Tag: heartattack

  • A Real Pain

    Last night I had my first night alone since you died. I walked all three dogs and did not trip on or lose any of them. I readied their dinner. I reheated leftovers for myself and watched the latest episode Traitors. I ate a small white chocolate cheesecake from Savor Ice Cream. I can confirm it is dangerous those tiny cakes are walking distance from my new apartment. I will be back. 

    I watched A Real Pain and felt like I was watching a movie about you. To be clear, it was not a movie about you at all. You are not Jewish, nor have Jewish family history in Poland. You also do not have a male cousin you would travel with in order to participate in a Polish Holocaust Tour because a grandmother left you money to visit her family home. But Kieran Culkin’s character felt like you, loving and suffering and entertaining and loathing. Caring for everyone and no one. Looking for meaning and finding a loss for words. Feeling everything and feeling numb to feeling at all. Having feelings so big, people turned away in discomfort. The film was brilliant in its complexity and artistry, in the acting and the writing. I wish you could see it to dissect it with me although I know it would be hard for you to watch. It was, true to its title, a real pain.

    Once again, I am struck by how close you feel and how far away you are. You are nowhere and everywhere. I did a Sound Bath on Friday and the image of you laying on the floor next to me resonated through my body. I imagined your breath on my neck, you were so close. Tears poured onto the weighted eye mask I borrowed from the studio. To prevent panic, my brain switched gears into wondering what instruments and tools created the sounds. How does thunder emanate from a bowl and rain fall from a stick? One moment we were surrounded by the lapping of waves on the shore which transitioned into the twinkling whimsy of chimes. What makes all of that happen? I miss our endless conversation about whatever we were curious about.

    I wish you could taste the cheesecake. It was airy and not too sweet. You always talked about a cheesecake you used to make and promised to make it for me one day. I wonder how this one compared. I guess that is another thing I can file into my mysteries folder. That and the circumstances that allowed someone to discover how to trap the sound of thunder in a bowl.

     

     

  • A Bike Ride

    Somewhere in the twilight where awake meets sleep, I dreamt of planning a bike ride with you. I imagined talking to you about it being 70 degrees on Thursday and how we should take advantage of that and go for a bike ride to the park. We could bring Dottie in the backpack and some snacks from PCC. As quickly as I envisioned the warmth of the sun and the cool feeling of the earth beneath us, I realized you were not here to actually go on the ride. That it will be 70 degrees in Chico, not in Seattle. That I am now in a totally different world than I was. The sense memory of crisp air on my face as we rode bikes down the Burke and the look of serenity in your smile as you pedaled down the path faded. My eyes jolted open, and I immediately pulled Dottie closer. Tears did not fall as I lay contemplating how silly it felt to plan a day with you when you are not here anymore. I checked the time. 12:23am. Great – it was going to be a long night if this was how it started.

    As I reflect on this now, I find it interesting tears did not and are not falling. Why is that? Tears shed from my body with any sort of focus on how much I miss you, a river forcing itself through the damn. But not now with the sense-memory of planning a day with you? I think I feel relief to still know you are there somewhere. That I can feel you even though you left me. Whether planned or not, a detail I can never know, you did leave me. That part, the leaving, feels so clear.

    This is the first time I have felt like writing to you or telling you how I feel about what is happening in my life. I wish you were here, and I am furious that you are not. I am so angry you could not manage your life more effectively, that trauma, neurodivergence, mental illness and a society that closes doors to discomfort prevented you from learning to manage your life. You, the smartest man I will ever know, could not see a pathway out. I am devastated I cannot talk to you about it. That you cannot reassure me yourself you did not drink as much as you did on purpose. I cannot live in the story where you killed yourself because that story is too fucking sad. You promised me you would not leave me in that way, that you would not end your life and, even if you had to break that promise, I just do not think you would have drunk yourself to death on purpose. That feels too messy and sloppy. I do not think you would have let me find you in that position, aspirated on your vomit and not breathing. You would not want to burden me that way. I know if love were enough, you would still be here. I know this is not my fault. Yet, knowing this does not change the shape of my anger and that you are not here. The only person I want reassurance from cannot provide it. Sitting in that reality is what causes tears to fall. They are falling now in hot globs down my face. I need your hug, your hands on my face, your words. Your beautiful words.

    I found you on our dining room floor 61 days ago. My body knew when I found you that the text you sent that morning was the last time you would speak to me. “I love you cutie.” For the past few weeks, my entire body aches all the time. I am storing grief in my hips and the pain leads to restless sleep. I wake up a lot and wish I could reach across the expanse of our bed and grab your hand as I used to. Instead, I hit play on another round of Gilmore Girls or How I Met Your Mother and avoid wondering about when I will sleep again. As if there is any way to know.