If
I knew that today would be
the last time I’d see you sleep,
I would hug you
tight and
pray the Lord be the keeper of your soul.
If I knew that this
would be the last time
you pass through this door,
I’d embrace you, kiss
you, and
call you back for one more.
If I knew that this would be the
last time
I would hear your voice,
I’d record each word
to be able
to hear it over and over again.
If I knew this is the last time I see
you,
I’d tell you I love you, and would not
just assume foolishly you
know it already.
-Johny Welch
From La marioneta de trapo
versión original:
Si supiera que hoy es última vez que te voy a ver dormir, te
abrazaría fuertemente y rezaría al Señor para poder ser el guardián de
tu alma. Si supiera que esta fuera la última vez que te vea salir por la
puerta, te daría un abrazo, un beso y te llamaría de nuevo para darte
más. Si supiera que ésta fuera la última vez que voy a oír tu voz,
grabaría cada una de tus palabras para poder oírlas una y otra vez
indefinidamente. Si supiera que estos son los últimos momentos que te
veo, diría TE QUIERO y no asumiría tontamente que ya lo sabes.
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
sparkly
The deep pain that is felt
at the death of every friendly soul
arises from the feeling
that
there is in every individual
something which is inexpressible,
peculiar to him alone,
and is, therefore,
absolutely
and irretrievably lost.
~Arthur Schopenhauer
God take my soul to that place,
Where I can speak without
words.
~Rumi
Unable are the loved to die
For love is immortality
~Emily Dickinson
There is no vocabulary for
this,
the no-language of grief.
I can reveal what my brain
thinks
but where are the words
for
this vague pain I feel?
-Irene Earis
The Baffling Dead
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
The Boy
Life is eternal,
and love is immortal,
and death is only a horizon;
and a horizon is nothing
save the limit of our sight.
~R.W. Raymond
When I used to see this picture on his mom's desk, I would think, they are soulmates.
I was sure they would get back together, have beautiful babies and be happy.
But then again, I was sure of so very many things that we will never see.
He has been close in mind lately, not just in the past few days, but especially this month.
Now when I look at this picture, it is the eyes, that look. It tells you so much about this old soul. There is a knowing about the trials and tribulations, the power of love, and the importance of connection. There is compassion and world weariness and strength. He was steady and wobbly at the same time, fearful and hopeful, ready to take on the world despite his reservations about well everything.
I see this picture and I think there is no way he is gone. There he is, right there, forever that sweet, smart, relentlessly idealistic and pragmatic young man, my future governor or president.
Some days I weep for the world because we lost that light, the one we so desperately needed.
Some days I weep for his mother who is trying so hard to learn how to be in a world without him.
Some days I weep for the children who don't get to grow up with father; he would have been the absolute best father in the world.
Some days I even weep for myself because there were so many more stories to tell, issues to discuss and adventures to have... and I try to be brave remembering his last text, the one he sent when he found out I was dealing with yet another loss, before he knew I would have to deal with his as well.
Stay up.
Trying.
Rest well, sweet boy, but let your mom know you are okay.
Monday, April 24, 2017
Princeton postcard
This has been sitting in my draft folder for a while ... thinking I would figure out how to debrief my trip back to Old Nassau. But April is a cruel month and these memories and feelings can't be processed so easily. So here is a little photolog of the trip.
We took an early flight out of San Jose. We left the house before the sun was awake. But it rose just as we took off, giving this spectacular good morning to all those tired travelers.
We landed in Newark, as it is still the easiest airport to get to/from Princeton. And this was the first sight of New York in the distance. It is still remarkable to me how close and yet how far NYC is from Princeton.
Also, I noticed, for the first time, how alike Oakland and Newark are... see the port and those machines that were Lucas' inspiration for those walking monstrosities in Star Wars?
This was my residential college... first steps off the new Dinky stop you see good old Forbes (or PIC if you are older). The sun was so bright, I was trying to see what I was aiming at, but instead caught my fingers.
It must mean something to see like this, but I will leave it up to you, dear reader.
People love to remark on the beauty of the campus.
I have to say since my time there was so fraught, I never noticed beauty.
But there is beauty that I can now appreciate... especially in the details.
These small creatures some scary and others whimsical that guard arches and doorways are some of my favorites.
Here's another that struck me on this trip.
I spent many hours in this building as it housed my department. I also happen to think it is one of the most beautiful. I am sure that others have fond memories or like the looks of others better.
It started raining after this and I forgot to take a lot of pictures. But I have a few more, especially of the conference that I will share later.
We took an early flight out of San Jose. We left the house before the sun was awake. But it rose just as we took off, giving this spectacular good morning to all those tired travelers.
We landed in Newark, as it is still the easiest airport to get to/from Princeton. And this was the first sight of New York in the distance. It is still remarkable to me how close and yet how far NYC is from Princeton.
Also, I noticed, for the first time, how alike Oakland and Newark are... see the port and those machines that were Lucas' inspiration for those walking monstrosities in Star Wars?
This was my residential college... first steps off the new Dinky stop you see good old Forbes (or PIC if you are older). The sun was so bright, I was trying to see what I was aiming at, but instead caught my fingers.
It must mean something to see like this, but I will leave it up to you, dear reader.
People love to remark on the beauty of the campus.
I have to say since my time there was so fraught, I never noticed beauty.
But there is beauty that I can now appreciate... especially in the details.
These small creatures some scary and others whimsical that guard arches and doorways are some of my favorites.
Here's another that struck me on this trip.
I spent many hours in this building as it housed my department. I also happen to think it is one of the most beautiful. I am sure that others have fond memories or like the looks of others better.
It started raining after this and I forgot to take a lot of pictures. But I have a few more, especially of the conference that I will share later.
Saturday, April 22, 2017
On breathing in and out
Do you remember when the sky wasn't falling? Some days I can make it all the way without imagining the worst happening over some daily challenge.
Other days, the weight of life and reality is overwhelming.
I almost don't remember that other life. I think, I used to have a life. I used to know which way is up and which way is down. I remember that I didn't fear anything.
I remember it like a dream or a movie, though, and it is someone else's life. But it wasn't that long ago.
Four years and seven months ago, my world turned upside down and then seven months later, another fissure opened, making sure that I understood that I should never say, again, things can't get worse.
Remember that, things can always get worse.
And when I was still standing despite the world being upside down, six months later, a volcano erupted.
I stood, shakily, and made it through, but the bending was giving way to breaking. I think that I had the beginnings of a panic attack one day... I had been hiding in the library, taking a moment to breathe in the quiet of a carrel. And I realized I was supposed to be writing, but I was breathing instead. Breathing as though it was no longer something my brain could remember to do on its own. And scared that if I didn't put all of my focus on breathing that I ...
I couldn't go there, not then, not even now.
I decided to try not to feel, I had already been trying to keep my feelings in a box for while. It was working, mostly, but to the detriment of everything else in my life.
For years, I figured out how to keep busy by *fixing* everyone, pretending to be alright and breathing.
You would think that would be enough ... breathing, especially; it is necessary for life after all.
But it was not enough.
Now I have been trying to put my life back together for over a year. Much of that time has been spent trying to unravel the tight hold on the emotions. Sometimes that means I cry, a lot, for apparently no reason. But I can only do that, still, when I watch or read something sad, about someone else, or I drive.
Now that my car has decided not to be reliable, I no longer have a safe place to cry ... so my neck gets stiff, and I eat sugary things, and I feel out of control and unable to go out of doors. And I try to feel.
But responsibility creeps in and my hiding abilities fully respond.
And I breathe in and out.
Other days, the weight of life and reality is overwhelming.
I almost don't remember that other life. I think, I used to have a life. I used to know which way is up and which way is down. I remember that I didn't fear anything.
I remember it like a dream or a movie, though, and it is someone else's life. But it wasn't that long ago.
Four years and seven months ago, my world turned upside down and then seven months later, another fissure opened, making sure that I understood that I should never say, again, things can't get worse.
Remember that, things can always get worse.
And when I was still standing despite the world being upside down, six months later, a volcano erupted.
I stood, shakily, and made it through, but the bending was giving way to breaking. I think that I had the beginnings of a panic attack one day... I had been hiding in the library, taking a moment to breathe in the quiet of a carrel. And I realized I was supposed to be writing, but I was breathing instead. Breathing as though it was no longer something my brain could remember to do on its own. And scared that if I didn't put all of my focus on breathing that I ...
I couldn't go there, not then, not even now.
I decided to try not to feel, I had already been trying to keep my feelings in a box for while. It was working, mostly, but to the detriment of everything else in my life.
For years, I figured out how to keep busy by *fixing* everyone, pretending to be alright and breathing.
You would think that would be enough ... breathing, especially; it is necessary for life after all.
But it was not enough.
Now I have been trying to put my life back together for over a year. Much of that time has been spent trying to unravel the tight hold on the emotions. Sometimes that means I cry, a lot, for apparently no reason. But I can only do that, still, when I watch or read something sad, about someone else, or I drive.
Now that my car has decided not to be reliable, I no longer have a safe place to cry ... so my neck gets stiff, and I eat sugary things, and I feel out of control and unable to go out of doors. And I try to feel.
But responsibility creeps in and my hiding abilities fully respond.
And I breathe in and out.
Thursday, April 20, 2017
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
words and feeling, aka cryptology
Here are the words that I wrote yesterday ... and set me off on yesterday's blogpost.
It strikes me now how sparse the text is, how laden it is with unspoken pain, isolation, desolation and need.
Wrote this to one friend, punctuated with :( at the beginning and the end, as though the words themselves would not convey sadness:
"This is going to be my hard week. Besides all the work, it is the 4th anniversary of my sister going in the hospital, having the "catastrophic event" and then the agony of the hospital watch. I bought the books so I could have something easy to escape into. Perhaps the universe just wants me to sit with the grief. It is just going to be a hard week." [She had stopped by a park to see if a book I have misplaced had ended up in their little library. It was a silly book, something easy and mindless to read.]
Hours later, this friend responded via text, not necessarily inviting conversation about the pain.
I responded thusly:
"It is interesting on the grief issue Each year is different. Last year I was dealing with other losses and then S and no room to process. So here I go again wondering if it will ever get better. ... I am not sure what better would look like. Honestly when the grief hits me I am utterly bereft. And other times I feel guilty or angry to be the survivor. And of course there are times I just want to crawl back into the convenient middle child role where I am not responsible for everyone's well being. Better would be to not have any of these overwhelming feelings. Perhaps to remember good times without the stabbing cruelty of loss bound to it."
I look at it now in black and white and wonder if either of them had any idea how hard it was for me to put those feelings into words. I wonder if they can feel the subtext and intertext that does not appear in black and white. There are precious few words there in those messages. Can they know how hard it is for me to talk about this at all? Does anyone have the capacity to read around someone's terse, cryptic messages?
It strikes me now how sparse the text is, how laden it is with unspoken pain, isolation, desolation and need.
Wrote this to one friend, punctuated with :( at the beginning and the end, as though the words themselves would not convey sadness:
"This is going to be my hard week. Besides all the work, it is the 4th anniversary of my sister going in the hospital, having the "catastrophic event" and then the agony of the hospital watch. I bought the books so I could have something easy to escape into. Perhaps the universe just wants me to sit with the grief. It is just going to be a hard week." [She had stopped by a park to see if a book I have misplaced had ended up in their little library. It was a silly book, something easy and mindless to read.]
I sent another friend this email: "I have to keep running after all the work ... and in between having little breakdowns because this week is the 4th anniversary of watching my sister die... ugh... compounded by the fact that every day brings us closer to the year anniversary of S's death. It is all one big trigger ...my neck is killing me and I am frequently on the edge of panic attack over seemingly silly things... oh PTSD is so real. Trauma I do not love you and don't know how to let you go..."
Hours later, this friend responded via text, not necessarily inviting conversation about the pain.
I responded thusly:
"It is interesting on the grief issue Each year is different. Last year I was dealing with other losses and then S and no room to process. So here I go again wondering if it will ever get better. ... I am not sure what better would look like. Honestly when the grief hits me I am utterly bereft. And other times I feel guilty or angry to be the survivor. And of course there are times I just want to crawl back into the convenient middle child role where I am not responsible for everyone's well being. Better would be to not have any of these overwhelming feelings. Perhaps to remember good times without the stabbing cruelty of loss bound to it."
I look at it now in black and white and wonder if either of them had any idea how hard it was for me to put those feelings into words. I wonder if they can feel the subtext and intertext that does not appear in black and white. There are precious few words there in those messages. Can they know how hard it is for me to talk about this at all? Does anyone have the capacity to read around someone's terse, cryptic messages?
lately...
I don't talk about my grief very much.
I don't always have words for it.
But April is the cruelest of months... in so very many ways.
It was already tugging at my, like the rip tide, threatening to take me deep, tire me out and drown me.
Then I heard that a classmate from college had died.
Like so many things in my life, it was the domino that I could not hold upright.
The intricate balancing act toppled and there went all the dominoes in a long, elaborate cascade snaking around me, threatening to throw more than my emotions out of balance.
In my experience, this has meant spending lots of time trying not to think about the raging grief looking for an outlet.
In my current experience it means a lot of crying, and a fair amount of physical pain that I carry mostly in my neck and shoulders. If I could give in to the crying as much as I needed to release it, perhaps I could stave off the pain. Then again, I am not sure if I could manage any work. As luck would have it, I have the most crazy work schedule for the next two weeks.
The universe loves me. Or at least the universe loves to toy with me.
Actually the universe has bigger fish to fry, but it helps to have somewhere to point the accusing finger.
To be honest, it has also meant a lot of irrational eating... this is all complicated by the fact that I finally got that horrible cold/flu thing that everyone else had months ago... and my sense of taste is seriously compromised. So I eat to try to contain the raging grief and it tastes like cardboard, so I eat something else, and the cycle continues.
Sometimes, it is like being in the hospital on death watch, feeling like eating would only prolong the suffering. And so I don't eat until the stomach demands something. I think -- ah, at least the stomach can demand. When we were in the hospital I am pretty sure I went at least five days without eating anything at all. Someone finally realized I wasn't eating and brought me a protein shake.
Thank goodness for friends. I certainly would be lost without them.
And, actually, I came here to write about friends, and hiding, and trusting and vulnerability.
I often don't tell anyone how I feel. I hold it. I deal with it. I power through whatever it is.
I may seriously maim myself in the getting through, but I will rarely ask for help.
I have so many wonderful friends, it is ridiculous that I don't ask for help.
Then again I frequently reach out to the friends who, for reasons of their own, do not know how to respond.
It like a reverse secret power -- to agonize about needing help and then reach out to just the person you know will not know how to respond thus creating the negative feedback loop ... shouldn't reach out, it will only make it worse.
Well... today, I reached out... and I probably chose the people least prepared or equipped to handle my raw emotions. But they each did their best to respond... whether or not there are truly appropriate responses has yet to be determined.
The upshot is getting it off my plate was actually just what I needed.
Problems are not solved... but load is lightened. And any bit of weight removed is greatly appreciated.
And some hiding in my apartment where I don't have to explain myself.
I don't always have words for it.
But April is the cruelest of months... in so very many ways.
It was already tugging at my, like the rip tide, threatening to take me deep, tire me out and drown me.
Then I heard that a classmate from college had died.
Like so many things in my life, it was the domino that I could not hold upright.
The intricate balancing act toppled and there went all the dominoes in a long, elaborate cascade snaking around me, threatening to throw more than my emotions out of balance.
In my experience, this has meant spending lots of time trying not to think about the raging grief looking for an outlet.
In my current experience it means a lot of crying, and a fair amount of physical pain that I carry mostly in my neck and shoulders. If I could give in to the crying as much as I needed to release it, perhaps I could stave off the pain. Then again, I am not sure if I could manage any work. As luck would have it, I have the most crazy work schedule for the next two weeks.
The universe loves me. Or at least the universe loves to toy with me.
Actually the universe has bigger fish to fry, but it helps to have somewhere to point the accusing finger.
To be honest, it has also meant a lot of irrational eating... this is all complicated by the fact that I finally got that horrible cold/flu thing that everyone else had months ago... and my sense of taste is seriously compromised. So I eat to try to contain the raging grief and it tastes like cardboard, so I eat something else, and the cycle continues.
Sometimes, it is like being in the hospital on death watch, feeling like eating would only prolong the suffering. And so I don't eat until the stomach demands something. I think -- ah, at least the stomach can demand. When we were in the hospital I am pretty sure I went at least five days without eating anything at all. Someone finally realized I wasn't eating and brought me a protein shake.
Thank goodness for friends. I certainly would be lost without them.
And, actually, I came here to write about friends, and hiding, and trusting and vulnerability.
I often don't tell anyone how I feel. I hold it. I deal with it. I power through whatever it is.
I may seriously maim myself in the getting through, but I will rarely ask for help.
I have so many wonderful friends, it is ridiculous that I don't ask for help.
Then again I frequently reach out to the friends who, for reasons of their own, do not know how to respond.
It like a reverse secret power -- to agonize about needing help and then reach out to just the person you know will not know how to respond thus creating the negative feedback loop ... shouldn't reach out, it will only make it worse.
Well... today, I reached out... and I probably chose the people least prepared or equipped to handle my raw emotions. But they each did their best to respond... whether or not there are truly appropriate responses has yet to be determined.
The upshot is getting it off my plate was actually just what I needed.
Problems are not solved... but load is lightened. And any bit of weight removed is greatly appreciated.
And some hiding in my apartment where I don't have to explain myself.
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Poetry Thursday
Protest
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
To sin by silence, when we should protest,
Makes cowards out of men. The human race
Has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised
Against injustice, ignorance, and lust,
The inquisition yet would serve the law,
And guillotines decide our least disputes.
The few who dare, must speak and speak again
To right the wrongs of many. Speech, thank God,
No vested power in this great day and land
Can gag or throttle. Press and voice may cry
Loud disapproval of existing ills;
May criticise oppression and condemn
The lawlessness of wealth-protecting laws
That let the children and childbearers toil
To purchase ease for idle millionaires.
Makes cowards out of men. The human race
Has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised
Against injustice, ignorance, and lust,
The inquisition yet would serve the law,
And guillotines decide our least disputes.
The few who dare, must speak and speak again
To right the wrongs of many. Speech, thank God,
No vested power in this great day and land
Can gag or throttle. Press and voice may cry
Loud disapproval of existing ills;
May criticise oppression and condemn
The lawlessness of wealth-protecting laws
That let the children and childbearers toil
To purchase ease for idle millionaires.
Therefore I do protest against the boast
Of independence in this mighty land.
Call no chain strong, which holds one rusted link.
Call no land free, that holds one fettered slave.
Until the manacled slim wrists of babes
Are loosed to toss in childish sport and glee,
Until the mother bears no burden, save
The precious one beneath her heart, until
God’s soil is rescued from the clutch of greed
And given back to labor, let no man
Call this the land of freedom.
Of independence in this mighty land.
Call no chain strong, which holds one rusted link.
Call no land free, that holds one fettered slave.
Until the manacled slim wrists of babes
Are loosed to toss in childish sport and glee,
Until the mother bears no burden, save
The precious one beneath her heart, until
God’s soil is rescued from the clutch of greed
And given back to labor, let no man
Call this the land of freedom.
Monday, April 10, 2017
Tennessee Valley
Went for a hike to the Tennessee Valley in northern California. I was surprised at the name, and then my friend found this. Amazing.
A beach named for the ship that ran aground there... amazing.
Here are some pictures from the adventure. I am barely to the 75% point of being better from this cold or whatever it is, so my hands were shaky (oh, and I hadn't eaten when we embarked on the walking), so... you know, not the best pics ever.
Still... amazing place.
And gorgeous flowers
A beach named for the ship that ran aground there... amazing.
Here are some pictures from the adventure. I am barely to the 75% point of being better from this cold or whatever it is, so my hands were shaky (oh, and I hadn't eaten when we embarked on the walking), so... you know, not the best pics ever.
Still... amazing place.
And gorgeous flowers
Thursday, April 06, 2017
Poetry Thursday
Bells in the Rain
Elinor Wylie
Sleep falls, with limpid drops of rain,
Upon the steep cliffs of the town.
Sleep falls; men are at peace again
While the small drops fall softly down.
Upon the steep cliffs of the town.
Sleep falls; men are at peace again
While the small drops fall softly down.
The bright drops ring like bells of glass
Thinned by the wind; and lightly blown;
Sleep cannot fall on peaceful grass
So softly as it falls on stone.
Thinned by the wind; and lightly blown;
Sleep cannot fall on peaceful grass
So softly as it falls on stone.
Peace falls unheeded on the dead
Asleep; they have had deep peace to drink;
Upon a live man’s bloody head
It falls most tenderly, I think.
Asleep; they have had deep peace to drink;
Upon a live man’s bloody head
It falls most tenderly, I think.
Monday, April 03, 2017
going back
Just returned from a few days in Princeton ... so many emotions to untangle. Not quite ready, yet, and I don't have time just now. But here is a tiger for you, idly minding the square.