When we first moved to Ithaca nine years ago , it was Emma who first invited me over for drinks, crafts, and the Bachelor. We were here for Eliot’s postdoc, but I was excited to be singled out and included. What’s more fun than a bunch of female ornithologists gathering to heckle the Bachelor? And who is this cool woman who can watch reality TV with other Cornell scientists? She could be all the things and turn some social norms upside down.
She became my confidant and we’d pick blueberries and hike monkey run through scary and uncharted times, through her meeting Krishna (and family) and falling in love, eventual pregnancies, and sharing motherhood. I knew she’d run an honest motherhood mothership and that I’d be able to learn heaps from her. She wanted to be a mother so very much and it was delightful to witness. Oh, how she poured love into Veda in every detail of her life.
My attempt at life balance in the last year included two things on the best weeks: Emma and yoga. We’d meet for yoga at the community center and then steal away for a few extra minutes between class and children’s bedtimes to drink cheap Aldi beer in the shelter out back or when the mosquitoes were too bad, in one another’s cars. We’d download the week’s challenges of getting calories into our petite “bebes,” the nursing, the weaning, trying figure out how the heck to fill our own cups so that we don’t lose ourselves to caregiving, and navigating partnerships. And she did it, she still did her trip to the Verdin with students in tow. What a cool lady.
The last time I saw her I peered in at her before going in feeling so grateful for this incredibly cool, smart, beautiful, authentic, and down-to-earth lady. She had a fabulous haircut by her sister Lily and some fun animal pattern pants. She was telling the nurses how to properly calculate dosage and correcting their misunderstandings. We walked the halls of the oncology floor and peered in at all the older folks and she rightfully said, this is just so unbelievable and wrong. She was too young. She didn’t want to miss out on her family.
She was absolutely hilarious and clever, thoughtful and kind, curios and open, and the best listener I’ve ever met. She had a way of making us all feel like such a priority. She wouldn’t let me by with half-assed explanations. She would always make me say what I meant by something. And that openness and interest made me feel so utterly accepted and seen. There are so very many of us who Emma shone her light on. I’m holding you all in my heart. I am so grateful for her family and I’m thinking of you all so very much.