It was forty-three years ago this
Autumn when you moved into the charming dilapidated two-story apartment at
Seacrest Village in New Hampshire. The
home bore the freckles and moles of age but it felt like eternal sunshine.
You rarely left your mother’s
side. She would stare at you for hours
and you would smile and make comforting sounds and bring her joy.
It did not gain your attention that
there was a war in Viet Nam or that college students were demonstrating and
protesting or that Nixon was President.
You never even acknowledged that men had walked on the moon. The outside
world held little of your attention. You
focused only upon your mother and she upon you.
There was a dry chill in the
outside air with a soft wind that moved the fire from the branches to the
earth. The earth was a deep tapestry
that prevented one’s feet from being grounded.
Your mother watched her television
re-runs every morning: The Dick Van Dyke
Show with Mary Tyler Moore and Bewitched. No matter how many times she had seen them,
she still enjoyed them and you seemed to enjoy watching her watch them.
When the television was not on, the
radio was and your mother sang along hourly as Peggy Lee crooned, “Is that all
there is? If that’s all there is, then
I’ll keep dancing.”
You spoke very little yet your
voice soothed your mother and always brought an active smile to her
countenance.
Your eyes spoke the wisdom of the
universe. You knew it all then, didn’t
you? You understood the linguistic
constraints of a viable Physics; you comprehended the Hopi Indian Physics with
no construct for space and time and the modern dogma of space, time and the
speed of light.
Your smile implied an intimacy with
the world’s most eloquent poets.
Occasionally, you would appear to
be contemplative. What mathematic
formulas were you solving? Or were you
deliberating upon ethical truths?
Is this innate knowledge and truth
ultimately lost when it is constrained by linguistics?
There were some outings that
Fall: a trek to a factory outlet store
in Portsmouth; a prayer left at Sunday Mass in Durham; a visit to the doctor’s
office. But they were all
inconsequential, simple outings, daring to be recollected, as they are now.
Each same day was new and
different. Every week brought belly
laughter without jokes to precipitate them.
Happiness filled the glass until it
felt as if the glass was overflowing with all the oceans and seas of the
universe.
Was that it then? Is it that nothing stays the same? Is it that matter and form are always
changing?
Or is it that you straddled that
envelope, that warp, and that you had not yet committed to either world?
Could you not have warned your
mother? Was there any way you could have
educated her about the dimension in which you dreamed?
Or did you try? The night before at dinner, you said only one
word to her: “Look!” Everyone looked at you but you had nothing
further to add.
The morning of November 7th,
you went to the University of New Hampshire.
When you returned home, your mother suggested you both nap.
For one, the sleep endured.
Forty autumns have passed without
notice. The days are not cherished, the
nights are restless and busy.
Your mother spends her nights
looking for you. She has been searching
attics and basements, hearing your voice, trying to find you. She wants to hold you, needs to feed you, and
spends her life trying to find you.
It is a frantic search. She is pressured. Sometimes she hears you crying and follows
the sound but the rooms are empty. Room
after room, night after night, year after year, decade after decade, she looks.
You had commanded that: “Look.” She looks for you incessantly but does not
find you.
It is this linear time puzzle,
isn’t it? She is looking forward. Some physicists say we cannot go backward in
time but forward travel may be possible.
Curiously she never goes to the
place where she last saw you.
Others may have stumbled upon you
there.
What people choose to walk through
that New England cemetery, there may be some who stop and glance at the pink
marble marker that commemorates your existence.
“Tread
softly. Our angel sleeps here.
September 7,
1969-November 7, 1969”
Your Mommy will never stop loving
and missing you, sweet baby.
You changed her world.
Remembering Catherine Margaret: September 7 - November 7, 1969
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