
This winter and late spring, when we all had mono and a variety of flus and colds and for a while thought Pete might have cancer, we spent a lot of time on the couch watching Pete’s favorite comfort shows. I was scared and trying not to be dramatic about it, but I couldn’t stop thinking about the fact that the life we’d built and were enjoying so much wasn’t going to last forever. It was one of those times when the reality I can usually ignore was sitting right next to me in the theater, loudly snapping its gum and looking at its phone.

While we waited for biopsies to come back, I drew. I told myself I was going to keep drawing — one sketch a day! forever! — but once we knew Pete didn’t have cancer and recovered from mono life suddenly accelerated to full speed again. For one thing, Will started moving — not just crawling but hurtling along the ground the way a komodo dragon does, his short, muscular limbs propelling his wiggling torso forward in a motion that, when lizards do it, scientists apparently call terrestrial swimming.

I stopped drawing — or sitting for more than a few minutes at a time — and started chasing. Then we decided to move our entire household (see Helen’s post about her recent move, asking if life is, after all, just hard.)
Moving was a necessary but somewhat sudden decision and it felt like the rest I’d been looking forward to for months had been snatched away. Pete and I had lived in our old house for seven years, the longest either of us have stayed anywhere in our adult lives.
We moved in when we were still dating. We moved out with several household’s worth of hand-me-down baby clothes and supplies and an eleven-month-old baby.

It took us two months to get the move done, because we had to take turns watching Will or do it in sprints when we had childcare. Since Will puts everything he can find in his mouth, moving into the new house entailed triple-cleaning every surface — at one point, I was crawling on my hands and knees, using my fingertips to comb through the carpet pile. It was worth the effort: In addition to dozens of tiny orthodontic rubber bands, I found a barbed salmon fish hook.
Last Friday, I went over to do a final sweep of the old house and, as my final domestic act, wipe down the fridge. It was a bit emotional, as these things are. I thought about the years Pete and I spent there together — getting to know each other, getting engaged, followed immediately by the Covid lockdowns, getting a cat, me getting pregnant, having Will.

It was a great house for us, even if the floors were so warped that none of the furniture sat quite level. I’ve met the new tenant — he seems to get this funky little house’s potential. But it was strange to give the keys away, and with them, all the layers of life we laid down there. How long before all the traces of Calliope’s fur are finally gone, I wonder? I’d wager years, even though we cleaned thoroughly.
Now we’re trying to “babyproof” the new house — a joke, first of all, and a challenge with stairs — and begin the next round of shaping the space we live in to fit our lives. We have a bathtub, finally, and a dishwasher. Now we just have to keep Will from climbing inside the dishwasher — the last time I looked away for a half a second, he’d managed to steal a steak knife.

I think one of the reasons it was hard to leave the last house is that we survived there — through the Covid-19 lockdowns, wildfires, job changes, all the ups and downs of building a life together. Even though we were sick and exhausted a lot of the time, that house was where we rested and healed. Now I have to trust another house to take care of us the way that one did. Or maybe just trust that no matter where we go, we’ll be able to take care of ourselves.