Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Waiting


Waiting

She waited patiently for someone. She wasn’t sure whose turn it was to give her the medication, but the pain had reached a point where she knew it was time.  She was never one to ask for help, she helped others…she was not used to waiting for others to help her. Sickness had overwhelmed her to a point where she was unable to leave her bed.
It took every ounce of energy she had to sit up in bed. She wanted to be ready, to at least appear she was as good as she could be. Someone came in and gave her the desperately needed drugs. She hated needing to be on drugs, it was never her way. She smiled at the ones who gave her the medication, she smiled at everyone who came into the last room she would ever know in this world. She wanted to ease the pain she saw in their eyes but she felt the medication take her and she had to lie back down.
Lying down was sometimes the hardest part.  The drugs took the edge off the pain, but it was always there and keeping her from being completely comfortable. She felt herself drift, not fully asleep, but not fully awake. As always, she heard the familiar noises in the house and the voices of the ones she loved. In a short time, she felt disconnected from the sounds and movements as it often felt as the drugs took a hold of her. 
In an unknown amount of time, she felt someone enter the room. She was sure the drugs had taken her further than they normally did because she felt a little more at ease. She wanted to tell the person in the room she was feeling a little better but she was unable to talk and unable to move. She heard more movement in the room and hear the voices and some were softly crying. She didn’t know why everyone was so sad, it was the best she felt in a long time.
She found a position that didn’t hurt and she drifted even further. The crying in the room sounded so far away she could barely hear it. It was almost a memory, something she might remember later...but right now, she felt the pull of the sleep that was relentless.  
As she felt herself waking up she thought it must be the drugs that was wearing off. She braced for the inevitable pain that happened after the pain medication wore off. As she lie there, she heard sounds that did not sound like her bedroom. The sounds of a gentle breeze, of birds…of movement that only comes from being outside. She believed she could even feel the sun on her cheek.
She thought it must be a dream because she would never be outside again, which meant nothing she felt was real and it was all part of a beautiful dream. The sounds around her didn't change and she believe there was even a fly buzzing around her head. She thought this was the most realistic dream she had ever experienced and it was the best she had felt in a very long time. She heard a voice inside her telling her to get up and walk, but the other part said she was stuck in bed, unable to move. Still she tried…she willed her body to move, just a little. She reached her hand out and she felt grass. Impossibly, she felt the warmth of the sun on her body and it was a feeling she thought she would never feel again.
Slowly, she opened her eyes The colors of the day were so bright it made her smile. She could smell the grass. She could smell nearby flowers that reminded her of her childhood. She heard birds she had not heard since she was a little girl. She knew where she was long before she stood up. It was her favorite place to go when she was a child.
The thought of being in her bed and dying was a distant thought as she walked around the area hidden in the trees. It was her favorite place to be alone as a child. A place close enough to home where they would not miss her, but far enough where no one knew where it was. It was her place of peace, before….she couldn’t grasp the idea of before what, but she knew it was a time before…
Suddenly she knew where she had to go, her memory told her it was a short distance, a short way across the field. She began to run. Part of her thought she was too old to run at top speed, but her legs just pumped forward and she did not have a care in the world. She felt like she could run forever.
Soon she reached a house. She knew the house, it was where she lived before (the war?). She smiled as she approached the house, she knew every inch of it. She walked toward the front door, but it opened before she got there. Standing before her was her mother. She was wearing her apron and a babuska. The smile on her face was one of utter joy as her mother opened her arms….and the woman ran into the embrace.
It was an amazing feeling, she felt she was a girl, a young woman, and an adult all at once. She smelled all the familiar smells she associated with her mom. The smell of food in a kitchen, scents of the garden she tended, the inevitable smell laundry drying on a line. She forgot how much she missed those smells, how much she loved those smells.   
As she hugged her mother, she felt another presence. Before the arms embraced them both, she knew it was her father. His large arms encircled them both. She felt safe with them there. There was no war to tear them apart, there was no distance, there was no pain. There was only them and they were all together.
She pulled away from the embrace to look at them. She felt her father’s hands cup her face and kiss her forehead. She saw him through the eyes of an adult he never saw. She threw her arms around him and hugged the man she never knew.
No one was speaking, no words needed to be said, only the love they shared. She realized that even when they left her, when they were apart, their love for her followed her everywhere she went.
She pulled away from them, grasping their hands and breathed in the fresh air. There was never a day she felt like this, never a time felt as good as this. She grabbed her parents by the hand and started to walk across the field. The warmth of the sun drew further out, she didn’t know exactly the direction she was going, but she knew it was the right direction.
On the edge of the field, she saw some people show she did not recognize immediately. They walked to her parents first and then they stood in front of her. She realized they were her grandparents, and they were gone before she could remember them, but she knew who they were. They took her by the hands, and she felt herself as a child, a young woman, and an adult. They beamed at her for all they saw and she sat with them for a while.
She felt the urge to walk again. There was another place in the distance that was beckoning to her. She felt her family close behind her as her pace quickened. There was a flickering light that grew bigger as she grew closer. Soon she recognized it as a large bonfire, and sitting in front of it were 2 young girls. Immediately she recognized them and she thought how young they were when they passed away.
She watched as the 2 young girls put aside the rings of flowers they were making and straighten the ones on their head as they stood up and faced her. The woman asked the pair who they were making the other rings for and the girls smiled and said it was for the ones not there yet. The woman asked the younger girls, how will you know where to find them? The younger girl answered she would find them in the apple trees, she just had to be patient. Then the woman asked the older girl how would she find the ones she is waiting for. The older girl brushed aside her long hair and answered that she would hear them singing long before she would see them. Both girls said all they had to do was be patient, to wait.
The woman hugged the girls, she felt a familiar happiness. Beyond the fire she saw a woman with an easel, painting the picture she saw before her. And next to her was a man with his hand on her shoulder. They waved at the women and she waved back, remembering the love they all shared.
Time was passing and the women then felt an urgency to be somewhere, but she did not know how to get there. She turned and looked around and saw the familiar figures around here. They were all milling around, grabbing hands and hugging.  So many familiar faces in so many stages of her memory and past what she could remember. There was so much joy that she did not want to leave the groups of people, but she also felt that if she did, she would find them when she needed them. So she walked on her own and no one followed her.
On a small ridge she saw another group gathering and a tall man was in the center. The love she felt swelling up made her start towards him and she saw him turn his head towards her. She began to run toward him with open arms and she saw him run towards her. With all the strength he had as a young man, he swept her up in his and spun her around. When he put her down, she felt the embrace of the man she had woke up next to for more than 60 years and felt his lips press on her forehead and she knew they would never have to part again.
The woman could not say how long they were separated, time seemed to pass in this place, but it was not a linear time. Everyone was old and young all at once. The frailties that people had in the past were gone.  She knew some of the people she only had known as a child, and others never knew her as an adult, but here they all were together at the same time and the same place.
She walked with her husband, hand in hand when he stopped and turned and smiled at her. She suddenly felt arms reach around her and she felt the laughter begin to shake her body before she heard it. She turned and looked at her brother and her hands flew to her face. He was someone she knew she would see here, but it was someone that reminded her of all of the ones that were not there yet. She grabbed his hands and beamed at him, then he let go of her hands and drew her in for an embrace. She did not know how long it was when they parted, only that she felt him even after he left.
She had spent enough time in this place it began to feel familiar, like this is where she was always meant to be.  Even though she greeted more people she never felt crowded and she was never alone. She never became tired, she didn’t need to sleep, but she knew she needed to greet those that woke up so they were not alone.
There was a soft pull at her hand and she looked at her husband and she knew it was time. He looked at her and smiled and kissed her forehead. They walked toward a house that she remembered they lived in when they were young, the one they made their home. They walked slowly towards, not sure of exactly who they were expecting, but just knowing they had to be there right now.
They walked into the back and they watched as two small figures looked around their childhood yard. Both of the figures turned and looked at the woman and her man approach them. Without hesitation they ran to the couple and they all embraced. She could feel them as the children they raised and as the adults they become. There was no sadness, only the love they felt. She did not know how long they waited for them to get there, but she was happy they arrived. They stood in a circle holding hands. As they turned and looked with questioning eyes around them, she held their hands tight. She knew there were others coming and they would find them.  So they began to patiently wait.  

Sunday, April 5, 2020

A Time for Good-bye

As the woman rocked in the rocking chair, it made the floorboards creak. The sounds were almost hypnotic as it creaked back and forth in the heat of the room. The woman had no expression on her face as she looked out the front window. She seemed to give into the rhythm of the movement of the chair. 

From behind her, she heard a noise, but she remained still. To react to the movement would have broken the quiet and that would have defiled a perfect silence, a peace that few find in their lives. 

"It's time to go," she heard the voice say. "Everything is packed and we have to leave now."

"There is a we?" she heard her voice say, but it felt from far away.

"No," the voice stammered, "Not anymore. But we still have to go."

"I know," she said quietly. "I knew before you did."

"Why are you still sitting there?" The annoyance was easy to hear in the voice.

She thought about it and it was hard to come up with an answer. There was no good reason to just sit there. Everything had been finalized, there were no arguments to be had, there were many more adventures ahead of her. She could not explain why she was still sitting there. 

"It's time to go, I've moved on," the voice said, now getting angry. 

"I know, so have I," she said serenely. 

"There is a closing and in 2 hours this house will belong to someone else! You have to move now!"

She did not respond, she just rocked back and forth, ignoring the demand to move. She ignored the further demands, she ignored the slamming of the door as she was finally left alone. When she finally felt the hush fall on her home, she smiled. It was finally quiet, finally at peace. In all the years she had lived there, she couldn't remember when it ever felt this much at peace. 

She smiled and closed her eyes. For a moment, there was nothing but healing silence. She heard all of the familiar sounds of the house and a tear fell down her cheek. It was the last moment she would recognize the noises as her own house. 

She opened her eyes and looked out the window and saw the movement outside her window. It was all the same sights and sounds....a dog barked, people walked up the block, she watched her neighbor pulled weeds from the front lawn, cars drove down the street. 

Once again she rocked back and forth and took in the sounds. There was a peaceful expression on her face. After a short time, her expression fell into a serious expression and she sighed. Slowly she stood up and stretched. She turned and started to walk out the room, but for a moment she stopped and listened again. It was the same things she had heard for many years...and she said good-bye to them.

It was time to move on. It was time to say good-bye. And she was finally ready to let it all go.