Monday, November 25, 2013

To Observe. To See.


Perhaps if we all spent one day—start to finish—experiencing, or just observing, one microcosm, we would all learn a little bit, understand a little bit, feel a little bit more. Everything has a start and a finish, whether it be dictated by time—hours, sunlight—or other forces such as one's own ability to function after exerting X amount of energy after X amount of time. 

Can you see?

Watching one family as they go about their day; as an airport starts up then wanes down; as a community rouses then sleeps; as a business opens, shifts, then closes; as an animal wakes, lives, rests; as a tide pool becomes then disappears. What would you see? What would you learn? I am unsure. But why would you ever do anything you knew the outcome of?! 
Where is the life in that? 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Thoughts of this time (day), so far

Wind and rain feel more alive than the stale sun.
Why so loud? Why so loud? Why not outside!
I hope I do not get wet out here, I just want to observe.
Does death always bring rain like this-this day of rain to hold me and set me free?
Cinnamon, I remember Cinnamon and her death and I sat in this exact spot and watched the world weep, just as now. My mom was there, she sat with me for awhile.
Is that all I get? Is that all you have to say? It is selfish of me to expect to receive.
The leaves are bright... bright green, red, yellow... no, light rather, they are light! Perhaps the leaves of fall are trying to bring the light back. They do say the changing of the colors is begun by the shorter days.
Perhaps that is why fall is about hanging on, we hang onto the light of the leaves while they hang onto the branches. But eventually they die. The light leaves. The darkness is swallowing, humbling.
When does it become inappropriate to say "my mother just died"? It has been three weeks, reality. It has been always, me. She is always dying, to me, each day. I wake up and she is dead, again. So when I wake up in a year and she is dead, again, do I have to follow reality "my mother died a year ago" or can I say the truth "my mother just died"?
I think in: words-present, memories-past, film-future. I don't even believe in timeline, so it is odd that there are these alignments. I wish I could be more abstract, think farther, larger.
Bird noises can be beautiful. Incense, candles, flowers, leaves. Beautiful. There is something more to beautiful, we don't mean 'good to look at,' it goes deeper than that. Beautiful... it is connected, it is ethereal, it connects one to... something... incomprehensible understanding.
I need to pack. I need to pack. I need to, stop being sad! I need to pack. I don't have time to look at rain. I need to pack.
Do I have a very very very mild form of PTSD? No, that's not justified. But the eyes, her eyes, the eyes. They flash.
I didn't understand much about death. It wasn't unexpected but it was shocking.
NPR is interviewing Hyperbole and a Half 's author about her depression. Thank you.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Death is Not: Do It Then Done, and so Nor is Grief

My words feel clumsy as they knock against the walls of this reality, attempting to reach beyond, to reach her. They roll about inside the world I can see, only able to describe the things that belong here... not her, and not how I feel about her passing.

People often ask me how I am, they hope I am okay. Sometimes I want to say:
My mother just died. Images of men taking her out in a body bag keep flashing in my head. A memory of saying goodbye–wanting to kiss her hand one last time before they took her, but her blood had pooled and I couldn't raise her hand to my lips because of rigor mortis–this sits on my heart. I remember her eyes–dilated, dark, and dead. I watched my mother, the person who loved me most in this world, my greatest source of love and comfort... I watched my mom turn into a corpse. How the fuck do you think I'm doing?

This is one of the ways my words are clumsy. I am not mad at the question, and I am not mad at the person asking. But I feel SO HARD, so much. Using words is attempting to squish immeasurable forces and feelings into a measurable unit. It can be frustrating and so I apologize for lashing out; and I apologize for not speaking.

Every time I have entered into a social situation since she has passed I have realized I have lost all normal social functioning capabilities. Any time someone greets me as if my universe hasn't just been shaken up, I feel dizzy and confused. Alone, too. Even talking to some of my closest friends leaves me feeling stranded because they cannot be where I am, they cannot understand. They do all they can, and I love them no less. But I am standing on an island that no one else can see.

I am not ready to leave this place, though. Not sure if I ever will be. No matter how alone and no matter how sad, it somehow feels closer to her. Raw, filled with blood, alive and dead... I feel all these things.

I hope, with all of this, that when, if you (all you living loves who may be left behind) ever stand on your own island between here and somewhere, that I can sit in a boat just offshore. If you ever want to step off the island, just for a moment, you will not have to travel far.

My words are also clumsy in expressing gratitude and love–for these things cannot fit into such restraints. But thank you. I love you. I think I still somewhat fear being judged for my pain, for being too mellow-dramatic or for being stuck. I don't want you to push me before I am ready, but I also do not want to be left. Please continue to bear with me as I attempt to re-settle. I'm sorry, I'm sorry... it will not be a short journey.