orginally posted at older2elder...
On
Easter Sunday, John & I had the pleasure of unexpectedly spending a
snatch of time with a family who seemed right out of one of my favorite
films, the small treasure, Dan in Real Life.
We
were blessed to hang out, however briefly, with a multi-generational
family that seemed to truly madly deeply care about each other. Such
get-togethers are their happy norm - the proud grandfather, who hails
from Central PA, dashed inside to get a picture of his brood at their
annual bowling outing.
The
grandparents, their children & grandchildren (ranging from 7 years
old to 31) descend from not-so-near & rather far at Easter to
celebrate with one of the daughters & her family, while everyone
treks to the grandparents' for Thanksgiving & Christmas. In the
summer, the pilgrimage is to an over-sized rental house at Virginia
Beach.
Our
brush with this delightful family came out of the blue, totally touched
our Easter with a magic we could never have imagined.
Thinking about writing this posting got me thinking about how utterly blessed we are to have quite a few Dan in Real Life families
within our circle of friends & pleasant acquaintances. Our bestest
friends in the universe gather every late Jan-early Feb with four
generations of their family in Hawaii - this year there was a
great-grandmother & a soon-to-be great-grandma, our friends, their
children, grandchildren, a beloved niece & her family. I think of
all the photos of Easter dining room tables that were proudly posted on
Facebook, of pictures of far-flung family arriving for a weekend of
reconnection & savoring the joys of being together.
A friend of mine pointed out, "You know, they have their problems, too." Naturally - as did the fictional reel family in Dan in Real Life. But they do keep coming together, do keep getting past whatever challenges divide to find the things that draw closer.
When John fell in love with me, he marveled at how
many happily married couples I knew. He knew one, maybe two. A couple
years after we married, he marveled at how almost all the couples he
knew seemed happily married, including two of his good friends who'd
been together for years but decided to take the plunge after seeing how
well it had gone for us.
Am
feeling blessed to have spent part of our Easter in the heart of a
loving family, to have seen the multi-ages competing in the egg toss
that attracted us in the first place (great back story!), to have heard
the happy voices & seen the beaming faces, to have learned bits
& pieces of their stories. And blessed to be able to look around at
our circle of close friends, good chums & pleasant acquaintances
and see so many families that take the deep delight in one another's
presence that has always & forever been a treasured picture in my
heart. It does exist, it can happen.
It's
not easy, I am sure. Nothing that matters ever is. Still, there they
were, whether around a dinner table on Marlin Road or tucked off of
Buck, down in Atlanta or out in Sacramento, or tossing eggs on a large
front lawn in Wyncote, in spite of the challenges & all that divide Real life playing out even better than fiction!
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