Red morning light spits through the shade; another day older closer to
the grave. . .
I certainly wish that I could
take credit for that opening line, but alas my best friend Bruce owns it. I’m not even sure if it’s the opening line I
needed to write to begin this post, but I love the combination of words,
especially the word spits. Who describes a sunrise, the start of a day
like that? I’ll tell you who: the person who sees that it’s another day,
there may be beauty in that red morning light, but when it wakes the person who
has to get up and trudge through the dark
in a world gone wrong (yep, same writer), you can bet it feels like the
light is spitting – not casting its rays, not cascading, not peeping through
the shade – but spitting.
Anyway, I might have had some
dark thoughts this week, and I might have written a chapter or two about a very
dark character; and I might have thrown words on a few personal pages. But alas, I did not post on the blog because
I just wasn’t in the mood to share any of those musings yet.
I didn’t have the kids all
week. The schedule during the summer
months is a bit quirky - - - it’s a one week on, one week off schedule, Monday –
Friday. So, aside from basketball on
Thursday (and for a brief period today), where I coached a team of seven kids
that could shoot like Jordan, but had a tough time on rebounds and defense, I
haven’t seen the kids since Monday.
Paige and Tony were on the team, and despite having lost every game (I
never said I was a good coach on technique) during the past eight weeks, we had
a ball (no pun intended). I will see them both again today as Paige tests for
another belt in karate - - hi-ya!
But it’s not long enough. It’s not often enough. It’s not right.
I say that last line, and I feel
like I’m constantly saying it about things, which makes me judgmental, a little
narcissistic, and somewhat naïve about the world.
It’s not right that life is so short
– that it’s not reaching the ripe old age of 80 or 85 anymore; it’s reaching
that age without being murdered, without a drug overdose, without a mentally
debilitating abuse, without a divorce, without some random health condition
that lands you in the hospital for weeks, and ultimately leaves your children
without a parent.
It’s just not right. It’s not right that the divorce broke my
children’s hearts, and that I had some part in that breaking. It’s not right that because I’ve been broken,
I’m not likely to ever love hard enough to be that broken again. I don’t know if that makes sense, but the
song “The First Cut is the Deepest” hits a nerve once in a while. I think I love better, and I love harder now,
but I shrug off the vulnerabilities that are tied to that love. I’ve told that to my significant other. . . you
can revel in my kindness and love, but you’ll never get in close enough to
break my heart again.
That’s not right.
Is it? I mean, it’s a different
kind of love, I think. It’s not the
relationship that begins with hopes and dreams intact. It’s the relationship that begins with the
broken pieces of those hopes and dreams in a bag we carry on our
shoulders. The ones at the start of our
marriages were like a wall of beauty. We
glanced at them, believed in them, and wanted so badly for them to be
real. Those illusions shattered, and we
were left with the scraps – and we were also left with the beauty that was made
from that illusion, namely our children – the tender-hearted, fissure-hearted
byproducts of a marriage gone bad. But
with that beauty comes the ache of loving them in a world gone wrong. With the dawn comes another day of not
knowing the ending, of another potential for disappointment, another day of
hard work; and a bag full of pieces of a future that broke.
For my sake, regarding the first
cut being the deepest, I hope I’m wrong because I know that withholding of love
and vulnerability is just not right. It’s
like throwing water on a fire, but never putting it out because the longing is
there.
It’s not right that life is
chaotic and always too short; heartbreaking and disappointing. Yet, just by recognizing it, I suppose I am
left with hope. The red morning light
might be spitting, but it’s still coming through the shade.
Though I’d like to end with a
Bruce Song, I have to leave the epilogue to Bob Seger – who recognizes what I’m
saying in these words from Fire Inside:
There's a hard moon risin' on
the streets tonight
There's a reckless feeling in your heart as
you head out tonight
Through the concrete canyons to the midtown
light
Where the latest neon promises are burning
bright
Past the open windows on the darker streets
Where unseen angry voices flash and children
cry
Past
the phony posers with their worn out lines
The tired new money dressed to the nines
The low life dealers with their bad designs
And the dilettantes with their open minds
You're out on the town, safe in the crowd
Ready to go for the ride
Searching the eyes, looking for clues
There's no way you can hide
The fire inside
Well you've been to the clubs and the discoteques
Where they deal one another from the bottom of
a deck of promises
Where
the cautious loners and emotional wrecks
Do an acting stretch as a way to
hide the obvious
And the lights go down and they
dance real close
And for one brief instant they
pretend they're safe and warm
Then the beat gets louder and the mood is gone
The darkness scatters as the lights flash on
They hold one another just a little too long
And they move apart and then move on
On to the street, on to the next
Safe in the knowledge that they tried
Faking the smile, hiding the pain
Never satisfied
The fire inside
Fire inside
Now the hour is late and he thinks you're
asleep
You listen to him dress and you listen to him
leave
like you knew he would
You hear his car pull away in the street
Then you move to the door and you lock it when
he's gone for good
Then you walk to the window and stare at the
moon
Riding high and lonesome through a starlit sky
And it comes to you how it all
slips away
Youth and beauty are gone one
day
No matter what you dream or feel
or say
It ends in dust and disarray
Like wind on the plains, sand
through the glass
Waves rolling in with the tide
Dreams die hard and we watch
them erode
But we cannot be denied
The fire inside
2 comments:
And the professor played the piano on that one! Great song. Great post. Spit thru the shade....he's brilliant
You are right. i appriciate your work.
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