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Sunday, June 07, 2015

Evaporating the crazy

Friday, if you didn't know, what National Donut Day, and my friend Maureen, who always brings elaborately wrapped gifts, with magic tickets, and glorious string, and luggage labels with her elegant notes etched onto them, brings me a box of Entenman's cake doughnuts. We'd met for dinner at Cafe Stella, our first in a long time, more than a year, and she is late, because she's always late, but I don't mind because I'm people watching and drinking something with lemon and elderflower, and the sun is pouring in, and there is the most amusing man at the next table who thinks he is humorous, but his jokes come out of his mouth and fall flat, face down on the floor. I see her lovely face, mouthing apologies as she walks in the door, her shiny black hair and I want to cry. "I've brought you doughnuts," she says. It's been three years now since her husband died, tragically, and for the first time I can see the light again in her eyes. He was her everything. She feels his presence in everything good that happens to her or her children. He is watching them and he is making it all right. Her dog is named Ignatius, for goodness' sake.

Elizabeth Alexander has written a memoir about her husband who died, rather young, Ficre Ghebreyesus, the painter and restauranteur. Alexander, a poet, has written a book that I'm finding hard to leave. I'm telling everyone I see to the read the book. Please read the book. Her prose is beautiful, succinct, aching. You can sample some of it here.

Ficre Ghebreyesus, self-portrait 

I don't like waking up alone. The dogs are beginning to irritate me in the night, with their constant scuffling, circling, nesting, snoring, farting, repositioning, as I struggle with my sleep. I want a deep sleep again. Alexander quotes Senghor (see below; beautiful, isn't it?)

"I miss a nice, warm body in my bed" I said to my ex-husband this week, as you do. Not because I missed him (of course I do, a little). Not to be provocative. But to tell the truth. Our wedding anniversary is June 11. It will be 27 years. And, as we are not yet divorced, I can tell people that. It's his form I miss most. The sleeping, sometimes snoring, rather sweet, soft man lying next to me. The smell I know so well, the way our bodies know where to be when we spoon.

A friend I've known for a few years, a friend who knows my secrets, even the most miserable, snotty, hideous ones, has recently started to sleep in my bed occasionally, although I could see it becoming habit-forming. He smells of sandalwood and now wherever I go I smell that smell and feel sleepy and happy. He sleeps in the zen manner, not allowing in any of the outside scuffles, acknowledging them perhaps, and then letting them go. His sleep won't be interrupted. He holds my hands or rests his arm on my leg and breathes gently, evenly. The smallest dog, the wanton hussy, nestles close to his ankles and licks them languidly. He smiles in his sleep. We drink tea in the morning and laugh. But it's summer. Perhaps these things are okay in the summer. Pretending that the man in the bed is there to help with insomnia. Wearing dresses and bare legs. Thinking about the sea. Filling the house with flowers. Eating outside at night at every opportunity. Wanting everything to be pink and blue and yellow and orange and turquoise.

This evaporates my crazy. For now.





3 comments:

  1. I'm glad you have company.

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  2. This is beautiful Bumble, and contains those things I love best about your writing. The penultimate paragraph especially,

    "He sleeps in the zen manner, not allowing in any of the outside scuffles, acknowledging them perhaps, and then letting them go. His sleep won't be interrupted. He holds my hands or rests his arm on my leg and breathes gently, evenly. The smallest dog, the wanton hussy, nestles close to his ankles and licks them languidly. He smiles in his sleep. We drink tea in the morning and laugh. But it's summer. Perhaps these things are okay in the summer."

    For me, the things you are describing are always okay, not exclusively in summer. Our definitions of accepted human connection are too rigid. We need to touch and comfort each other more. "It did not seem so difficult. She need trouble him with no gift of her own. She would only point out the salvation that was latent in his own soul, and in the soul of every man. Only connect! That was her whole sermon. Only connect the prose and the passion, and both will be exalted, and human love will be seen at its height. Live in fragments no longer. Only connect, and the beast and the monk, robbed of the isolation that is life to either, will die." http://www.newrepublic.com/article/76235/the-prose-and-the-passion

    xo.

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