Building Down
Image byTeece Aronin
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You’ve seen film footage of these detonations, I’m sure. There is a countdown, a roar, and the building collapses onto itself like an accordion dangled by one strap and then dropped. This method of demolition minimizes the risk that someone will get hurt.
Nights are somehow better. Darkness blacks out the skyline, and I almost forget for a while, curled up inside the evening chatter of my children.
Writer C.S. Lewis lost his wife, Joy Davidman to bone
cancer. His book, A Grief Observed, was based on notes he made as he mourned her. Said Lewis: “No one ever told me
that grief felt so like fear.”
If grief feels like fear, it is because so much of grief is
fear. This grief of mine fears that now, when it rains, instead of dashing into my warm, sound building, I'll stand outdoors instead, lost and abandoned, a weeping clod. My pain will stick to my body like a see-through second skin, and parts I'd shown only
to him, will gleam in the wet, public light.
It is the fear that now I'll have to find someone else
with a van and as much patience as my lost one had to help me haul home that sofa from the thrift store to replace the one the dog chewed up. And this replacement person must be
someone I can sleep next to, blissful, as he drives, even though I know I look
drunk or anesthetized or in some other slack-faced way, compromised when I sleep.
Where do I go to find a man or a building like that, and to whom will I offer up my love, with the exception of my children, because my love for them will be hardwired and unconditional forever? Was, is, and is forevermore. If there are angels, protectors who watch over us, wanting what is best for us, do times like these test them, too? Do they blame themselves, as if symbolic deaths and imploding buildings were a ball they should have caught, but dropped?
I will find my way through this grief, and since he is grieving too, I hope he also finds his way. Then I will offer my friendship. When we have stopped grieving, I will offer him that, and maybe we can try each other on for a different kind of fit.
I hold tight to the ability to grieve. I wear it like a badge earned many times over, and I see it as hope that hurting deeply means living deeply.
The alternative of not living, someone told me, is deadly. And the alternative of not living deeply, I tell myself, is worse than death.
But again, if you know this answer, please tell me: Where do you go to find a man, or a building, like that?
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