Today, in keeping with my new burst of enthusiasm to actually finish the book, I opted to drive down the stake of a unique and personal domain name. (In other words I dropped the “wordpress” out of the URL.) The address for the book and the blog are now the same and official:
acuriouscure.com.
To tell you the truth, the change felt a little intoxicating. Like first rum. It was all so new and different and kind of spring-break-name-gone-wild and I got all wound up. In a burst of total abandon, I changed the header picture and then the theme, too. And believe me, if I knew how to change anything…anything…else on the site I would. But for now my lack of technical expertise will keep the rest of my clothes on.
So anyway, that’s why everything looks a little different today.
BTW, the alligator sculpture in the header above is my newest and most prized-of-all-prized art pieces. And I know, she really belongs in a big fountain, or a bed of deep periwinkle, or on the nightstand next to my bed as primeval protector of dreams, but for now I can’t bear to have her out of sight for that long.
So instead she’s hanging out on the hearth next to the wood burning stove, right in the center of the house. That way every time I forget she’s there, and then walk around the corner and catch her out of the corner of my eye again, my stomach can do another flip flop and I go…what the…?!! before I remember.
I’m participating in a tele-writing workshop which runs through the middle of January so I’m transferring most of my writing attention over to the book for the next six weeks. (A badly needed redirection I might add. As most of you probably know, blogging can get a little addictive.)
What I thought I’d do to keep up here is post bits and pieces of whatever I’m currently working on for the book as well as (of course) any other odd and unrelated beauties I stumble over during one of my inevitable distracted periods. Today, I have one of each:
Here’s a passage from the book that talks about what I went through after the first time I told someone they were dying:
“But even though that’s what I would have preferred, there was no time left for it. To question slowly requires time, but what if Elsa wanted to know before it was too late? What if she wanted me to tell her? What if she said that to me because she saw me as a person who would be straight with her and deliver the news, bad as it was? Someone who would help her understand what was happening and alleviate her growing confusion? Help her back to the core and strength of who she was; a woman who preferred the truth. Who preferred straight dealing. Who didn’t want anyone to protect or pity her. A woman who needed someone to respect her strength and treat her like a competent human being rather than an invalid.
There were other times, other days, when I offered slow questions. Like the day I asked her if she knew that I worked for hospice, or the day I asked if she believed in an afterlife. Those questions were my bait, asked with the hope of luring her into a conversation about what was happening to her, but on those days she clearly didn’t want to know. She shrugged them off and changed the subject, letting me know she wasn’t willing to discuss it.
And I respected that. I wasn’t attached to her believing that she was dying. I had no problem with her passing away in the midst of denial if that’s what she preferred. I was a little uncomfortable when she talked about all the things she’d do when she got better, uncomfortable pretending…but not much. If that’s what she felt like she needed then I was O.K. with it.
After all, it was about her. Not me.
But then that moment came and it blindsided me, when she finally wondered. When she looked at her belly and stroked her long-fingered hands softly along the sides and said in that small, bewildered voice, “I don’t know why I’m not getting better this time.” And for one brief, fraught moment she was clearly lost. Vulnerable. As if she’d thought she was traveling through familiar terrain and suddenly looked up to find herself in strange surroundings. Pausing. Suddenly uncertain. Puzzling softly.
“It’s never lasted this long before.”
It was a fork in the road. A split second when she could have gone either way, back into denial or forward into truth. For a heartbeat, a blink, a breath she was open. Lined up. In range. Positioned to receive a message should one happen to come and in that brief moment the responsibility for making a choice of whether to send that message or not fell on my shoulders.
Fuck.
In the moment it seemed so simple…because I would have wanted the truth if it was me, because she had just told me how she preferred straight dealing, because that was how we had been with each other all along…I chose to tell her that it looked like it was her time to go. That she was dying. And because it was my choice, my responsibility, and my burden, I was required to look into her eyes and see what it means to strike a mortal blow. To snuff out hope. To feel her hand suddenly slip from mine and watch her fall silently away into a dark abyss, her eyes stricken, locked on mine as she grew smaller and smaller.
Is that my penance here? Is that the asking price for dabbling around the brink of infinity? Is it a stern reminder that I need to tread more carefully? That grace is love, yes, but also incomprehensibly vast and unknown and terrifying? Somewhere in the back of Elsa’s eyes I saw something looking back out at me and warning: Be careful, Dia. Always be careful with one another.
Was I wrong to say anything? Should I have withheld the information and kept my mouth shut? I don’t know. I don’t know.
I don’t know.”
Breathe…don’t forget to breathe.
And then here is an oddly beautiful thing I found and just had to share. It’s a video by Louis Schwartzberg called Wings of Life that “is inspired by the vanishing of one of nature’s primary pollinators, the honeybee.” It’s absolutely breathtaking…slow motion cinematography of brief and tiny lives…and I highly recommend watching it if you’re feeling any heaviness after reading the above blip. It’s really just all part of the same Life, y’know?