So I was lying in bed staring out the window, my brow furrowed
with thoughts spiraling like a gyroscope. After a while, I turned and looked at my charmer. I hadn’t
realized she had been watching me, waiting for me to notice her as to not break
my train of thought. She’s like that, which is one of the 782,432 reasons I
love her. She quietly asked, “What’s wrong.”
“I know it’s silly, but I wanted this place to stand
forever. I wanted to always return and see my mom and dad.” I pulled the
curtain farther back to view the entire snow swept lawn. “My dad is always here
… in the land, the trees and grass, and the creek that passes by. All him. But mom … she lived for this home, and I can’t
keep it up. The center can’t hold. And all that bullshit.”
She wisely let me stride down the ‘woe is me’ lane and
listened intently. I waxed, on and on, about how we live in a disposable
society and other mental crap, like, even memories don’t last … just look at my
mom and the broken down merry-go-round that passes for a brain of hers. Nothing
lasts forever.
I paused and contemplated what I just spat out. When I float
back from my wounded spot, I found my charmer’s reassuring, green eyes. She
said very simply, “Even the pyramids are crumbling, what do you expect?”
“Yeah. Nothing is tangible,” I replied. A few seconds passed,
and we spontaneously laughed at the direction our gravity-filled conversation lead us.
Our daughter woke up and looked at us. I saw my dad’s eyes
and mom’s inquisitive nature. The past collided with the present in a whirlpool
of emotions, and a thousand clichés could be inserted here, but I’ll spare you
because there’s nothing new that you and an incalculable number of human beings
from the dawn of time haven’t felt.
My little girl asked me to read her a morning story, and so
I do. I reach for one of her tiny books from the collection we piled on the
nightstand. This dilapidated old trailer lasted long enough for me to read Biscuit Visits the Farm to my little coconut in the same room
that my mother and father read Curious George to me. And, hell, that’s all I
need to double down on life and keep pressing forward.
The passing on of stories. I suppose that is mostly what the human race is all about!
ReplyDeleteLovely piece, David. Sharing.
ReplyDeleteCharles, I've heard Caveman Pulp was one of the best on the rock wall weekly's ever.
ReplyDeleteGracias, Kirsten. And thanks again for sharing the link.
Good luck with the repairs! You're a good son and father.
ReplyDeleteI live in the house I grew up in. Even were I not disabled, I have not the knowledge to do much more than perfunctory repairs. It's getting old along with me, yet the good memories of a childhood remain.
ReplyDeleteNo repairs, Sarah. Don't have the dinero and it would be a money pit. So, I have one last guardian watching the place for a couple of years.
ReplyDeleteRandy, "perfunctory repairs" is a good way of saying it. And that image of you growing old with the house... there's a story there.
Kewl beanie babies.
ReplyDeleteSometimes just venting to a loved one can help put things in perspective.
And especially when you have a damn fine partner, G.
ReplyDeleteDamn, you made my eyes water.
ReplyDeleteThe link is there and always will be. I'm glad you can see it.
ReplyDeleteThere's nought like family. Enjoy while you can. Great times to you all.
ReplyDeleteYou have me watering (the plants of course) David. Watching the place become such as it is is sad,but like D said, even the pyramids! The home I spent my childhood in (mom's earlier time) is gone totaly, the house burned, but the memories live on as long as we remember. Wow, thanks for marrying a wise woman!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by and reading, Naomi. Appreciate your kind words always.
ReplyDeleteLeah, Sometimes life is out of focus and it takes the right moment to snap you back.
Will do, Dave. Gracias, sir.
Sis, I remember Meta taking me by that earlier home you mentioned. Yes, I imagine that abode carried a wealth of memories. And, yes, I married above me.
I'm not prejudice or anything, but she did good too!
ReplyDeleteKeep pressing forward, dear
ReplyDeleteALOHA from Honolulu
Comfort Spiral
~ > < } } ( ° > <3
> < } } ( ° >
It's always hard as a child going back to what you knew, you always expect it to be as it was.
ReplyDeleteSis, :)
ReplyDeleteCloudia, Full speed!
Chudney, True. A little of Tom W's You Can't Go Home Again. Though in my case I kinda sorta didn't leave. I mean I've been back a lot since I initially left to join the service. Place is just crumbling.