Relativity
18 July 2019 | Theme: Time | 3-Minute Read | Listen
I awoke at 3:00 a.m. on Valentine’s Day, a few days after reading Carlo Rovelli’s The Order of Time. In my half-asleep state, the mind-twisting concepts of Time from the book intermingled with images of my father; they demanded to be written down. “Now?” I said aloud to my muse, greedy for more sleep. But the images were compelling, so I reached for my laptop (if I had to write this down, there was no way I was going to have to decipher my handwriting later).
For a solid hour, I sat up in bed remembering, typing, weeping. In my memories of childhood, the images appeared in crisp black-and-white, but as I approached the hours near my father’s dying, I saw shades of gray. Neither here nor there. No longer of this world, but not yet departed. A state of liminality.
Later in the day, I would inadvertently delete the poem my muse had guided me to write, but I was able to conjure up most of it again. In honor of my father, whose 97th birthday will be Sunday, I share it with you now, Dear Reader:
Relativity
Time moves strangely
In the nursing home,
Bending, curving, slowing
Around the gravity
Of my father’s dying.
I sit in the stillness,
Watch his graying face,
Feed him ice chips.
He studies me, then says
With a conspirator’s wink,
“I think I can beat this.”
I wisecrack through tears,
“The House has the advantage, Dad.”
He sinks into his pillows,
Draws a long breath and muses,
“Yes, the House always wins.”
Time twists and morphs,
Spinning wildly backward
Until I am a little girl
Holding his hands,
My white Mary Janes
On his black dress Oxfords
As he teaches me to waltz
At the daddy-daughter dance.
Time stands still in his eyes
As he smiles down at me,
My face gazing up at his.
I will always be
His Belle of the Ball.
In another instant
I am sixteen, and my father
Sits in the passenger seat,
Wordless as I stomp the brake
To avoid hitting a tree.
“Dad, I’m so sorry!”
I panic, “What do I do?”
He nods and says calmly,
“Now put it in reverse…”
Quivering like heat
Rising from a highway,
Time shimmers, then parts—
I stand in my white dress,
He in the only tux
He has ever worn.
I take his arm
As he whispers words
That make me laugh and cry
As we step down the aisle.
Through a tiny wormhole
We emerge in the NICU
Where he holds my newborn preemie.
I have never seen him
Look so terrified,
As if his large, gentle hands
Might break this fragile creature.
Again, Time telescopes until
I am back at his bedside
Stroking his aging arm.
Nearly fifty million minutes
Have been his to hold,
But now he is tired,
His body yielding, though
His mind wants to linger
Just one more day,
One more hour.
So hard to let go
Of a life well lived.
“It’s all right, Dad,” I sigh.
“You’ve played a great hand.
But it’s OK to fold.”
His eyes are closed,
But in the gray light
He smiles for me
One last time.
Until next time,
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