History of love floating around your head ; young genius so full of good memories
Forget me not when looking back on them with that dreamy third eye
History of love floating around your head ; young genius so full of good memories
Forget me not when looking back on them with that dreamy third eye
Today is [my friend]’s birthday! I think we could end up doing something, but he seems to have other things going on, which sucks but I suppose that is part of what it means to be alive in the world : to lose our friends to their new lives [I am indeed a culprit of such an instance β‘]. I miss some of my friends sometimes. Looking back, ππππ ππππππππππ ππππππ πππππππ ππππππ ππππππππππππ ππππππππ πππππππ ππππππ ππππ πππππ ππππππππππππ ππππππππ. I can’t even think of anyone along their lines, & go figure they’re all way more successful than me. I wonder what they’d say if they knew I currently have $πππππππ to my name.
It had been several months before the virus spread that I had last seen my grandma. She had a growing case of dementia and was in the throes of reliving her childhood. She didnβt recognize me at all; I think she thought I was some cute boy from another neighborhood. She even acted jealous when I was giving my six year old second cousin attention and wheeled her scooter over to me to get in on the eye contact.
Long before her mental decline, I never really had a good relationship with her, even though she went out of her way to buy my siblings, cousins and me gifts. My mom and aunts always complained about how poorly she treated them during their childhood, and so it was confusing to see her so happy and cheerful as my mom rolled her around Walmart.
βYou like this one?β Sheβd ask with glee as I fawned over a transforming spaceship.
βNo, Ma! Thatβs way too expensive! He canβtβ¦β My mom started.
βOh, bashaw! He likes it, he can have it!β She insisted.
I think she was trying to make up for leading such a mean life. She even donated extra to her church, talked to the likes of countless strangers (even gave them money that she didnβt have) and would tell people stories about her life, mostly stories about how much her daughters mistreated her. It was a surprising sight to witness given my mom and aunt were taking care of her in her more feeble years.
Both of her parents had died when she was young, and I wonder if that had anything to do with the misery my mom went on about. I saw it firsthand when I was really young, when she could still walk. She and my grandfather had led unhealthy lives, him smoking whole packs of cigarettes at the familyβs dining room table, her downing every piece of sugar she could get her hands on. Type 2 diabetes plagued them in their old age, and other ailments followed them like crows to corn.
βOh, would you be quiet and sit still!β I overheard her yelling at no one from the dining room while my sister and I were playing in the adjacent living room. It mustβve been in regards to us, but I think her and my grandfather were too exhausted in their old age to make a more formal approach.
I remember her telling me about the Yankees, and so it was no surprise that in her childish reminisens that sheβd go on about Mickey Mantle and their glory days.
βDid you go to Yankee games when you were young, Grandma?β I asked her one day in a car ride for one of her regular hospital visits.
βOh, yes, but we mainly saw the news in the paper. That Mickey Mantle was something else,β she said before gazing in my direction, βhe was an ambidextrous batter, you know?!β
Looking back on it, I think she thought I looked like him, or at least reminded her of him with my protruded forehead, blonde hair and cheeky smile. That, or she just thought he was handsome and that I should try out for baseball. Whatever the reason, itβs probably my favorite memory of her.
She had already been in hospice when the virus hit her, and it didnβt take long before it took her life. I didnβt feel much of anything in the wake of her death. It was as if all of my momβs and auntβs memories had become part of me, so I just felt numb to it all. There was also something disingenuous about her kindness. She would usually greet us with smiles and excitement, but as visits went on, her frown became the staying notion and not much was talked about beyond regrets and complaints about past mistakes and unfortunate circumstances.
βMa, dad never said that, that justβ¦β My mom would start.
βOh, caw, come on,β my Grandma spat, βyou donβt know what youβre talking about,β as sheβd roll her eyes.
I wonder if the virus had been painful for her, if she had even known about the βnew plagueβ in her state of unbeing. The darkness that had come over her mind was enough to shroud the memory of even her daughters and son from present sight, so what was one more ailment to her? I like to think that she barely felt infected by the time the care center had called my mom to tell us she had tested positive.Β
βMomβs got the virus,β My mom told my dad after getting off the phone.
βOh, noβ¦β My dad replied, setting aside whatever work he was busy with, βthat might just do itβ¦β
βHmβ¦β was all my mom could muster. Her and my aunt were the only two out of five that took care of her as she needed more and more support. I think by then, she was just tired and depressed from taking care of someone with a fleeting memory that barked complaints and orders about pain and medication.
I started to think if I could have done more; not about her health but as a better grandson. I wondered if I could have visited her more when her mind was still all there, asked her about life growing up, maybe uncover dark secrets thatβd explain the looming unhappiness that afflicted our family. Mostly though, I never questioned it. I felt as if she didnβt deserve such effort from me, even as I got old enough to drive and be able to visit her more often. This sort of bothered me, but it never motivated me enough to change my thinking. I thought βsince she treated my mom like shit, why would I treat her any differently?βΒ
One night, years after she had died and the virus had been suppressed to a passing conversation, I asked my mom about my Grandmaβs final moments.
βSo how long had she had it before she died from the virus?β
βOh, she didnβt die from the virus. It was phenomenological. It even killed her doctor, thatβs what got the ball rolling on them locking down their facilities.β She replied, to my astonishment.
βWhat? I thought you said she caught it right at the beginning and thatβs whyβ¦β
βWell, she did catch it, but then she tested negative and lived a few weeks after that. I must not have told you, yeah the employees were all shocked.β
I stood there in shock as she explained how her body somehow killed off the virus and she had continued on.
βWait, then, what happened? Did she just die from old age, her dementia?β
βHm, maybe. I firmly believe she died from depression.β
βDepression?β I knew my Grandma was sad, but she didnβt come across as someone who was medically depressed enough to die from it.
βYeah, because no one could visit her at that time. Everyone was still on edge about the virality of it, whether it was airborne and so forth. With no one around, she must have lost something more in the midst of losing her mind. As if nobody cared about her. I knew other old people who died because of that. Your great grandmother on your grandpaβs side died a month after your great grandfather because she missed him so much, oh you knew thatβ¦β
I was beside myself. All those years of telling people she had died from the virus, and she had gotten it, but I had no idea she got over it. Then the heavy really hit harder. What if I had visited more? What if I had gone to her with gifts that she would have enjoyed, like how I enjoyed the transforming spaceship she had gotten for me at the reluctance of my mother? What if I had shown her that I did love her, even with all of the vitriol that was cast between her and her children, and subsequently me? Would she have lived longer? Would she not have fallen so privy to her dementia? Whatever the case, something about her beating the virus, a feat not even the healthiest victims could achieve, in the paroxysm of her mind decaying, made me feel proud to be her grandson.
We were children Spinning until We got too dizzy And we’d fall down Laughing in a tizzy With little To no concern About the ensuing Nausea Now just nostalgia And as adults The spiraling We take on Still nauseates Yet we no longer laugh We throw up Our hands In disbelief About just how painful The spinning can be When all we want Is to be still With those who fill Our hearts To remind us Of those parts Of us That used to be Free
9/23/22 3:35 PM
Twice now and way more times than that have I tried to give up on missing people. Those people who were closest to me are so hard not to cry over when I realize they are no longer key components of my life and the deeper the memory of most recent regurgitation, the harder it is to look at it without despair. Sometimes I feel like I’m overreacting. But my biggest concern is that they don’t care. I fear they never cared. I believe it never mattered and that might scare me most. Maybe I’m a passing thought in their lives. I like to think that they may miss me. If they don’t, so be it. Who am I to them anymore anyway? Nothing but a memory as they seem to be to me. I’d like to think they’re the base of who I am today, that I have been shaped by the past. I should let go. Or should I hold on? Either way is painful. Both feel impossible. That gives memories a convenient feel. All I have are the memories of which are totems in time. Some are beautiful, others distraught. They’re pillars of life which I can’t cut down, though I may leave them to oxidate, they’re stuck standing in the lands of history and hold structure to buildings that once bustled with activity. Maybe those buildings are still active with new people whose presence brings on life that supports the buildings as thoroughly as the past. To learn from the past is probably the most valuable option in the longstanding showdown between me and my memories. I wish I could repeat the past sometimes, but then I wonder why I would want to. I’d want to do things differently, do things the right way as I look back on the wrongs. But what’s the difference between then and now other than the people? Why not act in the way now that you think you should’ve then? There’d be less regret in that sense, and greater exploration, discovery of possibility. It’s difficult not to think to myself “won’t I just be building memories of which I will look down upon with despair as I realize they’re no longer for me to take part in?” Everything changes. Why would you want things to stay the same? Everything feels virtually the same anyway, so why not recharge, refresh? Let it breathe because it could stop breathing at any moment. You won’t always be happy about it, but why would you want to always be content? Doesn’t that seem lazy? You know there are other problems to tackle other than your pillars of the past, of which are entirely immovable. Ah, maybe there’s a key there. If the pillars of the past are immovable, and you’re currently building future pillars of the past in the present, doesn’t that reveal a certain strength of which your humanity gives to the present? And in that case, the future? It’s almost as if your actions are time travelers and that they will always be shaping the world around you no matter how deep and lost below they sink. This gives memories the quality of diamonds in a sense. Some may be rough and almost unknowable while others are fine cut and precious. If you think the memory is fine cut, hold on to it if you believe that suits you best. If you find a memory that’s rough, it’s probably better not to change it, but if you try, you might find it was one of the most beautiful memories that you left out and once you’ve cut it and found this out, you’ll hold to it forever if you value it enough. As for the oncoming chances to find new precious rocks in time, well, that’s up to you to decide how you’re going to cut what you’ve discovered.