Abby details the thoughts she had of her husband's last moments of life and the recognition of regrets and physical pain he must have had. This wrecked me.
I read an article today in the online NY Times entitled, "For the Brain, Remembering Is Like Reliving." Without the scientific data or fancy degree in science, I could have written the article. I am typing Michael's journals into the computer to take with me to Italy. I'm hoping they will help my brain relive some of the memories and I will be inspired to write. Mentally, I don't think I am taking it in. I'm in such a hurry to get it all done before I leave and I am mechanically trying to decipher his handwriting. I'm not taking the time to understand the meaning behind his words.
But my body is remembering. I feel the burn between my shoulder blades and the dull ache in my bones. I feel wasted, even when I've done very little.
I didn't expect this to be easy. I expect it to be excruciating. So why am I doing it? Martyrdom? Masochism? I don't think it's either. First of all, I am giving myself plenty of room to breath, in Italy of all places, for 3 months! Surely that's not masochism. Second, I am writing this book for myself (if other's should come to enjoy it-great, but not the goal), a cathartic adventure of sorts.
According to the online Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the word Catharsis is New Latin from the Greek word katharsis, from katharein to cleanse and katharos, to purge. The fuller definition is "a purification or purgation of the emotions (as pity and fear) primarily through art; that brings about spiritual renewal or release from tension; elimination of a complex by bringing it to consciousness and affording it expression."
This is why I'm going to Italy to write "The Book." And I expect there will be a lot of tension before there is a release or renewal. The goal is not to escape, or move to Italy (as some of you are fantasizing about), or to find a husband (as some of you have feared). I hope that by bringing forward Michael's life and my experiences in it, that I will afford it the expression that will help me release and renew. Forgive me it I struggle through this process initially and take you along for the ride.
"You're a very lucky girl," a dear friend of mine keeps reminding me, and as I doubt myself along the way, it is a mantra that stirs me on.
5 comments:
Beautifully written, full of heart and soul. But most of all - could you use smaller words so I don't feel like I need to write a comment worthy of the NY Times?
I love you, miss you and am proud of you.
XX00
Sheri (the unstilled soul who would benefit greatly from self reflection but instead goes to law school)
No, I'm pretty sure it's masochism.
PS I don't know why the Intertubes is calling me Adqueen, it's Lyn here.
Congratulations on Finishing Law school and good luck on the Bar. I hope all is well.
For adqueen/Lyn... it could be a conflict between your account identity under blogger.com and google.com. Now that google owns blogger... who knows which identity it is identifying you by (that cannot be good grammar). Check both accounts. There is also the 'choose an identity' you can use when posting responses in the blog, where openID options are available.. maybe its pulling it from there?
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