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CALIFORNIA / PART 1

Posted on: Wednesday









I've been missing my sisters like crazy lately, especially when Biet brings me the phone each day eagerly asking "call Lala!? call Emmy?!".  They are my two favorite women in the universe, and I wish dearly that we all lived closer.  Maybe one day we'll all share a brownstone, with food simmering and goodies baking on each floor and a gazillion babies running at our feet.  Maybe. But for now, I have our trips out west, our hours-long phone conversations, and these pictures- these pictures of my family.

California part Seven: Family Portrait

Posted on: Saturday

{from when Emmy was still pregnant!}

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California part Six: Grandfather + Granddaughter

Posted on: Friday

Of all of the photos of our trip out West, these are by far my favorite. This is my Dad. This is Biet's Grandfather. This is a great man. As I watched him and Biet together, I couldn't help but envision him holding me as a tiny baby girl, not so many years ago. After these moments on the porch, my Dad proceeded to sing Biet to sleep in his arms, with the same song he used to sing to me. Good old Willie Nelson: "An' with no place to hide, I looked in your eyes, An' I found myself in you.."







California part three: Lisa turns 26 !

Posted on: Thursday

My baby sister turned 26 years old! We are only a year and a half apart, Lisa and I, but she will always be my baby sister.  I loved growing up with a sibling so close in age.  Sure, there was bickering, but most of the time we were best friends. I can't believe that we both are now nearing our late twenties! This was the first time in a long time (read: years) that we three sisters were together with our Dad to celebrate one of our birthdays. We had a small get together at Emmy's with champagne & sparkling apple cider (I forgot how good that stuff is!), dessert, party hats, and family. Our cousin Melissa was in town so she joined the party. And, of court, Beckett helped blow out the candles (you can't put candles in the same room with that boy without him getting excited and blowing them all out). Happy Birthday Lisa!






Biet Meets the Family

Sometimes it's hard living in New York City with no family around. No Grandma's or Grandpa's to drop the baby off with for a few hours, no sisters to get coffee or go shopping or cook with. No parents and no cousins and no siblings. Our little family is Biet, Nico, and Mama & Papa- and it stops there. And it's beautiful, but every so often (especially when I talk to born-and-raised New Yorker friends with their countless aunts and uncles, and especially during the holidays) I wonder what it would be like to have our families closer. Of course, we have our friends, and they are amazing. But I do miss my family around this time of year.

We got to have one little week of intense family time last month, when we boarded a plane and headed out to California. It was kind of amazing. With my two sisters and Dad all living within a few blocks of each other, there was always somewhere to hang out and  someone cooking and someone to hold Biet. All of a sudden, my arms were baby-free, and I knew that my dear girl was in good hands, whomever she might be  bouncing around with. I miss that. This family vacation was monumental because it was on this trip that Biet met her Mama's side of the family for the first time (aside from Auntie Lisa, who came to the East Coast just after Biet's birth).  We snapped a few pictures of that first day, of the very first moments that Biet spent with my sisters and Dad. I want Biet to look at these one day and see how much her family has loved her from the moment they laid eyes on her. It was wonderful for me to spend time with all of them too. I really do miss that crazy family of mine sometimes...

first Airplane ride

Posted on: Tuesday

Biet took her first flight on a jet plane! We three dropped Nico with our dog sitter and headed out on our first family vacation to... California! It turns out that our little baby girl is quite a spectacular traveler. She slept through most of the flight, and ate through the rest. By the time we arrived to the west coast, she was smiling and drooling and full to the brim. Gaby and I, on the other hand, were a bit exhausted (its tough to rest on the plane when you're holding a sleeping baby). The California sunshine perked us right up though. And who was there to pick us up at the airport? Auntie Lala and Grandpa! Biet finally got to meet her Grandfather (he'd been waiting to kiss her chubby face for five months!). I think she approves.






Lavender for Biet

Posted on: Friday

Once in a great while, if you're lucky, a person comes into your life who can affect it positively in the simplest ways; a person whose mere presence brings about small changes that you will remember forever; a person whose friendship seems, inexplicably, greater than the sum of its parts.  It may be your teacher, your butcher, your mailman, your boss, a stranger on the train, or, your neighbor.

When we moved into this dear home of ours, we met Sacha, who lived upstairs in Number 8 with her husband Mike, and Lisa Marie, who lived downstairs in Number 2.  They extended a hand and welcomed us into the building, and onto the block.  During our first few weeks here, as we maneuvered around mountains of boxes & tarps, living out of suitcases & covered in paint, we found a handmade ceramic heart hanging from our doorknob. When we were frustrated and overtired, renovating our apartment by day and working by night, we would come home and see that little heart that Sacha had made. And we knew that all this work would pay off soon, that we were building a good home.  As we laid in bed at night listening to the music of Lisa Marie's record player drifting up through the floorboards, we knew we were in the right place.

We grew to know both Sacha & Lisa Marie as the kind and generous artists that they are. Sacha continued to constantly surprise us with gifts and goodies waiting for us at our front door. Lisa Marie has always been there to turn to, acting as East Village den mother of our building.  Knowing that they are both just a couple of floors away brings me a sense of great comfort. Knowing that they love and partake in this community brings me a sense of great pride in our neighborhood.  When Biet was born, our neighbors brought me the deepest sense of alchemy I have ever known. Let me explain:

My due date was May 15th, the same day that my late Mother gave birth to her first born, also a daughter, my sister Emmy. Since my sisters and I lost Mom at such a young age (I was 4), I was enheartened by this coincidence and took it as a sign that I would have a girl, just like she did, and that the baby would be healthy and strong. Happily, both of these things happened. My Mother gave birth to Emmy in Spokane, Washington, and, 3 days later, Mount St. Helens erupted.  So, as the story goes, after the monstrous volcano eruption, all of Spokane was covered in ash. The sky turned black, the sun disappeared, and all of the cheer seemed to drain from the city. My Mother was still in the hospital with baby Emmy. As she slept one day, my Dad went down to the hospital parking lot, took the car, and drove west, away from the ash and the dark and the volcano aftermath.  He drove to the town of Sequim, far enough away to escape the ash, and famous for its lavender fields, now in full bloom. He picked wild lavender until the back seat of the car was full to the windows, drove back to the hospital, & lugged the lavender inside.  While my Mother slept, he filled every open space of her room with the sweet-smelling purple flowers. When she awoke, her room had been transformed into the only place in the hospital filled with flowers and cheer. As my Dad tells it, Mom received the absolute best care out of everyone in the entire hospital because every nurse wanted to be in her room day & night.  And Mom and Emmy spent their first days together surrounded by the beautiful blossoms.

Mom & Dad:
Mom holding Emmy:
Emmy holding me 4 years later:
On my due date, May 15th, Gaby and I saw Sacha and she told us she had dreamt the night before that I had the baby, at home, and that we named her Betty.
My contractions began later that very same day. Biet was not born until the next day, May 16th, at 6:59 pm.  After her birth, after the midwives went home, it was just the three of us: Mama, Papa, & Biet. We laid on the bed and ordered hamburgers from our favorite NYC burger joint.  Then we all three slept, as a family, for the first time.  The next morning Gaby went to walk Nico.  When he opened the front door it was sitting there.  A congratulatory gesture. A gift from our neighbor: a glass bottle with a bouquet of wild lavender.
I had never told Sacha nor Lisa Marie the story of my Mother & the lavender. The bouquet that morning meant the world to me. I still have it, dried and hanging next to Biet's crib.
And Biet, the beautiful name which we chose so long ago for our daughter, and told not a soul, just happens to be the Russian form of Betty.

I am so happy to know these women, and I thank them for the comfort and grace that they unknowingly bring me.
Me holding Biet:

Happy Birthday Grandpa!

Grandpa turned 61! Biet is my father's sole granddaughter, & he is her only grandparent, & although they have yet to meet (California here we come this autumn! **I promise**) I can already see that they are two peas from the same pod. So.. for my Dad's birthday my sisters are taking him in a hot air balloon! I heard this and then looked down at my beautiful daughter and noticed what I had dressed her in today..
I think it's a sign that she wants to meet Grandpa.

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