Luke, Matt, me, Katie & our Grandma (Barbara Hoag) |
Whether my aunts and uncles were engaged in their signature sibling squabbles—equal parts passive-aggressive and theatrical—or the women in the family were sipping on martinis while the in-laws, who married into the family, either threw their hands in the air or quietly sipped on gossip from afar, things were never dull. Katie, Luke, Matt and me
Because truth be told, we couldn’t let the younger cousins in on it—they’d get hurt and cry to the grownups. And the older cousins? We always thought they were far too sophisticated and cool for silly childish games. So it was just us four—the ones in the middle of the line of twelve grandkids.Missing Matt in this picture
As the time drew near, I’d make my way down the hallway—be it my grandparents' long hallway, thick with the scent of old books and pipe tobacco, or my aunt and uncle’s house, riddled with family pictures on the wall as I passed. My favorite place for these top-secret pillow fights was always my cousin Luke’s room. Luke’s room was a classic '90s kid bedroom—complete with Legos, a pile of stuffed animals (or what kids today call plushies), countless Star Wars figurines, and a Luke Skywalker comforter. The shelves were the quintessential floating shelves, always piled with too much weight and testing the laws of physics.
Matt and me |
And then: mayhem.
From there, it was no man’s land—an all-out brawl. A swing and a miss, and you’d hear a karate trophy clatter to the floor. “Ouch!” A pillow whizzed past my face with the velocity of a Nerf missile gone rogue. Darth Vader toppled over in the chaos. “Ahhh!” Slam! Bash! Crash! The bed bounced beneath us like an inflatable jump house, and we leapt with the reckless confidence of kids convinced we were invincible—timing our jumps to collide with whoever had the misfortune of being on the downbeat. Someone flew from the bed to the floor to launch a surprise attack on an unsuspecting opponent. Others got pinned, caught in a giggly chokehold that wouldn’t pass legal clearance in the WWE, until surrender was declared—but somehow still ended in laughter. We scrambled, flailed, dove, and swung, lost in a sea of shrieks and stuffed polyester.
Missing Katie here |
Matt & me |
Time, like those pillow fights, moved fast and without warning. Decades proceed, eras of lifetimes gone and in the rearview mirror, and flashes of fleeting memories later, we find ourselves well into the independence of adulthood and deep into our careers. Some of us with a mortgage and family. One elbow deep with half a litter of kids and homeschooling, One enjoying the freedom of travel, higher education and single life. One navigating a separation, divorce and custody of children. And one who lives an alternative lifestyle out of state, and disowned themselves from the family completely.
Luke, his first born, and me |
Even though Matt and Luke are my older cousins, I’ve always looked at them as a set of second siblings. And aren’t cousins just that anyway? In this case, they were like a pair of older second brothers. Those memories of our secret pillow fight missions are some of my favorite childhood memories, and despite the fact we can’t roughhouse like we did when we were single-digit ages, what endures is the playfulness we somehow still manage to keep—threaded through teasing conversations and inside jokes at family gatherings. Despite our wildly different views on just about everything, we all seem to agree on one thing: our family is chaotic. But I’m glad for them—even with the ever-present matriarchal forces that be—my mom and theirs—calling the shots with sprinkles of Catholic guilt, strong side-eyes and sharp smiles.