A lot of Tomorrows

February 19, 2024

By Lavinia Spalding

We are at the dinner table when my young son asks, “The day after a lot of tomorrows, will we build a treehouse?” I want to scoop him in my arms, this boy so eager and fresh, so tall his forehead meets my shoulder. If I could, I would lift his body above mine and set him on the wooden platform of the tree house in my childhood back yard. I’ve told him again and again about the thin steps my siblings and I nailed to the thick trunk, the rope pulley we attached to a plastic pail, and the essentials we hauled up, like Tootsie Rolls and orange Crush and Archie comics.

For my son’s enjoyment I have hauled up endless tales of exquisite freedom, a bucolic youth spent high behind a curtain of leaves. Unsupervised, we weren’t expected home until my mother’s whistle, loud as a car horn, pierced the quiet country air. I paint a picture of that wild countryside, and whenever possible, pick for him dandelion clocks to blow and wish upon, as I did at his age.

He’s sprouting like those weeds, though, and soon he’ll outgrow me. In a few years, I won’t be able to lift him at all. So, instead of telling him we don’t have a tree strong enough to hold a house, I smile across the table and make a wish for both of us.

“Yes,” I say. “The day after a lot of tomorrows, we will build a treehouse.”

 

Lavinia Spalding is the author of Writing Away and the six-time series editor of The Best Women’s Travel Writing. Her work appears in The New York Times (Modern Love), AFAR, Tin House, Post Road, Longreads, Off Assignment, and more. She co-hosts the podcast There She Goes. Visit her at laviniaspalding.com

 

Image by ysuel courtesy of Adobe Stock

10 Comments

  1. Rita Sloan

    Lovely. We tell our children about our childhood and our children will tell their children about their childhood and on and on.

    Reply
    • Stephanie Shafran

      Lavinia,
      I love the tender, loving gesture of this mother, as well as the writing!

      Reply
  2. Linda Dreeben

    Such beautiful writing.

    Reply
  3. Art Fahy

    Yes, after so many tomorrows that treehouse will be built like ours with uneven wood, different thicknesses, and catching splinters in our butts. Some of those steps up to the treehouse will move as we climb upward. But the fear is not there. The excitement has overcome the fear. We will feel safe as our laughter floats out across the backyard.

    Reply
  4. Sally Showalter

    I adore this piece. Holds an armload. Thank you.

    Reply
  5. Marlene Cullen

    Thankful for a lot of tomorrows and thankful for your beautiful writing.

    Reply
  6. TJ

    I’m crying reading this. Great writing touched me.

    Reply
  7. Mary Jane Lemire

    I love this. Beautiful writing.

    Reply
  8. Bethanie Gorny

    Beautifully said. the incredible poignancy of motherhood and fleeting childhood.

    Reply
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