Last night, I gave into the
temptation to wallow. Brian and I watched, The Fault in Our Stars. From
the first few minutes in, I found myself shocked at how different the
experience of a camera, as a narrator, would make the entire story. My favorite
device the author uses is a book within a book, where the characters encounter
the phrase, “Pain demands to be felt.” What could be more true? Perhaps, the
corollary that “Love demands to be given?”
When I read the book, on a
transcontinental SFO to JFK United flight, I didn’t shed a single tear.
Although I prefer to pretend otherwise, books and movies make me cry. I have
been known to be the really unstable bawling and sniffling chick with the
cashmere turtleneck pulled up to her eyes in 7B (more than once). What makes me
different than the typical really unstable bawling and sniffling chick with the
cashmere turtleneck pulled up to her eyes in 7B is that I am reading something
Stiglitz wrote about income inequality and remain happily married.
There I sat, on my blue sofa, in a
ratty t-shirt, shocked when the tears streamed down my face. I discovered one
of the reasons I hate crying has nothing to do with losing control, fearing
vulnerability, or being told that no one likes a cry baby. It’s that the
physical sensation of crying is horrible.
My body heats up. I feel claustrophobic
in my own skin. I sweat. This is not polite glowing. A salty stream of sweat
stings my invariably slightly sunburned neck, creeping down my chest, where it
becomes cold, forcing me to notice that
its reached my navel. My “rosy” face becomes purple and the whites of my eyes
turn pinkish red. To complete the image, my nose runs a hot, clear, liquid and
I never have a tissue.
The reaction I was having was not
to watching two star crossed lovers, but to knowing that people die leaving
things unfinished. All those meals never
eaten, songs left unsung, chances to choose kindness missed, sunsets
unwatched, babies' laughter unheard. Yet, if we are there and eat those meals,
sing those songs, watch the sunsets and make the babies laugh, we bring the lost along
with us. We never stop loving people when they die. That is our privilege - to
live with their love. That remains. And it gives us hope.
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