That's my fantasy, anyway. I think I've always believed in the model of the diversified portfolio, the clan, the coven. For my college yearbook, I chose as my defining (if overly arch) quotation a line from Ulysses : "Youth led by experience visits notoriety." I loved the idea of being taken by the hand by a sharp older woman, her gray hair snazzily coiffed, and led toward the beckoning, threatening Elysium of notoriety. Notoriety was my gnosis, the spiritual truth, but firmer and darker, and my experienced one had to be a woman, for the idea of an experienced man smacked of the satyric. I had no idea how to find Experience; my female professors in college had to maintain a professorial distance, and they were worse than mothers and grandmothers in having so many dependents, pupils, to attend to. In any case, I was terrified of them and felt the weight of my weightlessness, of how little I had to offer in return. I still don't know how to make friends outside the age-concordant span, and I still yearn for the solace it would bring, though the mere image of that coven, and the hope of finding it, are comforts.
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I have great, wild hopes of finding my daughter as she will be in adulthood, when she nominally stops needing me, when she is past the seizures and denunciations that I expect will come at adolescence because they came so brutally for me. I hope that I'm right in my interpretation of the organic grandmother, that mother hunger is a primal trait of womanness, and that my daughter's need for me may prove larger, more enduring, and more passionate than the child's need for meals, clothes, shelter, and applause. I hope that she needs me enough to show me who she is, to give regular dispatches, her intellectual progeny, and to trust me with their safekeeping. I hope that she likes to barter Youth and Experience haggling over Notoriety. May she spit fire and leave me gladly, but sense in her very hemoglobin that she can find me and rest with me and breathe, safely breathe, if only for the fleeting intermission between cycles of anger and disappointment. For as long as they last, my bones, brain, and strength are her birthright, and they may not be much, but they're tenacious by decree, and they'll comply happily with the customs of dynasty. When Youth comes calling, Experience gets out her shovel and digs.
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