Frequently we are stopped by complete strangers, "she looks just like you!" they say, and I nod, "yes, we hear that quite a bit", but I don't really see it, not now. Our baby pictures are almost identical, often requiring a second look to be certain. Like Mary I was a complete ham and threw myself in front of every Kodak flip flash I could find. Early on I posed with a hand on hip starlet look, one that she mastered years ago. How did this face I have now once look so much like the one she wears? What happened between seven and forty five?

It has always fascinated me, when looking at pictures of my childhood, that the hand waving good-bye to my father from my 3 year old body is the exact same hand waving now, at my children, from my 45 year old body. It's larger, and full of spots; my knuckles are crinkly and skin saggy, but it's the same hand that once was so puffy and tiny. The same hand that used a blue crayon to scribble "Allyson" on the wall in the laundry room now squirts the 409 and tries to remove "Mary" from the wall in the living room. The same hands that wrote their way to a blue ribbon in creative writing now type out story after story on a machine barely conceived of back in those blue ribbon days.
The very same ones that held so tightly to my grandmother's perfectly manicured hands now wrap around Mary's small fingers, trying so hard to never let go. And those same hands hold her, just as they were once held, back when we saw ourselves through the lens of a Kodak Flip Flash.
2 comments:
ha are you kidding
she is your spitting image
cool...none of my kids look like either of us...mom or dad...only a few wispy hints now and then...
37....? sigh
Thanks for your kind comment on my blog. I love the way you write. You are clearly very gifted and I have no doubt that you will be published soon. As for me, it is not so much the fact that my daughters look like me that bothers me, it is the fact that they act like me sometimes, the have the same questions and doubts. It feels a bit weird.
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