Skip to main content

We Dying Immortals

A few months ago, my boss took everyone in the office out for drinks to celebrate a new big client that one of the lawyers had just signed on.  We cheerfully paraded out of the office at 4:30, ready to drink to the occasion.  The evening sun sparkled through the tall bar windows on my glass of rum and coke as we swathed ourselves in a haze of laughter at the corner of the bar.  A few stools down the other legal receptionist, a middle-aged Southern blonde, politely declined the appetizers because her husband was already at home cooking dinner for her.  One of the lawyers joked that her husband was trying to get her in the mood; she replied with a smile and quickness, "He doesn't have to work that hard to get me in the mood."  We all laughed.

That laughter has gone.

At the beginning of October, she called off work one Thursday.  She had taken her husband to the hospital the previous night with severe abdominal pain, and the doctors couldn't identify the cause.  After several tests, he was diagnosed with 2 forms of cancer, one of them very advanced.  She texted our office paralegal the following Thursday when their doctor suggested hospice.  She wanted to get a second opinion, but they never got the chance - they were informed that Saturday that he had only days to live.  When I came into work the following Tuesday, one of my coworkers gently informed me that he had passed away on Sunday.  10 days.  10 days between fine and gone.  I couldn't taste my food the rest of the day.

The funeral was that same Tuesday night, and everyone in the office went.  We took up three rows of the too-narrow chairs; my knees banged against Dave's on the one side and one of the lawyer's on the other.  And the body of a man I had only met once in my life at a summer work cookout was in a powder-blue casket at the front of the room; I had a clear view of his face for the whole sermon.  I felt awkward and helpless.

I brought no tissues with me.  I sat dryly through the slideshow, the stories, and the service.  I heard one of the lawyers' wives sniffling a few chairs away as the pastor spoke.  We all rose after the service ended, and through the arms and coats I could see that little Southern blonde walk straight to the casket, followed by her adult son.  I watched her bend over his face, her curls falling over her shoulder as she kissed his forehead and said many soft and broken things to him.  My insides wrenched.  I should not have been able to see that.  And the tears came then.

I clasped Dave's hand tight as we crossed the damp parking lot of the funeral home, still feeling that ill helplessness.  I found myself touching him and looking at him more that night, instinctively seeking to imprint his details on my mind.  I wanted to count the freckles on his shoulders because I had been reminded that my time to look at them is shockingly short.

Yet my eyes can see so little.  All I've seen is passing, a fleeting projection.  My eyes tell me that since I can no longer see her husband, since he is no longer manifested in the body of that shy-smiling man, that he is gone and done.  But my eyes are liars.  We humans are too grand and immense for our own bodies; and how little we know of it, both for ourselves and others.  

"I'm bigger than my body gives me credit for," John Mayer crooned.  That's true.

Decades ago, C.S. Lewis wrote:

"There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilizations--these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat. But it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit--immortal horrors or everlasting splendours."

I cling to that truth now with my face briefly lifted to the ignored inevitability of loss.  I love, therefore I have much to lose.  But all those I love are more than I can know, creatures transcending the physical world I live in with them.  In losing the mortal form of one I am reminded of the immortality of others; that fills me with very real terror, and acute pangs of hope.

So I laugh loudly and count Dave's freckles again.

Comments

Sheri said…
On my window sill sits one of those Daily Calendars.

Oct 16--Do you realize there are only two eternal things on earth today? Only two: people and God's Word. Everything else will ultimately be burned up--everything else. Kind of sets your priorities straight, doesn't it? ~Charles Swindoll

I love your posts. Thanks for sharing.
Anonymous said…
Just wanted to tell you that I still read you. And I still think you're a beautiful writer and beautiful person.

Deb B. from CSCC
~heather said…
thank you to you both :)

you are extraordinarily sweet
Anonymous said…
Heather, thanks for saying "hi" at Cup O Joe. I like this posting a lot and would like to use it as part of my teaching this week, if that's okay with you. ken
~heather said…
I would be unbelievably honored if you did so, ken! Please, feel free to use it as you need.

I might be at Cup'o'Joe today, so maybe I'll see you there :)

Popular posts from this blog

The First Stages

2 days ago I had a coffee date with the girl "in charge" of the house I'll be moving into this Sunday. Snuggled down in a sweatshirt over a white chocolate mocha during a drizzly afternoon we went over last minute details to make sure she and I were on the same page. As we wrapped everything up, she told me to wait and dashed to the car; coming back in with a polka dot gift bag I had only eyes for what lay behind the curled red ribbon tying the two handles together: two shiny silver keys. Inside the bag was a beautiful red journal and a heap of candy from all the girls to welcome me into the house, but I couldn't get over the feel of those keys in my hand with fresh cut grooves. I marveled at the sight of them threaded onto my keychain as Sarah Brasse's eyes danced from across the table. I looked up, feeling the warmth of the mocha spread from my abdomen to my fingers and toes and the ends of my hair. "It's real, isn't it?" I said. "It's

The Core Four

What a wonderful delight - the Core Four are back and typing about their lives. Nothing makes my day quite like reading a fresh entry - or two even! - from Tricia AND Traci AND Jans. Nothing compares. Especially Jans; that was what, a two, maybe three month difference between entries? It made me sad, but I checked as often as I thought of it. What a tremendous treat to click your link and find my name invoked in the first sentence - I'll be on a high from that for hours to come. To the rest of you wondering what names I'm referring to, check on my links sidebar; the three of them and I used to live in three different cities and two different states (now three cities and three states), and our little-traveled blogs kept us connected. These girls are the reason why I started writing a blog at all; it's hard to imagine that I once was the worst at updating consistently...now I can't get enough of it, and I run out of stories to tell (which is saying alot for me...) We all

I Watch You Smile - You Steal the Show

Anyone ever see "Mean Girls" with Lindsey Lohan? When she was pissed off, she suffered from a symptom she dubbed "word vomit". Hers was the result of her convulsing anger, but I have a different word vomit. Mine is basically the result of my vocabulary and emotions upchucking at the same time. I'm not quite sure what to tell you guys; what's appropriate to say, what you don't need to know, what's too much to tell you. This is probably gonna be a pretty long entry, which might scare you off, but after hearing my unusally discouraging tones I have no doubt that many of you are now riveted. I guess...you guys love me and want to know me, and for some, this is the only way you keep up with me. I'll figure out the limit as I go, I guess. I had a very good talk with my momma today, which is a good sign for our relationship. It was violently and starkly splintered for quite a while, but it has progressed in leaps and bounds lately as I've better und