time, years previous: truly wild, spring hits, apricot couronne, the pigpen, the quotidian (3.24.14), over the moon, roasted vegetables, snappy happy.

  • the quotidian (3.23.26)

    Quotidian: daily, usual or customary;
    everyday; ordinary; commonplace

    Lastest crush: mango from the street vendor.

    My 3.15 pi day pie. Because I can’t math.

    In process: bakery sausage rolls.

    Have you tried the cream-soaked cinnamon bun trend?

    Cake delivery to the birthday girl.

    Welcome, Juniper!

    Welcome, Mickey!

    Riding lessons.

    First Porch Sit of 2026

    I was fussing about missing the baby. My husband volunteered to stand in. It wasn’t the same.

    Ahh, much better.

    Family photo.

    This same time, years previous: guild day birthday, honey, the cheezer, beef tamales, the quotidian (3.23.20), almond cardamom tea cake, the solo, pop quiz: what did you eat for lunch?, the tables are turning, the quotidian (3.23.15), an accidental expert, the walk home.

  • on becoming a grandmother

    It’s a strange thing, becoming a grandmother. Unlike becoming a parent, it’s not something I choose — it happens to me.

    Up until now, the show has been mine. I have been the one raising children, making decisions and life changes and a home. I rule. But with this new baby, I will no longer be centerstage. Soon, the moon and stars will revolve around the grandbaby’s family, and I will be bumped to an outer orbit — revolving, watching, illuminating. 

    It is confusing. I want this new baby more than anything, and I am sad.

    Also, I am incredulous. How can I be this old?

    ***

    For weeks leading up to the birth, I dream about babies. About a two-year-old little girl with a mop of thick, curly hair. About a long skinny boy named Jebriel who weighs 20 pounds. About being pregnant, nursing, and giving birth. The dreams are intense, frequent, and disorienting.

    As the end of the pregnancy closes in, I get twitchy. I think about my daughter-in-law constantly. Where is she? How is she feeling? Is everything okay? As long as I’m with her (which isn’t often), I feel calm, but only an hour or two after, and I’m tense again.

    My sleep becomes fragmented.

    ***

    The night before the baby comes, my son calls to tell us that labor has started and is going well. They just want us to know in case they need help in a few hours. Make sure your phone is on, he says.

    I sleep fitfully, checking my phone every hour. There are no messages.

    In the morning, my son calls. All night, labor has been intense, and due to a midwife shortage at their practice, they’re going to need to transfer to the birthing center to get care. While they are away, would we mind running over and cleaning up the house?

    Of course, I say. Right before lunch, my husband and I head over to their place. I strip the sheets and plastic from the bed, straighten the living area, and then — another phone call. 

    My son says he has a migraine and is fighting nausea. He needs backup.

    ***

    At the birthing center, my son’s eyes are red-rimmed from exhaustion. He looks half out of his mind. Over the dull roar of the white noise machine in the hallway, I hear a low-register wailing, like whale sounds crossed with a tiger’s growl. It goes on and on and on, and then stops. And then starts back up again.

    “That’s her,” my son says tiredly. “She’s been doing that since the beginning.”

    I surprise myself by feeling so distressed at the sounds. How can he be so calm? How is he not beside himself? She sounds so . . . alone. I have an overwhelming urge to run back there and koala myself to her.

    I say none of this, though, and I hope my face reveals nothing.

    My son starts mumbling about oxygen levels, then — something about breathing too deeply and needing carbon dioxide — so he sticks his head in my bag and zippers it shut. “You can take a photo,” he says through the leather.

    The bag treatment works, and soon he disappears back down the hall.

    Between contractions, I send chirpy texts to my girlfriend, and to my daughter-in-law’s mother. During contractions, I pace, hurling whisper-shout commands at the wall like a drunk football fan in front of the TV. 

    My husband rubs my back. “It’s like you’re in labor.” He laughs when he says it, but he’s tense, too.

    The keening intensifies — I feel like I’m going to explode out of my skin — and then, suddenly, my son’s voice breaks through, “You did it!”

    My husband and I high-five and cry and hug, and then I immediately resume my post, this time listening for newborn sounds.

    After a bit, one of the midwives comes out to report it’s a boy, and I’m surprised, even though I’d spent the first half of the pregnancy sure it was a boy. A little bit later, there’s our son, glowing, grinning, jubilant.

    When we are finally invited back into the inner sanctum, I steel myself. Surely my daughter-in-law will have a bruised face, bloodshot eyes, and no voice. 

    When I see her sitting up in bed nursing the baby, and smiling, I’m so relieved she’s in one piece that I awkwardly pat her all over her head and face before pulling myself together. 

    ***

    I thought that when I’d first hold my grandbaby, my heart would explode, but I don’t feel anything, really. He’s naked, and so, so tiny, and he wiggles a lot. I hold him clumsily, like I have never held a baby before. 

    He doesn’t look like either of his parents, which confuses me. He’s more blond than I expected — practically a redhead. 

    He sticks his tongue out a lot.

    ***

    My husband and I sit in chairs at the far end of the room and watch the goings-on.

    Never before have I seen two people in worse shape make such a complete turn-around. The air is so thick with good endorphins that I can practically see them.

    My son bounces about, giving the baby his vitamin K shot, eating a burger, picking out a onesie, packing up their things, and talking, talking, talking.

    My daughter-in-law is an entire ocean of serenity, so glowy and happy-soft, she’s practically melty

    We hang out together, visiting about this and that, and placing bets on the baby’s weight. (My daughter-in-law nails it: 7 pounds 6 ounces.)

    But mostly we don’t say much of anything. There’s no need for words, really. There’s no space for them.

    ***

    During the post-delivery clean up, my husband and I return to the waiting room, but then my son shows up, baby in arms. Can I hold him for a bit?

    For the better part of an hour, I bask in the sweetness. I can almost feel the love tendrils creeping out of my chest and wrapping themselves around his warm little body.

    ***

    The next day when I swing by to collect their dirty laundry (really, I just want to see the baby), the weirdest thing happens. 

    As I sit there, the new little person in my arms, doing nothing but holding him, it dawns on me: I am content. 

    I am rarely content, and holding my own babies, I was always hankering to do something else. Maybe my contentment is a fluke, a one-time occurance? 

    But later that week when I pop in to help out (er, get some cuddles), I snuggle him for nearly two hours, staring at his face, snuffling his head, singing to him — and he isn’t even awake. 

    It’s bizarre.

    ***

    Everyone keeps asking me how it feels to be a grandparent. 

    This is the first grandbaby on both sides of the family, and on my side it’s the first great grandbaby, and the first great great grandbaby. But aside from the collective creaking that is the sound of our entire extended family aging upwards, there’s not much to say. This becoming just is

    But I do feel things. 

    Gratitude —  for the myriad of ways the new parents have needed and included us. 

    Wonderment — at the indescribable beauty of watching my son and daughter-in-law fall head over heels in love with their child.

    Startlement — for my dizzying biological pull to care for and protect this child. 

    Exhilaration — for the intoxicating discovery that I have the capacity to love in a new way, a way I’ve never loved before. 

    So that’s my answer, I guess. Becoming a grandparent feels unexpected and thrilling, raw and disorienting, draining and joyful. 

    Most of all, it feels right

    P.S. I still haven’t picked a name for myself yet, but at this point I’m too busy soaking up the cuddles to even care. 

    This same time, years previous: pickled jalapeños, crunch week, chicken birthday cake, colby cheese, cherry bounce, roasted sweet potato salad, for science, another adventure!, kitchen concert, homemade pepperoni, opening, what will I wish I had done differently?, adventuring, oatcakes.