a summer list

I’ve been thinking about my Summer List. 

This once-favorite tradition hasn’t traveled well.  I started writing Summer Lists in Chicago.  At first, they were just for me, but my oldest child did contribute an item or two in recent years.

A Summer List is exactly what it sounds like: a list of activities and experiences you want to do and have before September arrives.  It might sound sentimental and overly precious, but my Chicago Summer Lists were deadly serious things. 

Having endured months of bitter cold and forced hibernation, I often felt a little stressed at the beginning of Chicago’s second season (you know, don’t you, that Chicago is called the Second City because it has two newspapers, two baseball teams, and two seasons?  You don’t need me to tell you what those seasons are, do you?).  A Chicago summer offers so much goodness, I actually worried about fitting it all in. 

What if Labor Day arrived and I hadn’t seen a film on the grass in Grant Park?  What if the wind turned cold, and I hadn’t yet eaten apricots and just-made goat cheese on a blanket at the Green City Market?  What if busyness or laziness kept me from packing up the kids and the snacks and listening to music under the stars at Millennium Park?  What if we said “yes” to too many weekend birthday parties and forgot to leave time for blueberry picking in Michigan City? 

Thus, the Summer List.

Those lists helped me to make the most of a glorious but, ultimately, fleeting season.  It felt like an antidote for the to-do lists that kept me rushing and preoccupied the other nine months of the year. 

The problem with a Florida Summer List is that the season is not fleeting.  I’ve discovered that this part of our country also has two seasons: hot and not so hot.  Everything I could think of to write on my list today caused me to think, “Well, but I’d rather do that when it’s not so hot.” 

Beach?  I prefer to collect seashells in February sunshine.  Pool?  Yes, of course, but we’ve been swimming since March, and I’m already a little tired of wet swimsuits.  The zoo?  It was beautiful in January.  Disney?  Not if you paid me.  Too many tourists this time of year.  And did I mention the heat? Maybe fruit picking?  Beau’s two favorite episodes of Caillou are the one in which Caillou picks strawberries and the one in which Caillous picks apples (which makes me very, very happy). Oh, but Florida’s strawberry season ended months ago.

So many people love Florida because the joys of summer last for most of the year.  And even I can’t complain about weather like this.  After all, I enjoyed those grilled pizzas in January.  But what do I make of summer now?  Is there anything special about June, July, and August when our activities and experiences are mostly the same?  What is summer, anyway?   A date?  A point of view?

For now, I’m focusing on the one thing I have in abundance only during these months: time.  I’m not teaching, baby girl isn’t due to arrive until the end of September, my two oldest are out of school, even the two-days-a-week preschool is on summer break.  We have time. 

We’ll get bored.  We’ll get hot.  No doubt, tempers will flare.  But, unlike summer itself, these hours will never come around again.  Once crossed off the list, they’re gone for good.  I do not know what they’re for or why they’ve been given, but I’m glad that, for now, they’re still mine to anticipate.  Each hour listed neatly on pristine paper.

Edited and reposted from the archive.

rainy day fun

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