she says,
"How are you,
you working yet?"
"No"
I say-
"Not Yet."
(Do you really want to know how I am? I'm settling an estate, and taking care of
several broken hearts, you know, since my son passed. Work? Hell, I just recently started breathing and
walking at the same time again.)
"Are you feeling better now?"
and I respond,
"Oh yes, much better, thank you."
(I don't know how to reply to you, if I tell you how I
really feel, you shrink away, so I'll wear the mask that makes you most comfortable,
we will not speak of death.)
"You must have been so proud of him, serving his
country, at least he made it home alive."
and I squeak,
"Oh, I am proud, and yes, what joy we shared!"
(How trivial you make it sound, like him coming home was
the most I should expect, I expected- dreamed of his future, what might have
been, I was most proud of him for believing in himself,
his mark was not fully cast on this world.)
"You know", she says "God always opens a
window when he closes a door."
"Yes, I know that, thank you."
I seethe.
(Lady, stand here in my shoes, look for windows, they must
be covered in the thickest of veils, because all I see is he's gone.)
Finally, she offers-
"Well, take care, call me if you need anything, and
smile honey, it's not the end of the world!"
Weakly I reply,
"Thank you for your concern."
(I don't know your number, shall I look in the book and
call you when I'm so desperate for him that I could just melt away? Not the end
of the world? Maybe not for you, but my world ended when his death collided
with my life, oh how I wish it were the other way around.)
4 comments:
It's been to long True. And your losses. Empathy is not hard to find as it has been 13 years since my 27 year old son sucumbed to the effects of bipolar. It seems only yesterday....
You and I, on this big invisible vast plane have met and comprehended each other's hearts...heavy weight there,but oh the muscles we've developed, huh?! Empathy, understanding- a sensitivity hard won.
Yesterday. If only. Beautiful, ignorant yesterday...
While I cannot imagine losing my son, when I lost my mom, I felt like that - I would rather someone sit beside me and hold my hand than say something meaningless. Your writing is powerful.
Thank you Amy, I appreciate your comment. I'm glad that for you too, there was a recognition of understanding...yes, just being with someone to lean on a bit, makes all the difference.
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