Wednesday, June 08, 2011

It's Like Home-coming


When I knocked on the door only a weak voice answered, but it said "come in". So I did.

There on the bed, wrapped completely in a brown, tattered blanket, only her glowing brown eyes peering out from a very pale face, she lay. I introduced myself "the woman from the bookstore", not sure she would remember me. Whether she remembered me or not, she seemed happy to have company, and immediately asked if I could help her with her clothing and bathroom needs.

She was very frail; skeletal from the thin breasts upward, her arms like sticks. Her belly was swollen beyond what seemed possible; her legs too were swollen. Advanced liver disease, perhaps cancer...she hadn't seen doctors in a long while.

When I helped her from the bed I could see the print of my hands pressed into her swollen flesh.

The tangible comforts were important, the little things. To get from the bed to the bathroom, to have her face bathed, to have a clean shirt. I did what I could, that first day, but mostly I listened to her stories. And day after day, between the practical matters, we talked.

She had been a dancer when we were both young. We had children of about the same age; they tumbled about in the grass at festivals where she danced and I passed out peace petitions, years and years ago. They came to the bookstore and read books together.

She had two sons. One was killed in a drug deal gone wrong, years ago. He was just young, barely needing to shave that fair face. She told me she knew from the start that he would die, she just didn't know how or when or how to protect him. His color was orange, she told me, glowing orange. Hers, she said, was midnight blue.

I listened. I rocked her in my arms when the pain was bad. I tried to get help for her. She had rejected Hospice care and she was afraid of doctors and she said she had so much money she could stay in that tiny motel room for years and years and years.

Though she was afraid the owner might notice she was dying.

I told her my first job in the region had been at this very motel; I cleaned the rooms each morning then; it was the only job available. It's like homecoming, I told her, and she laughed with me.

Her life had been a hard one; she told me stories of abuse and stories of loss and stories of pain. She hadn't spoken to her surviving son for years, though he was only a few miles away. I tried to make a bridge for them, but I failed.

The last day I spent with her, coaxing her to take some spoonfuls of pomegranate yogurt (her favorite), she suddenly looked up at me with those beautiful sherry colored eyes and said "you were the best thing to ever happen to John".

"well, I did love him" I said, smiling at the thought of the father of my first son, 25 years older than I, such a charming and eccentric soul.

"He loved it that you loved him" she said. I smiled. And she said "you know, when he was flirting with everyone at the bars and at the parties...I want you to know, we always had your back, sister."

And there we sat in that tiny motel room, the sunlight coming through the window I'd opened, thinking back over the decades. John's been dead...can it be six years already? He made it to his 80's and died with a curious soul, telling me his only regret was that he had not spent more time concerned with poetry and less concerned with money.

Ah, she was such a dancer, so delicate. She made you believe she could fly. She was part of a circle of friends who founded a still performing dance group--they choreographed vast dramas, they taught children, they brought joy. She had not kept dancing, not after the death of her son, not after her addictions shook her soul, not after jail and accidents and betrayal.

But I sent word to the women who had danced with her, and they came to talk with her, to love her, to recognize her in those last days.

We talked of flowers and of Welsh poetry. Someone smuggled in some liquor and she asked me to mix her some drinks, just a day or so before she died. I took orange juice and tequila and ice, per her instructions, and did my best. "It's not good for you" I felt bound to say. She flashed a wicked grin and said "I can tell you are no drinker; pour in a bit more tequila please."

I did.

I woke one early morning with anxiety dark on my heart. It didn't go away as I started the day, and when I was able I took a moment, went shopping for fruit and yogurt, and hurried to her room.

The police were there already, with the coroner. I introduced myself and asked if I could stay with her a little, even though she had died in the early morning. I told her how brave she was, how beautiful she was, how I had enjoyed this time with her clear and beautiful soul. It's okay now, I said. It's all okay now.

The police offered their condolences. I gave them her son's contact information and what other strands of information I had. She was a beautiful, beautiful dancer, I said.

There wasn't much more to say. I brushed her thin hair back from her face and said "we'll meet again, don't worry, my dear. "

7 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

If I were an actor, and I needed to do a sad scene, I would want your blog nearby. You sure do clear out my tear ducts. Sorry for the loss of your friend, but so glad you were there for her. :)CC

7:43 PM, June 08, 2011  
Blogger ocean lady said...

Such a remembrance to offer, "book store lady" bodhisattva. You have sent her dancing spirit to be remembered in all our hearts.

7:53 PM, June 08, 2011  
Blogger LiVEwiRe said...

Your willingness to listen, and truly hear, your ability to laugh with her in the face of what was to certainly come, to be her comfort, share her story... perhaps someday I, too, will see her dance.

8:24 PM, June 26, 2011  
Blogger am said...

Was so moved that I was unable to comment in early June after reading your words about your friend, but after coming across some Welsh poetry on a blog from France today,

"... Though I sang in my chains like the sea,"

I want to thank you for this remembrance. She sounds so much like my friend who died in a VA Hospital in April of 2008. We'll all meet again.

Kind wishes always,
am

9:29 AM, July 02, 2011  
Blogger jarvenpa said...

dear ones, thank you for your kind thoughts. How interesting it is that our lives weave through one another's so sweetly and sometimes sadly. And of the four of you I've only met one in person...but I feel your closeness as if you were kin.

5:11 PM, July 10, 2011  
Anonymous atma said...

And you, Jarvenpa, is a beautiful poet.

I'm going to read every post here and hope it rubs off a little on my own soul

7:30 AM, January 20, 2012  
Blogger christopher said...

You are a master. You know that don't you? Also you are not allowed to say so...I know that. You are only allowed to be another bozo on the bus. Still, beneath and shining through...the twinkle in your eye.

10:55 PM, May 16, 2012  

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