I lay on a block of concrete and close my eyes. How can the sky burn my eyes when the sun is buried beneath a veil of white clouds? I feel that piercing brightness like gravity pressing on my eyelids, and it is a pleasant feeling. I smell the railroad tracks from where they rest, collecting dust in their current slumber, which could be interrupted at any given moment by the deafening rumble of the train. They smell like the beach. I feel the cool breeze breaking the tension of humidity and pushing against my bare legs, and I imagine I'm lying in warm sand by the ocean. All that is missing is the cry of the seagulls.
I lower the volume of my music, eerie music about questioning God, and I find myself disturbed by the silence. There are no seagulls. I am completely alone. Here in the middle of nowhere, stretched on a seemingly useless concrete bed, laid at one end of the trail I cycle on every day. I turn up the music again, and listen to the way the music itself somehow sounds troubled. I turn my head to the side, and watch a silver car traveling up a hill in the distance. I think about sitting in the back of my mother's car, outside of a post office, crying quietly as she attempted to make me feel guilty for having pinkeye. (What kind of parent tries to make their child feel guilty for being sick?) The tears seemed to fall even harder than usual, probably urged forward by my bacterial conjunctivitis. I watched cars traveling then to, with my head turned the same way and lying against the window, picturing throwing myself in front of them.
I pictured myself wearing a white dress, a white dress made of lace, with a halo of daisies in my hair and heeled shoes on my feet. I held a handful of flowers like a bride. I threw them in the air as if a hopeful bridesmaid waited for that moment of perfect coordination and that collective jaw drop when it landed in her palms. And I threw envelopes with the flowers, letting them fall like confetti. Envelopes holding letters full of words I never got around to saying, or didn't say enough. And with long, slow strides, I stepped out into the street at just the perfect moment and let the rest of the world stop holding their breath and puff out that sigh of relief. Their bouquets had been caught. Reassured of good things to come, now that their one burden had slid reluctantly off of their shoulders, and tiptoed away to that makeshift aisle of sidewalk and macadam.
The bride began her walk. Her escort was Doubt, the one who had convinced her to make herself this way. And at the end, the one that Doubt had told her would be the only groom she'd ever know: Misery.
She prayed that that unlucky wedding crasher behind the wheel would take them both. Till death do us part.
I shuddered at the clarity of the thought, a clarity that came form repetition. But why? Dying couldn't be the only way to escape from Misery. Could it? And I didn't want to die. I wanted to live forever. Death scared me more than anything. What if I simply stopped existing? What if I was caught in an empty void of blackness, but I didn't even know it, because I wouldn't be capable of knowing anything? What if there is no afterlife? What if death is just death?
It's a terrifying thought to get stuck on. Sometimes, late at night, I try to keep myself awake, because I am afraid of what will happen if I fall into a dreamless slumber. I am petrified of the idea of not being aware of my own existence. I am not sure why, but I need my racing thoughts to remind me that I am alive. Because on every other level, I am left unsure.
Dying only adds on to your misery. Imagine the scenario when you were to watch your parents grieving beside your deathbed. Won't it hurt even more?
ReplyDeleteIf you were to love someone (be it your lover or parents) and sacrifice for him or her, how would you feel if he or she were to leave you?
As a normal being, who wouldn't fear death? I have accepted my fear for it. However, once you have loved or sacrificed (not giving up your life) for someone or a group of people precious to you. You would probably not think about your fear but what you can do for him or her or them. The process of loving and sacrificing may seen to be tough but seeing the smiles that your hard work brings onto their faces will make you forget the pain. That, itself, is enough. For once, you will feel that your existence is needed or has a purpose. At least, that is what I feel.
I used to be surrounded by things I am comforted to. The people around me, my bed and even a simple warm meal. Only till I was stripped of them, did I realise how blessed I am. Drenched in the rain, tired and cold, I sat down to eat a pack of cold, tasteless food when the rain was cleared. That experience made me realised that having a plate of warm food to eat, is a blessing that I have once taken for granted.
"Only till I was stripped of them, did I realise how blessed I am."
DeleteSorry, my bad.
Correction: Only till I was stripped of them, did I realise how blessed I was.
-_-||| I am trying to correct myself.