Tag-Archive for » mourning «

I’ve been eerily calm about everything lately.  I haven’t taken the Clonazepam in a week—ran out—yet I’ve been okay.  A few panic attacks, some low-grade anxiety manifesting itself as strained back and leg muscles, several moments of deep bereavement, but I’m overall peaceful.

That is, in the face of the deaths seemingly piling up around me lately, I’m okay.

In fact, my major stressor has become the fear that my late sense of peace will end.  Because if this ends, then I didn’t learn anything new.  And I’ll struggle to control myself—again.  Then, I’ll know the peace was really shock from Sang’s death.  Then, this is just another turn of the chemical tides.  It’s always—

I’m catastrophizing.  Realistically, it’s more likely the peace I feel is due to the overall peaceful environment I’ve constructed around me.  I have several inspiring relationships in my life.  I have a steady income and health insurance.  I have an able body and a highly capable mind.  True, I recently lost one of my best friends to what boils down to the limitations of science.  Just today I held back tears as I told a Sang story.  Yet, that I was able to exercise that much control surprises me.  My voice only broke a few times, and I had the foresight to lower my gaze to hide the rising tide hazing my vision.  It was a small step but a step forward nonetheless.

Publishing this post tonight is the biggest step of all, actually.  The worst thing a depressive can do is isolate.  So, I’m doing what anybody who’s had effective therapy treatment does: communicating.  Every word hurts, and every sentence feels like a small miracle I alone labored to create.  Even as I write these words, I’m wondering if I’ll have the courage to press the “Publish” button to my right.  If I do, it’ll be a big step out of grief and depression.  If I publish again tomorrow, I’ll have started myself on the long journey back to full mental and physical health.  Writing, my shameless monster, washes me of the guilt and self-disgust that’s too long kept my skin from breathing.  Publishing adds meaning to an otherwise masturbatory skill.

So, in a sense, I give myself meaning by publishing.

I’m sorry.  I’m either extremely focused or disturbingly absent-minded.  This post seems to drift between the two states.  I irresponsibly allowed the Clonazepam to run out in between psychiatric visits.  Though I did have the job of finding a new psychiatrist during that interim, I should have made the matter a higher priority than I did.  I—I’m whipping myself.

Not a new problem.  I know.

I’m trying to scream on paper, but I’m not talented enough to know how to do it.  So too simply put, nothing feels urgent anymore.  Yet, I’m full of all this quiet, distant tension.  Not quite dissociation, I’m compelled to enjoy it.  But I just don’t trust it to be good.  There’s an anxiety whispering from there.  It’s creeping up my throat, and I want to let it out.  If I let it out, maybe I’ll be able to take a deep enough breath.  I can stop this yawning.  I’m always so exhausted, lately.

I just have to press “Publish.”

I can’t help it.  I don’t trust these people that say you’re dead.  I keep imagining you lying face down on your bathroom floor.  What did you look like?  I wish I had a picture of how you lay, the expression on your face.  Were your eyes open or closed?

No, that wouldn’t convince me.  I can too easily imagine you getting up from that floor.  I can see the long vein running from elbow to wrist, the definition of your whole arm revealing itself, as your muscles took on the weight of your body.  You lay on my living room floor so often, I have videos in my head of you standing up—exactly what I want you to do right now.

Stand up, Sang.  I just need you to stand up.  You’re fine.  I know you are.  Sure, you died.  But that doesn’t mean I’m not going to see you anymore, right?  You’re still going to come over on the weekends?  You’re still going to have love and advice for me.  It isn’t a question in my mind.  I can still call you to check up on you.

You simply won’t have much to say back.  Like a book, you’ve said everything you’re going to say.  Sure, there’s an end.  But that doesn’t mean I can’t go back to all the pages you gave me to read.  Right?  … Talk to me, Sang.  You always have something to say, something brilliant and funny and endearing.  Stand up, Sang.

Sang.  Sang lost weight last year.  Sang reconnected with himself last year.  He revealed things to himself and to Charles and to me that he said he hadn’t ever wanted to think about.  He loved a woman last year.  He didn’t want to go out on New Years Eve because the roads were dangerous with drunk drivers—last year.  I don’t know what he experienced this year.  I haven’t seen him.  He’s dead.  It’s what everyone keeps saying.  Sang’s dead.  They keep telling me.  I keep saying it.  I can’t help but say everything I can about him.  It seems others can’t stop themselves either as they offer their words.  I love the words, warm and soothing like a long, hot shower.  Words haven’t made me feel this good in months.

Lend meaning to a meaningless situation.  Death for humans is the same as it is for stars.  Our matter and meaning flows from us into our universe.  Happily, we live in an era where the matter and meaning of Sang’s life can exchange phone numbers and email addresses.  We’re forced to accept our collective being can never be reconstituted, but we can exchange words that allow us to feel whole again.  Lend meaning to a meaningless situation.

The Sang-Yoon Lee Tribute Page

Sang’s own words

Sang died.  Heart attack, or something.  I’m holding up well but barely, glad I don’t believe in an afterlife.  His great questioning is over.

I have words, but they’re not ready.  They need to be as near perfect as possible.  See, my idea of perfection has a ghost in it.  The very idea has become a ghost, dead beside him.  I need to resurrect one of them.

Tomorrow, when my eyes aren’t swollen red and dry, I’ll have something worthy.  Below is the first of what will be many drafts.  It doesn’t say what I want, but it says enough—for now.

In Mourning

In Memory of Sang-Yoon Lee

Querido, ya

te extraño.  Deja

tu mentira.  Despiertate.

Te espero

afuera.  Acuerdate,

no aguanto

el frio.

Soon after I heard Sang died, after I had cried and screamed out enough of my grief to make room for my sanity, it occurred to me, there’s now a ghost in my ideal life.  Less than that!  A memory.  Imperfect.

In a time when so much is possible, the impossible is suddenly the only thing that seems to have any meaning at all.  Death, in particular, has been invading our consciousness with images of late.  Whether it’s Harry Potter’s Voldemort or CNN, Death pervades our thoughts, even our fetishes.  Deeper even than our sexual psychosomas, Bella and Edward signify many things, not the least of which is our primordial wish to defy time and space—life itself.  Our survival is no longer dependent on our progeny.  Instead, as highly individualistic animals, we’ve decided as a culture to forget the race; we must preserve ourselves.

But there is no preservation.  Writers know that.  That’s why we write: if nothing else, these words will carry us to others.  We only ever live in the minds of others.

I wept until I remembered he had left a bit of perfection behind.  His writings are imperfect in some ways, but they are imperfect in the perfect way he was.  They reach toward the idea of perfection in exactly that overworked and restrained way he had.  Though an atheist, I find it comforts me to think he’s survived in some way beyond my imperfect memory.  I feel I can relax my grief into the comfort of knowing his actions carried meaning during his life; his words will carry meaning in his death.