Carol Craig

A Little Girl’s Terror

A violent, deafening roar shatters the calm. Time stands still. Frozen in place, a child lets out a bloodcurdling scream. A brutal boom penetrates brain and bone, obliterates any thought but sheer horror. The apocalypse has arrived. Parents out of grasp, she clings to the tall poplar trees lining the road where she stands. Panic stricken, she holds tight, trembles and shrieks. 

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photo of inchworm on dark green leaf

Inchworms in Sneakers

The inchworm in front of me reaches forward and with a firm grip, loops its tiny mass to heave up its rear, and reaches forward again in what seem painful repetition. At 25 millimeters long – roughly an inch – it crawls literally one inch at a time. While its destination is likely unknown, the tiny creature simply moves ahead at its steady, inch-wormy pace. Clearly not a Type A organism seeking shortcuts.

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photo of axe wedged into tree stump in the snow

Lions, Lambs, and Axes


There’s been a cosmic shift at our house.

Trickster March tiptoed in like a lamb with her seductively warm temperatures, nesting birds, and uncharacteristic gluts of sunshine. Yet like a good date gone bad, the she-beast abruptly reared her lioness head with snow, gray skies, and accompanying sour moods. Such is the course of nature in these parts. It’s no wonder that, compared to other locales, March in the North boasts the pinnacle of poor mental health.

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Christmas Kitchen

The pilot light’s whiff of natural gas readies twin caverns in the behemoth 1940s Chambers Range. High octane coffee in avocado green melamine cups jump starts the holiday baking marathon for a well-seasoned 10-year-old and her favorite grandmother. It’s the early 70’s and caffeinated coffee (yes, even for the younger set) is the elixir of inspiration as pans clang and beaters whirl. Como, Crosby, Martin, and Sinatra croon while the official Blue Bowl of Goodness makes its way to the counter. 

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One Small Bird

“Please – let me know, somehow, that you’re OK up there?” I ask my mother earnestly on what seems her death bed. Holding her arthritic, frail hand, I continue. “You know, come visit me sometime as a little bird or something. I just need to know you’re OK up there.” She slowly nods, staring straight ahead while I glance out the adjacent window in time to see two large buzzards roost on a light pole in the hospital parking lot.

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photo of hands going through files in a filing drawer

Springing Ahead

I have rarely sipped the spring-cleaning Kool-Aid, but this year I had a sudden, irrepressible urge. One of my triggers was an old file cabinet. Placed in our garage “a few years ago” to make room somewhere else in the house for heaven knows what, this piece of office furniture has continually hindered entry and exit into the passenger side of my vehicle. So, as winter waned and my annoyance bloomed, I deemed it necessary to (finally) address the cabinet’s contents and either donate or relocate said steel monstrosity.

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Prisoner Transfer

“We want to be in YOUR family!” hotel staff would buoyantly exclaim in response to my kin’s general tomfoolery and raucous laughter. Affectionately dubbed “the prisoner transfer,” we siblings would convene semiannually in random Interstate 57 motels to pass the aging-parent baton allowing both ourselves and parents a change of scenery and posse of caregivers. Our planned weekend overnights to share the load would occur somewhere between our cities and include a rollicking catching up, routine medical updates, and typical slapstick fodder of our collective DNA. 

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photo of dinnerware place setting

The Good Plates

A recent reader essay in Victoria magazine got me thinking. It was a loving tribute to a set of bone china, recently passed to –and eagerly accepted by– a younger generation. My own cupboards reveal that I am the lucky (though some would label me unlucky) recipient of three sets of ancestral dishware, each with its own pattern and ethereal dialogue of its forebears encompassing joy, hardship, and most notably, perseverance. 

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photo of fire pit at night

Where There’s Smoke …

“My legs won’t work,” Dad answered as we suggested he move out of direct line of campfire contrails. The breeze had shifted as we settled in for the start of our weekend in the Great Outdoors. With tents pitched and kids ready for bed, we had been decompressing with beverages in hand, mesmerized by dancing flames. Dad was perched on a bench, his back against the picnic table.

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The Spirit of Christmas Yet to Come

Several years into the sandwich generation of caring for aging parents along with our own small children, my Christmas spirit took a rapid sleigh ride to the bottom of the not-so-festive dumpster of unrealistic expectations.
But a few days later, our basement floor drain mysteriously refluxed a murky puddle. With the movie quote lingering a bit too close for comfort, we called the plumber, expecting a straightforward solution. Nothing a plumber’s snake couldn’t easily handle, we surmised. With a glut of family coming for Thanksgiving, loo efficiency was of utmost importance. Not only were we a spirited bunch of frequent flushers but, for this first Thanksgiving without my mother, the entire extended family would be together.

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Fowl Play

“Shitter’s full, Clark!” Our family laughed at this classic holiday movie, sharing the quote in unison while snug in front of the fireplace. It was early November, and we had started our seasonal movie binge early, smugly content that our water closets were just fine.

But a few days later, our basement floor drain mysteriously refluxed a murky puddle. With the movie quote lingering a bit too close for comfort, we called the plumber, expecting a straightforward solution. Nothing a plumber’s snake couldn’t easily handle, we surmised. With a glut of family coming for Thanksgiving, loo efficiency was of utmost importance. Not only were we a spirited bunch of frequent flushers but, for this first Thanksgiving without my mother, the entire extended family would be together.

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photo of marching band boots and pom poms

Drill Team Dance

Unlike our well-seasoned rivals across town, our brand new high school didn’t disappoint in our paucity of marching talent. Our haggard esprit de corp was led by a man who appeared an already elderly descendant of John Phillips Sousa. Attempting to span a few generation gaps, our director was determined to put a new show band on the city scene despite our seemingly lackluster talent and non-nonexistent marching skills. “Tryouts” were a misnomer: if you could fog a mirror, you were IN. 

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Lake Time

Another evening fades to dark. A campfire and twinkle lights match the light of the moon. The Minnesota state bird, the mosquito, has gathered its troops – a thick fog of stormtroopers undaunted by DEET. Their mission: drive the bipeds inside so the winged can now enjoy the ambiance called “home.”

Everyone wants warm lake time, even the pests. And who can blame them?

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photo of red barn with a brown horse outside.

Old Barn

The glare of day dissipates as I enter the barn’s comfortable embrace. Wings overhead softly undulate toward a niche of protected calm in the timber frame of her ample underbelly. Feathers aloft in cool, fragrant air propagate the perfume of freshly steamed hay, tanned leather, equine musk, old wood, and Mother Earth. Muffled hooves and dove call sift through hand hewn stalls and plaits of sunlight from aging, wavy panes festooned with frilly arachnid lace. Her confidentiality, like her fortitude, stands witness to the cycles as earth is tilled, livestock nurtured, and life brought forth and laid to rest.  

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photo of Plush red heart on white background.

Fleece is My Love Language

We’ve all heard the buzz and likely taken the online quiz regarding which of the five love languages we and our significant others most identify with. For those of you unfamiliar, the five actions presumably tripping our affection triggers in our relationships are: acts of service, receiving gifts, quality time, words of affirmation, and physical touch. In the spirit of a northern (read glacial) Valentine’s Day, I would like to offer a sixth language that nicely tosses a blanket atop the traditional five.

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photo of Festive christmas reindeer made from face mask and decorations

A Nurse’s Holiday Wish List

Every December prompts reflection on a year drawing to a close. A few days from the winter solstice, I watch an even earlier waning sunset upon a cold horizon and ponder my personal and professional past chapters. These two years have been a doozy. And while many consider life somewhat back to normal, those of us inside hospital walls may disagree just a tad.

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The Golden Season

The landscape around my home is currently awash in this warming hue. Farm fields boast shades from straw to ochre, amber to russet. Whether in the kitchen, sewing room, or other inside spaces, flavors, textures and rich colors nourish my soul and stoke my creative fire as days shorten and temperatures decline. Luxurious rays of progressively earlier sunsets seep indoors and coax us to windows, bathing everything in gilded bliss.

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photo of Retro Fashion Model Gold Dress, Woman Golden Evening Gown

Sequins and Spanx

“It’s a curse being a woman,” I thought as I opened a few recent invites to fall nuptials. Out of it erupted my vortex of analysis paralysis to find the right frock. I thought my closet had been streamlined to wardrobe perfection. Like Goldilocks, I wanted a dress that was just right. But three cranky bears showed up instead: my disposition, my family, and the Citibank bill …

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photo of Green dead plant in potted. Studio shot isolated on white

Green(ish) Thumb

A huge fan of perennials, I prefer to plant something once — usually too late in the season — and rely on Mother Nature to do the rest. This allows me to spend winter fretting over its fate. Even if sparse, the magic of freshly green shoots year after year bolsters my shaky sense of horticultural success. The only annuals I entertain are those that quickly erupt into florid color, and the irony of a favorite – impatiens – is not lost on me.

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photo of San Juan, Puerto Rico old city wall at twilight.

Ana

“Oh Baby, pleeeeze!” Ana purrs in her luxurious Latino brogue as she pauses the wine glass at her lips. “You’re livin’ life! It’s OK!” she offers against my anxious apologies of sparse communication. A rendezvous in the Windy City has brought us together to catch up and clink glasses in a toast to enduring friendship, no matter the passage of time …

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photo of wall with rocks and mortar

Mortar Mayhem

“It’s never over till it’s over,” our realtor cautioned as we excitedly embarked on our home purchase. They say you know when you are “home,” and something I cannot explain led me room to room, as if by the hand, at the open house. I connected with this place on a level I could not articulate, falling madly in love.

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Pile of books and apple against blue sky with sun and clouds

Marjorie

Her ample figure bustles about the room, her piercing eyes watch as pencils in stubby fingers scribble hieroglyphs onto blank pages. An imposing presence from both habitus and experience leaves little doubt about the consequences of cheating. In the stark, fluorescent lighting of this classroom, many have barely endured the passage into sixth grade. I however, have found a kindred spirit. 

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carol craig crossing the finish ine

13.1

I recently finished my first half-marathon, a 13.1-mile trial of discipline and perseverance. Unlike my past rollercoaster rides of inactivity followed by bursts of overachieving, this was a respectable, incremental effort of kinder steps followed by an event completed without needing four day’s rest. I will, however, admit to experiencing a migraine requiring meds and a nap later the same afternoon. And, yes, according to the data from my fitness tracker, I still overachieved, but far less than the usual gross negligence of my physical wellbeing. I still have work to do. Fitness is a process and the discipline required to stay fit never ends. So, how do I persevere? Baby steps.

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stained glass window with 3 candles

3 Candles

Our eyes adjust to the dim light. Faint rays of late afternoon sun illuminate suspended dust particles in the cavernous warehouse. The musty scent of bygone eras greets us and tickles our nasal passages. A few sneezes later, our expedition begins: Dad and I are in search of an old stained-glass window – my college graduation gift …

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photo of quiet contemplative space

A Lady’s Lair

Considered “too fancy” by some, this perennial space is where I prefer to start and end my day. An abundance of ancestral artifacts and trappings of ladyhood render the atmosphere calming and restorative. Most importantly, I hear the whispers of women in my past. I feel their presence here, young and old, shimmering individually and collectively with the changing light of each day.

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Doctors give resuscitation to a male patient in the emergency room. Cardiac massage. Defibrillation

Code Blue

Lifeless flesh undulates to the rhythm of external chest compressions. A crowd of providers streams in from a variety of departments as invasive lines are placed, medication timing recited, and respiration commandeered by a surrogate. Several minutes of continued effort offer little reward…

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Girlfriend Garmin

“Are you EVEN kidding me?!,” I annoyingly ask out loud to the flat round screen on my wrist. Having just completed a two-hour sweat fest, I feel as though my efforts have gone somewhat unnoticed by this feisty fitness “friend.” Based on the data she has collected, her smug determination that I have merely maintained my fitness, and not improved it, tweaks my ire. Rolling my eyes, I cave to her assessment, vowing to train a tad smarter with the next workout …

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toy giraffe and small framed photo of father and young daughter

Giraffe and The Gettysburg Photo

The one-eyed giraffe winks at me; not because he wants to, but out of necessity. He lost one of his small felt eyes somewhere along the past 52 years of loving use and storage. For whatever reason, I had chosen this souvenir from a family trip to the battlefields of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania – a far cry from a giraffe’s natural habitat – back in the late 1960s …

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Lake in Minnesota during a beautiful sunset in the summer. Teal and orange

Nita

The dazzling sunset plays along the crystal facets of the lovely wine goblet in my hand. I raise a toast to the warm spring day and to the goblet’s prior owner. My friend Nita, whose spirit glowed as colorful as the evening before me, lives on in my heart.

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large gathering at dinner table

My Adopted Table

“Well HELLO CA-rol DE-uh!,” the plucky, red-cheeked Irishman and his wife proclaimed in thick New England accents, taking a pause from clanging pots and pans to offer warm embraces. The mouth-watering aromas trailing them were a delectable temptation of what was to come. A meal at this table was more than simply good food. Stories, laughter, and advice were the seasonings in this soiree of solid fare, lovingly prepared and abundantly presented.

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Coffin Couture

Backpacks and shoes scatter as the back door is shoved open by the weight of the day, my work-weary frame pulled by agitated kindergarten twins in a hangry plea for sustenance. Amid the cacophony of snack requests, clanging pots and pans, and diatribe of school day doings, I ponder the most efficient way to sling dinner toward the table. At already six-thirty in the evening, there is no relaxation in sight…

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A Quest For Connection

All is quiet aside from the hum of rubber on pavement, our pensive focus on the fall colors whizzing by as we drive. While the change of scenery is welcome, this is not a dreamy sojourn. It is October. We are headed to Florida to see my elderly father-in-law, and timing is critical. Long- term care facilities recently reopened to visitors, and my husband and I have enough time off work to travel as well as quarantine. We feel this trip is now or never, and we await our bittersweet reunion.  

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The Glue Is You

My elderly friend – affectionately dubbed The Queen of Cool – made her own Christmas cards every year. A retired counselor, she had heard it all. Each holiday season, she offered her insights as seasonal love letters to those of us privileged to be in her circle. While her own children rolled their eyes and scoffed at their mother’s unconventional greetings, I found her simple words refreshingly grounded in an otherwise disjointed world.

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Kayaking With The Stars

The glossy brochure confidently stated anyone in moderate physical shape could enjoy the 31-mile kayaking weekend. Three days of rustic beauty, easily attainable for two fit thirty-somethings, included nights of tenting on the Apostle islands of Lake Superior. I booked the trip, determined to prove to my other half this city girl could indeed enjoy the great outdoors …

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Vacuuming Pastures (And Other Nonsensical Perfectionism)

My mother was the queen of domestic prowess. Nothing escaped her razor sharp scrutiny for disarray, even when eventually relying only on peripheral vision due to macular degeneration. One year on her birthday, I gave her a card showing an older woman vacuuming a horse pasture through a ramshackle wire fence; the caption: “A woman’s work is never done….”

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Mockin’ Time

A pocket of backyard paradise is tucked under a generous shade canopy, its dappled light an outdoor disco ball. Next to the Lilliputian playhouse built long ago by Grandpa, hammocks are strung between the trees where our daughters gently sway to the breezes of each day. Far more than a hobby, “mockin’ time” is a nourishing ritual in their development.

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Old Linens

My fingers caress the bespoke covering’s coarse weave and silky crossed stitches. Holding another generation in my hands and heart, I gently lay the tablecloth in place. Many a vivacious conversation has obliged the various underlayments now in my possession, glorious tales spun into the thread count of history.

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Autumn’s Kiss

Quietly entering our open bedroom window in late summer, her cooling tendrils wrap themselves around my sleeping face. A first kiss is gently placed on my forehead as I wake to enjoy the hint of what’s to come. The calendar may state otherwise, but her stealthy wink lets me know she’s returned and in the wings, rehearsing for her yearly fete.

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Anesthesia Dance

I study the monitor screens before me. Displayed in a rainbow of color and a pulse tone, the usually rhythmic waves are my visual and audible vocational artform. Most people will never understand, but the always-in-motion bits, bips, and blips are an integral part of who I am. This soothing white noise provides a context of what matters.

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Concertmaster

He lifts the beautiful, rosy-hued violin off his desk and begins to play. The sweet, silky sound that follows is one I’m supposed to replicate. My attempts are a far cry from the magnificent melody he demonstrates. He listens intently as I struggle, hearing a chord of progress inaudible to my young ears. A musical maestro and gifted instructor, he coaxes out emotion as well as intonation.

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Charm Bracelet

Spring gradually unfolds outside my car window as the road and the miles gently whiz on by. I watch my private, time-lapsed arrival of the new season as we head further and further south. Dogwood and redbud blossoms float gently amid the soft brown haze of branches pregnant with buds. While viewing the scenery, I also lovingly polish the silver charms on my mother’s charm bracelet – a last minute inclusion to my trip wardrobe.

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Chambray Shirt

She hangs silently among her dressier siblings in a land of infinite options. Not drawing attention to herself, this one exudes a quiet confidence, a stability unmatched by the frilly sidekicks and high-heeled seductresses rubbing shoulders with her just inches away. She knows one thing and one thing only – she’s The One.

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Tug of War

This essay was originally composed in May 2015 after the burial of my parents,  long before the pandemic with its associated gathering size limits and travel bans.   I hesitated to post something so deep during a time of already intense struggle, but writing has always been my creative outlet to productively process my spinning head. 

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Breakfast in a Small Town

A rush of air stirs the fine hairs on my crossed arms. A bustling waitress, arms full of clean coffee cups, briskly passes us en route to her table, its tired recipients grateful to receive their morning jolt. A swirling cloud of food envy envelopes us as we wait. The delightful smokiness in the air is balanced by scents of fresh biscuits, eggs, and fried potatoes. The counter is lined with locals – farmers, professionals, seniors – all starting this new day in familiar camaraderie. Mugs clink, forks scrape and conversation flows along with the free refills. I sit quietly, enjoying the fervor of the morning as I read the scribbled menu on the grease board complete with the plethora of daily pie selections.

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On Becoming My Mother

My mother watches me as I dab tinted moisturizer on her face. The full face makeup of younger years has been replaced by cosmetic minimalism. Strong lipcolor has been tossed aside, a lightly tinted gloss in its place. Her salt and pepper hair color is now her preferred shade. Watching my mother’s transformation from youth to midlife and beyond has been, and will likely continue to be my blueprint without even realizing it. We strive to NOT be our mothers for a variety of reasons as we age. But the inevitable is, well, inevitable. The face in the mirror is mine.

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A Pennsylvania Fourth

A hot breeze blows through the rolled down car windows as we carefully turn into the country driveway at the top of the hill. Passing the local gas company’s substation with it’s twisted nest of pipelines and meter boxes, I again wonder why one would live near such an ugly array. Once under the ancient shade tree canopy near the house the temperature drops to comfort level. Anticipatory fidgeting gives way to joyful release as my brothers and I sprint past ice-filled barrels of pop bottles toward the wiffle ball game beyond the parked cars. We’ve looked forward to this day all year long – the annual 4th of July picnic at my Great Aunt & Uncle’s place.

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