Another person from the fabric of my life has left the
pattern. Someone who intersected my days in unexpected ways then ran parallel with
me for the last seven years.
When we were together, I was as comfortable as a softened
robe worn in an evening, with large sleeves that puddled across my chest when I
held my arms together to seek ease or relief and with big pockets where partially-used
Kleenexes lived on top of stale chocolate kisses in their silver wrappings, a
stray cotton swab, and a toothpick.
Carol was everything I needed whenever we came together. We
didn’t live in such proximity that we knew each other’s movements by heart.
There was enough separation, so that it was fun to catch-up when we had a
moment or an hour to share.
The thing is, this loss is a little like losing my long-term
companion. I’ve not just lost the living with her in the now, but I’ve lost one
more person who shared my history, who had knowledge of where I came from, and
could reminisce with me about memories of what was once. Events we experienced
were touchstones, ones we held as unique points of each other’s foundations.
She was in my past when I first came to Laytonville, thirty-seven years ago.
She faded as our lives went in opposite directions, but then we came together
again to share the new and unwanted perspectives of widowhood.
I am a little mad about this loss and the fact that we don’t
get do-overs in our lives. I can’t unravel the weft or the warp and add a few
more yarns or threads of cotton to provide me with more options of comradeship
toward the end of my life, so that I’m not left dangling all alone. I could
never have replaced Carol, but I might have had the idea to pick up additional
and younger filaments/friends along the way. Then, when one as precious as
Carol has left, I could have more around me until the length of my
own fiber ran out.
No comments:
Post a Comment