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Sometimes loss comes with a physical price. |
-I- In all the weelks leading up to it; all the weeping and the moping and the general malaise- I could not have imagined how fast it would be over. When that Goodbye came, it was two things at once: Flying impossibly slow, turning in the air, yet thundering down like an anvil onto a desert's floor, leaving me with a mouthful of grit and broken shells I mistook for teeth. I met that Goodbye with my face, my whole body. I spat that Goobye out, mixed with sand and blood. It hurt, just like it should. Took it a while to really hurt, but isn't that the way all Goodbyes are? -II- It left me impaled on metal, that Goodbye did. Broke my bones, brain sloshing like a bird hitting a window except it was my skull instead. It tore wire and tendon and neuron and vessle that took years to heal; maybe never, that damned Goodbye did. And after all that, it was a badly done Goodbye. Left ripped, ragged and needing stitches that created such ugly scars. Left bleeding ears and blindness from the impact of that indelicate, unexpectedly rapid Goodbye. -III- So I came back and looked at that Goodbye once. Not too many times you can do that; usually just happens once and you don't get to try again. I guess I got lucky (because everyone said that I did). This time, there was no impact. Just a Goodbye. Like the last of the summer breezes, just before they turn too cool to enjoy. That last first Goodbye was so cold, January cold. The Indians say "It was a good day to die." This day was July. This day was a good day to say Goodbye. |