Saturday, April 27, 2019
Sadly Considered
Ah, hell. . . I'm sorry I've been such a bad correspondent, but circumstances have prevented me from being able. This has been the most incredible week of the year for weather. If you are here (I know some of you do come this time of year), congratulations. Nowhere in the country is better than this right now. Selah. But I have been hit hard by the flu for the first time in years, and this one is a killer. Almost. I was in bed for three days and wobbly on my ass for many more. I have a cough that will not go away, a terrible, harsh, death cough. I have managed on occasion to sit and look at the garden, but that is all.
And then the fight began. Not reporting on that, but it was devastating, too.
And so today, I tried to rally. I stretched and went to the gym and did some easy exercises and lay by the pool to tan. I tried to eat, but I have not been hungry and the workout had brought back that lazy sweaty feeling. I showered and went out to try to finish a roll of Ektachrome so I could send it to the California lab, but I got caught in terrible traffic and spent the day navigating closed streets. Having taken no photos, I went to the Cafe Strange for a beer. That was the last place I'd been before the accident. I have only gone once or twice since. The day was turning hot and had the feel of a dead, summer day, and I began to dread the coming months. Then I remembered that this would be the last summer I would ever have to spend here. I will not be working next year. And really, I have much vacation time I must use up before the end of the year or lose, so I really needn't spend that much time here this year.
And then the sadness came on like a tsunami. Everything is changing. Everything has changed. I am not the man I was, and I won't be able to travel the way I could. I don't want to say I felt cheated or robbed, but I don't want to say I didn't, either. Let's just say I was swept with despair.
I have had dark thoughts this week. I've thought much about death and felt it in my bones. Death is more real for me than it has ever been. There is nothing to do about it, and that is the fact. That is what death is.
I am not dead, but I am not as alive as I was. I never will be again. I wonder what summers will be like? I will take small rooms in northern communities, I would guess, Seattle, perhaps, or maybe somewhere in the Northeast, or maybe Paris. I will find a cafe and a coffee shop and I will find streets I like to walk. Will I meet people or will I be an odd character you barely wonder at?
I don't know. I shouldn't write when I feel this way, but I haven't written for awhile and just now I have some time. My bones hurt. I can hardly raise my arm. I will pour some red wine and sit on the deck and watch the birds. Later, there might be some t.v.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
ReplyDeleteGlad you are up and around ...
I had a shift in my grieving process over Easter weekend. Really. As nutty as that may sound. It wasn't intentional at all - it was organic. I was walking the dogs on the bog and something in the world (my world) moved ever so slightly away from the darkness and agony of loss to light and celebration - of the gift of remembrance and a certain joy tinged with sadness but not unbearable and so incredibly lonely.
Perhaps it was the preparation and metaphor of the holiday - ingrained in my life from childhood - I don't know. But it wasn't a choice - it was inflicted on me and definite.
I'm not sure what this next phase is or where it will lead. 6 months in and still learning.
Hope the TV was good.
Watched hours of YouTube videos. I get lost in it.
ReplyDelete