
Sitting at the airport, I observe a Nana traveling with two grandchildren.
They ask her what her tattoo says as they snack on sliced apples and peanut butter from a small Tupperware.
The boy’s chubby fingers grasp the apples while Nana spreads peanut butter on them gently, as if she’s done it a thousand times before.
She says the tattoo is a Roman numeral for her favorite bible passage.
She speaks to them sweetly and without stress.
Her bulky shoulder tote is filled with baggies of kid snacks and activities, she pulls out markers for the little boy to color with.
“Get your hands out of your shorts,” she says.
Planes take off and the little girl points. “It’s a busy place, isn’t it?” Nana says.
In a moment I blink, and I am that Nana. I have library books overflowing in a backpack, my daughter has given me a list of all their favorite foods and their allergies,
We are off to have an adventure!
My son calls me to check on them. I pass the phone back and forth.
“We are having so much fun,” I say.
I have a list of all we have done in our little travel journal, the pages are well worn with with peanut butter smudges and chocolate milk splatters.
I keep it because I want to make sure they remember. But also so that I don’t forget.
Truth be told, I am not this grandmother,
but in some wormhole pocket of life, I may soon be.
And as I sit, as I admire curious children or more specifically— calm, tattooed grandmothers, I think that moments like this:
This airport, these chubby fingers, these planes, and the overflowing tote bag of snacks are all metaphors, aren’t they?
You are young and then you are old and then everyone is young again. And you just have to keep looking around and questioning, and explaining, and loving and try to never lose your sense of wonder.
It’s a busy place, isn’t it?
Later, while I get teary under my sunglasses, I see Nana (me) hide her phone from herself to watch them play.
They are a little bit farther from her this time, in awe of the floor to ceiling windows: both kids laughing and squealing in delight,
“Nana, watch! Nana, watch!”
“I’m watching,” she says.
I look over, smile, and think:
Now, look at us:
A pair of tattooed women
Just sitting at the airport
Sharing apple slices
And talking about our grandchildren.
Her soft voice and kind eyes and slow response to them comfort me somehow.
But this Nana is wiser than me,
She knows not to look away for even a minute—
She doesn’t want to forget
this busy place,
these chocolate splatters of memories,
These chubby fingers that grasp tight to her heart.
All women, somehow—
have one foot in where they are and one foot in where they’ve been— and they always feel like what they see in the present is some kind of dream, some movie stuck on fast forward.
Time passes slow in an airport,
or in a rocking chair at 3 am,
or in a twin bed after a stomach bug,
or in a hospital when you see their little face for the first time.
But time passes so fast in so many other places that it becomes hard to slow down, to take notice, to hide your phone away to see the joy and the world squealing.
It’s a busy place, isn’t it?
It sure is.

























