Do you ever feel like you took a step once and got stuck?
Life went on, but a part of you never moved on from that moment.
That’s me.
Where you left me, I’ll be.
The same things are all I see.
–S.
Do you ever feel like you took a step once and got stuck?
Life went on, but a part of you never moved on from that moment.
That’s me.
Where you left me, I’ll be.
The same things are all I see.
–S.
Winter comes,
I am colder.
Time goes,
I don’t get older.
Fires burn,
I never feel warmer.
I’m stuck in a moment.
Only muted sounds,
murmurs.
–S.
Missing you is like breathing.
I don’t need a reason.
You are my favorite season.
Why my heart is beating.
–S.
The most interesting thing about me is that I lost you.
The second most interesting thing about me is that I’m so blue.
–S.
2013.
I think even when you turn 36, or 82, or 117, I would still call you baby.
You were born the day before I started eighth grade.
I was worried about which of my best-friends were going to what high school, my whole life ruined and in shambles. How was I ever going to pick where to go?
Mom already told me that she wouldn’t fill out the transfer papers. Do you think I could have forged them?
And then there was you. Little, but big at the same time.
With a head full of brown hair. You peed on the nurse. That’s when I knew you were going to be trouble. You were so…so baby. And I was scared to hold you. What if I hurt you? Or if I didn’t hold you correctly? Or you started crying?
In time, you became my little, but big at the same time best friend.
I think the most important thing that I have learned from your nine years on this earth is just to breath. Life isn’t about marking up a calendar to next year and back of things that need to be done. Life isn’t about constantly making lists. Life is just about living.
Sometimes you take fifteen minutes to say something that could have been said in one sentence, and you remind me of our mother.
Sometimes you get frustrated really easily and shut down, and you remind me of our father.
Sometimes you nod your head to a song you don’t know the lyrics to and you close your eyes, and you remind me of myself.
I know that there will be a day when mom and dad won’t be on earth with us and it’ll just be the two of us. Life won’t always be fort building, ramen making at midnight with melted slices of cheese, waking up to Nerf guns, cannon balls in the pool, ice cold cokes on a summer day, Halo 4 campaigns before going to sleep, Teen Titans at 3 am, or scavenging the refrigerator for two items that are possibly edible together.
People move away. They have their own families. They stop talking. They start again. They love. They get hurt. They love again. They never stop loving. These are also parts of living.
These are things we don’t write on our list or our five-year plan.
I remember when we had to put Whoopie to sleep, I think that was your first real loss.
You lost your best friend. The dog that you’d known since birth. You were eight. For a long time we were worried because you were really sad, and you stopped telling jokes and laughing as often as you used to. Your spirit wasn’t as bright as it had always been.
And then we brought Ringo home a couple months ago, and you didn’t want to tell mom and dad, but you whispered in my ear that it made you sad although you really liked Ringo – he just wasn’t Whoopie.
My heart broke baby.
I want you to know that if I could somehow ensure that a part of you stays innocent forever, I would. That a part of you still cries when Sarah McLaughlin comes on and they show the commercial with the animals. If I could somehow make sure that your heart is always big and always full of love and that you never get tarnished, I would do that for you. Even if it meant sacrificing any amount of happiness of my own. I want you to never be afraid to be yourself. Even if kids laugh. I want you to wear clothes that don’t match, if you want to. I want you to do the robot to a song that the robot ‘shouldn’t’ be done to. I want you to mouth lyrics you don’t even know. I want you to still hug mom and dad and tell them that they are your best friends. I want you to keep laughing. Keep dancing. Keep dreaming. Keep loving. Keep smiling. Keep hoping. Keep wishing. Keep being goofy. Keep telling stories. Keep telling corny jokes. Keep living. It has been an honor to help raise you, to love you, and to take care of you.
I hope you always remember a time when we laughed and played together, and the world seemed a little simpler.
–S.
What if you never left?
I saw a picture of you holding me as a baby.
But I’ve never felt that.
My mom says that you talked to me as a baby.
But I’ve never heard that.
You’d have more than a little to drink every night.
But I’ve never smelled that.
Word on the street is that whatever needed fixing, you were the man.
But I’ve never seen that.
If you ever cooked,
I’ve never tasted it.
You died. I have no memories. How can I feel a connection to you?
When we visited grandma eleven years ago, I found a box of pictures in the room I was supposed to be sleeping in. As everyone slept, I lined the pictures up on the carpet. Some were of you when you were younger. Some were of grandma. Some were of you two together. They were all in black and white.
I wished that you could reach out to me. Say something. Anything.
Let me know you are here. I wonder what kind of life you imagined for me.
Life is confusing and complicated.
When grandma died, your daughters stopped speaking to one another. I wonder if my aunt even knows about the box full of pictures. I wonder if they are collecting dust underneath the bed. I wish she would have sent half of them to me. I know that I would’ve stared at them for hours. I would’ve wondered if your smile was real. I would have searched for clues. I would’ve run my fingers down every picture.
Mom sometimes tells me stories about you that she remembers.
I know what it is like to love a person you’ve never met.
I know what it is like to miss a person you’ve never known.
Grandpa.
Where are you?
–S.
An excerpt from a letter that I wrote years ago to my then best-friend who went into the Air Force.
First and foremost, I am a writer. I think that my best writing comes from the darkest of places, and sometimes I have dry periods where I am not motivated to write any words. It has taken me a long while to share anything because rarely do people care about one another on that deep of a level.
Sometimes you don’t even want to heart your own voice. Not because I have been depressed or anything. I’m okay. I’m good. You just get tired of it – as with all things. The day is July 8th and the time is 1:31 am. Like the summer nights that have come before this one – I can never go to sleep before three or four in the morning.
My apologies. I feel that we left things in such an awkward place that sometimes I think – will we ever come back from that? I know that you have bigger things going on in your life and it doesn’t really compare to what friendships are going to survive or not. That’s how we are, I know. You’re with me or you’re not. But I also know that sometimes we have to swallow our pride, a million times over, and just speak.
So, here I am.
I’d like to tell you about myself. If you ever start feeling like you’re in a prison – I hope these words help you find a way out in your mind. I hope you find it in your heart to smile while reading my words and maybe even laugh.
Lord knows we need all the laughter we can get,
but I’ll probably be doing a lot of crying.
–S.
Eight Years Ago.
My brother was born the day before my father’s birthday.
For the last ten years, he’s been his greatest gift.
Every year, we make a party celebrating the both of them.
As I watched my parents this weekend – putting everything together, my mind drifted over the twenty-three different ways my birthday was celebrated over the years.
I always wanted more from my parents. The most expensive gift. More gifts. A better birthday cake. No homemade food, give me pizza. Give me a thousand different colored balloons. Get me a new birthday outfit. Every year should be better than the last.
I watched them clean the entire house. I watched them decorate it. I watched them prepare all of the food. I watched my mom make the cake. I watched them prepare the porch for the guests that were coming. I realized in all of these moments that I spent so much of my younger years wishing for more that I overlooked all of the present moments.
I never realized how hard they tried. I never appreciated the things that they did give.
I didn’t count the roof over my head as a gift. I didn’t care about their full-time jobs. I didn’t count the shoes on my feet and the clothes on my back.
I didn’t need a car on my sixteenth birthday or gold earrings from ‘Santa Claus.’
I needed to learn the art of appreciation.
If I could talk to a younger version of my self, I would help her to start appreciating mom and dad earlier. I would tell her to not allow it to take twenty some odd years to make certain realizations.
Start now.
They are amazingly complicated people in their own right, but breath deep and be patient.
Let them surprise you.
Time with them is the ultimate gift.
I’d tell her.
-S.
I want you to know that the nights we spent with outfits too short for our own good, dried up alcohol on our bodies from random strangers stumbling around the bar, sweaty hair, and cigarette smelling clothes are nights that I will never forget.
On those nights – we owned the town.
Two girls holding hands walking barefoot with their heels in their hands starting up at the skyscrapers of the city.
The whole city was lit up with neon signs, the moon, and the stars.
Nothing mattered on those nights.
Not whose heart was broken.
Not what college paper was waiting to be written.
Not what family or friend drama was developing.
Not that there was a work shift coming in the morning.
–S.