We never enjoyed doing jigsaw puzzles until this summer when my 90 yo aunt introduced us to them while we sat on the summer porch looking over the lake. After that, Gracie and I were hooked.
There is nothing quite like time spent doing a jigsaw. Life slows down, your senses are heightened and magic begins to happen as an image slowly begins to form. All that hard work and in the end you see the results unlike so many things we do in life in which we never “see” what we actually do. But the best thing about the jigsaw that happens is the time that Gracie and I spend together. We sit in near silence except for the “eureka” that is voiced triumphantly when we find an elusive piece.And sometimes in this quiet time a different type of magic occurs and little bits of conversation emerge that never would otherwise.
“Mom,” she says with a sense of pain and frustration that catches the words in her soft little voice, “Celeste (her nemesis) asked me in front of my friends, “Can you see out of your eyes?”
I give a snort of indignation.
“So what did you say?”
“I told her, what, do you see me with a white cane or something? How can you ask such a stupid question?”
“Well done. I hate when people try to get our goat and I am proud that you didn’t let her.”
These are the types of conversations that my tween and I have as we stare at 1,000 little pieces scattered over one small card table. Brief, sweet, insightful…I hear things I normally wouldn’t have as we sit in the silence together. It’s perfect amount for a 12 yo who is not sure she needs her mother anymore and enough for me not to put my foot in my mouth and say something unnecessary or unneeded. And in that, I realize our words together are a lot like those jigsaw pieces…small, misshapen, but often fitting together until a picture is created. And that is enough for both of us right now.
i get gobsmacked sometimes by synchronicity. i suggested to my youngest yesterday, who is 17, that we buy a puzzle for the holidays to do together. he rolled his eyes then quietly said yes.
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Me too. It is weird how that happens sometime. This week I was thinking of someone I had not seen or talked to in 25 years. My son calls me 2 hours later and told me that he had found that person on Facebook. Weird.
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