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Love Lift Us Up Where We Belong

Love Lift Us Up Where We Belong

It almost felt like we were Peeping Toms as my husband and I clustered around the computer screen, avidly watching the most intimate details of this young family’s life for the twentieth time in less than ten days. We laughed when the couple picked on each other, fretted when their offspring didn’t seem to be thriving the way we thought they should, wondered if all of them would be able to stand the harsh elements pervading their setting, and secretly questioned the parents’ abilities to keep their three offspring alive.

No, we weren’t watching the latest “reality” TV show churned out by Hollywood, but a family of bald eagles my husband had discovered through an online live cam. I had caught him watching them last Sunday, and although at first I couldn’t understand the draw, I soon became as addicted to their interactions as he. The mother and father shared the responsibility of their brood: the one sat on the hatchlings while the other flew over the dense Iowan woods–scouring it for rabbits, ravens, and even a fish whose scales reflected like tiny mirrors angled toward the sun. It actually took my breath as the mother/father (I still cannot tell them apart) ripped hunks of meat from their partner’s latest catch and carefully depositing it into their offspring’s uplifted, chirping mouths.

Last evening, before I went for a walk in the graveyard, I watched one of the hatchlings teeter toward the edge of the nest on unsteady claws and flapping, downy wings. Less than five minutes later, when I was tying my tennis shoes, my husband called from the office, “Honey! C’mere! Quick!”

When I came into the office and looked at the screen, I couldn’t believe my eyes. Both of the parents were in the six foot, one and a half ton nest, and they were balancing a tree branch between their yellow beaks. One of them then took it from the other and put it at the edge of the nest where the hatchling had just been.

“They’re doing that to keep the babies from falling out,” my husband explained. I told him to call if they did anything else exciting, and I’d come tearing back.

Sometimes when I walk to the graveyard beside our apartment, I completely forget why it is there. Encamped by rolling hills, swaying saplings covered with pink cotton ball blossoms, and soaring mountains, it seems no more a place for the dead as Mars is for the living. But last evening, it was different. I guess it was because I was tired, and that bald eagle family had gotten me thinking about family life in general. I guess part of it had to do with the past month and a half, and though I don’t want to go into much detail to protect those it is more greatly affecting, I will say that it has been one of the toughest experiences of my life.

So, instead of trucking up and down that paved pathway, I walked onto the grass and swatted down before the gravestones. I looked at the cameoed photograph of a woman who’d died when she was years younger than I, yet born a decade before the birth of my own mother. I traced my fingers over the dates of the departed, and my heart ached for the couple who’d been severed by death because the other half of their whole had kept on living. In their photo, although neither of them were really smiling, I could see the love they’d shared in the way she put an arm around his shoulders, and the way he gently clasped it with one of his callused hands.

The sun was setting behind the distant hills, so I decided to head back toward our apartment. After spending a day wearing long sleeves in eighty degree weather, I’d also decided it was time to switch out my winter and summer clothes. This is a task I despise more than any other; I would rather alphabetize the contents of my refrigerator than sort and refold all of my clothing. Despite this, I lugged all of my summer totes into our bedroom, started shucking sweaters from hangers, then paused and walked into the living room. I needed some music to get me going. Feeling slightly sentimental, I scrolled down through the playlists on my laptop until I found the one I sought: Wedding Mix.

Singing off-key to Frank Sinatra, Billy Joel, Air Supply, and Dan Folgelberg, I suddenly got a second wind and soon had two totes completely emptied into drawers and refilled with sweaters. Then a new song began to play: “Love Lift Us Up Where We Belong.” Because of what has transpired over the past month and a half, the lyrics resonated with me in a way they never have before. It spoke of living in a world where few hearts survive, how long the road is, how there are mountains in our way, but that love would lift us up to a place where — and here I even got goose bumps — eagles cry on a mountain high.

Needless to say, I was knocked into an emotional abyss before the second verse. Recalling that husband and wife gravestone when she’s not even dead, I began getting teary-eyed. Then I recalled how it said at the very bottom, “To know him was to love him,” and those tears, they started rolling.

Darting into the office, I stretched my arms out toward my husband and blubbered, “To know you is to love you!”

My husband, still watching the bald eagle family in between listing eBay items, looked back at me standing there with tears streaming down my face and said, “What? What happened?”

I pointed toward our bedroom and half-laughed/half-sobbed, “That song! Regardless of what we face, love will lift us up to a mountain high!” I then pointed to the computer screen where the father/mother eagle was tenderly feeding his/her young. “Just like them! Just like that bald eagle family!”

My husband pushed his rolling chair out from beneath the desk and stood. “Oh my, honey,” he said, “you’re really tore up.”

Wiping my face on my long shirtsleeve, I laughed, “I know! I don’t even know what happened!”

He walked with me back to our bedroom, which was strewn with chunky knit sweaters and sleeveless tanks. Reaching out his finger, he tapped down the volume on my laptop.

“Don’t!” I hollered. “I like it loud!”

“I know, but the song’s making you cry,” he said.

I wrapped my arms around him and looked up, “Yes, but these are happy tears, Randy. Happy tears. I’m just so, so blessed.”

Now, as I write this out on our land, my husband is strengthening our future home — our love nest, if you will — and I am sitting in the sun after having helped him pick up pieces of siding and fascia. And I know, regardless of how long our journey together is, how many mountains present themselves as we travel it, that love will continually lift us up to a place where we belong…just like those eagles.

(Live cam for bald eagles can be found here.)

Comments

  • Lauren

    Beautiful…always keep those thoughts fresh! Mountains will indeed come, and some may seem absolutely insurmountable, but with your love, any mountain can be conquered!

    April 10, 2011
  • Thank you, dear Lauren. I'm so grateful to have marriages around me that have conquered obstacles rather than letting obstacles conquer their marriage. You and Stephen are certainly counted among those.

    April 10, 2011
  • What a great post! I love how you were able to tie together your observation in the graveyard with the Bald Eagle video and your closet emptying. And all came together through a song to provoke an emotion in you. Beautiful! Thanks for sharing, and for including the song as I'm listening to it as I type. And I love Dan Folgelberg too!

    April 11, 2011
  • Hey, Leah!
    One of my college friends sang Dan Folgelberg's “What I'd give you since I asked” in our wedding. That song is so ethereally beautiful! I do love how art — movies, books, music — can affect emotions in me that had been lying dormant all this time. This past weekend was actually the first I cried over this sad situation, and all because of a song! It challenges me in my own writing to reach the places in people they didn't know needed to be touched!

    Thanks for reading!

    Hugs,
    Jolina

    April 11, 2011
  • Oh my, Jolina, you've done it again, brought tears to my eyes with your beautiful story and insightful prose. My son recently earned his Eagle Scout rank and we just had the Court of Honor ceremony over the weekend. So your analogy was especially emotional for me. Thank you for so often sharing your deep, joyful emotions.

    April 11, 2011
  • You tied all the pieces of this together beautifully! You captured more than I can comment on–but I especially can relate to the scene with your husband, when he is caught off guard with your crying to the song. I cannot count how many times that has happened to me–thank goodness for sweet husbands! And the eagles (I'm so glad you didn't include a link), I know I'd be just as attached and worried! Thank you for a beautiful, heartfelt piece, that speaks to the depth of love, loss and attachment.

    April 11, 2011
  • Thank you, Jessica, for your very kind words. I love how nature can speak to us on some many levels about family, love, life and even death. Over the years I have found so much solace in the arms of creation, so I guess [wo]man cannot live on words alone.

    I'm so glad this post spoke to your heart, and congratulations on your lil' Eagle Scout!

    April 11, 2011
  • Yes, Julia, we are very blessed to have such wonderfully sweet husbands! It makes this writing world so much easier to bear, but also just everyday life, too! But I don't think they've got it too bad, for all of this spontaneous emotion helps keep them on their pragmatic toes! And I do hope you are able to check out the eagles. They are just so precious and help take the stress out of the worst of days.

    Thanks for reading!

    Hugs,
    Jolina

    April 11, 2011
  • Loves, loves, loves. *happy sigh*

    Love,
    Paige

    April 11, 2011
  • Loves, loves, loves. *happy sigh*

    Love,
    Paige

    April 11, 2011
  • Thank you, dearest Paige. You turn the pages in my book, even those I have yet to write. 🙂

    Big bear hug,
    Jolina

    April 11, 2011
  • Another sweet, sweet post, Jolina. I'm so sad I missed that spectacular feat of the parents with the rebuilding of the nest to make the babies safer. I watched a similar bald eagle cam in PIttsburgh last year — and a documentary about them. They are so fascinating. So majestic and regal – and so symbolic for our country. I was tickled to go home to PA last summer to find that colonies of them are flourishing now that they've been reintroduced. Thanks for the sentimental thoughts; you know how to make a girl think! You and Randy are such a great pair! Hope you're inching closer to moving into your 'love nest.'

    April 11, 2011
  • Yes, we're getting very, very close to moving into our 'love nest,' Melissa. The drywall is getting finished this week, then we start on painting! (I'm imagining a post might come out of this one, highlighting — once again — Hubby and my many differences.) And, yes, I tend to think that Randy and I are a good pair. It's those many differences that causes us to have a strong bond.

    Also, thank you for mentioning that documentary. I want to check it out. Randy and I are so hooked on those precious eagles!

    Hope you have a great evening on your “last frontier”! 😉

    Hugs,
    Jolina

    April 11, 2011
  • You're a powerful writer, Jolina. Very talented.
    And you're a lucky girl too, to have such a sweet, supportive guy, who understands you. (Every writer needs one.)
    Your lovely writing drew me in and I could not stop reading if I'd wanted to.
    I'm going to check out the eagles. This is the sort of thing my husband and I will enjoy, I'm sure.

    April 13, 2011
  • Hi, Cynthia. Thank you so much for your kind words (especially today when editing WIP is not going as smoothly as planned). I agree that I'm a very lucky girl to have such a wonderful husband who supports me in life and in my writing dream. I cannot imagine attempting any of it without him. I do think you will enjoy watching those eagles. They are so fascinating to watch and doing so brings such peace. No wonder they're addicting! 🙂

    Thanks for reading!

    Hugs,
    Jolina

    April 13, 2011

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