This weekend, we enjoyed the gracious hospitality of our dear friends in St. George, Utah. A few things struck me:
1. My family needs a house. I haven't seen my girls as happy as they were this weekend, running around a gorgeous, spacious home with more than fifty square feet to play in. It helped that they had our friends' five adorable kids playing with them every second of the weekend. We barely saw Esme, which was wonderful not because we don't want to have our kid around but because it indicated that she felt empowered: she felt freed from the self-inflicted responsibilities of being the oldest child that so often beleaguer her, empowered to be a "big kid" who doesn't need to check in with mom every few minutes as she does in our apartment simply because of our proximity. There's no place to go in our apartment so there's no opportunity for her to develop her sense of personal space, something I feel is essential to children's emotional health. This little apartment has served us well for the past six months while our house is being built, but I can tell that all of us -- parents and kids -- are feeling the stress of the situation. (PS. Cabinets and appliances are going in the house this week!)
2. The southwest is in my blood. I absolutely love the red rocks and dirt of southern Utah and Arizona. Some of my earliest memories are from the back of a rented Cadillac where I would sit in the well of the backseat while my parents and I drove through the Arizona desert. My soundtrack, from my first cassette Walkman, included the Cabbage Patch Kids soundtrack, the Annie soundtrack, Grofe's Grand Canyon orchestral suite, and the Prokofiev First Piano Concerto. My father loved Arizona, especially since he had stayed at the spanking new Arizona Biltmore (a Frank Lloyd Wright masterpiece) with his own parents as a child. It was still a revered resort when we went there in the 1980s, although when Elliot and I visited again a few years ago it seemed to have turned into something of a conference mega-hotel. Hmm... I'm sensing some "retrospectives from Neylan's childhood involving the Grand Canyon" posts coming in the next few days... Think red dirt in the meantime.
3. "Couple friends" are rare and dear. Ever since reading Stegner's masterpiece, Crossing To Safety, in 2000, I have marveled at how unusual it is to find married friends with whom both wife and husband feel a kinship. These friends in St. George are some of those special finds in our lives. In 1999, weeks after getting married, Elliot and I took a Southwest Airlines flight from Salt Lake City to San Francisco, moving to our first home and starting our lives together. On the old Southwest planes, there were sections of seats that faced each other, and on that flight we happened to sit across from a couple who were themselves MIT and Wellesley/Harvard grads who were also moving to the Bay Area to start married life. Since that flight marked a turning point in all of our lives, it is easy to pinpoint them as our oldest couple friends. Our time in the Bay Area together brought many happy memories and now, almost eleven years later, we have eight kids among us.
And last but not least, I was struck by how well I sleep at other people's homes. It's amazing what a full eight hours will do...

