Monday, December 29, 2014

CHAPTER NINETEEN: White Balloons

SHE IS
…two years behind the kids she
Graduated high school with and
While they will finish college this year
And face—for the first time—the real world
She has already seen it.
She has haunted hospital corridors and
Scrambled eggs for her younger brother and
Kept the home fires burning while
One parent kept falling down and
The other kept picking him up.
She is not invincible, and sometimes she cries
Because life is not fair.
But unlike her peers who are ensconced being
Ivy-covered walls and plodding through classics on
Ancient French poetry and bio-physics

She knows it.

APRIL 23, 2001. 4 PM.
            With a few tears and a lot of prayer, Bonnie and Nicholas have decided to be “just friends.” It was, they both content, “almost right.” With two such lovely young people, both committed to God and His plans for their lives, one wonders why it couldn't have worked. What was it that was missing, keeping them from filling the missing pieces?
            “Something,” Bonnie has said early on in the relationship, “just isn't there.”
            They tried to make it work, tried to fall in love with each other. The best they could do was genuine affection. It is more, of course, than a lot of people ever manage to have. But for these two young people, it is just not enough. They deserve head-over-heels, fly-me-to-the-mood, heart palpitations and sweaty palms love. And someday they will find it. They are not willing to settle for less than what they know God has to offer them. They each know that God has designed someone out there especially for them. They’re willing to wait.
            Good for them. Good that they recognized that all the things that were right with the relationship did not make up for what was wrong. Good that they think they can still maintain a friendship. They still laugh together, but it is slightly hollow. However much they try to put a good face on it, it is still a loss. And our lives seem to be continually full of losses.
            I, too, feel the loss. I am grateful to Nicholas, who entered our lives with a toolbox in his hands. In the few months he and Bonnie dated, he installed light fixtures in the basement and the foyer, rewired the outlets in the house, and installed a new bathroom floor. Not only have his repairs strengthened my house, but they have strengthened my daughter as well. The last two years saw her spending far too much time in hospital rooms and not enough time being young. Nicholas helped her find the twenty-something inside herself again.
            Yet even as my daughter packs Nicholas into a memory corner of her heart and tries to move on, I sense in myself a sadness that is out of keeping with such a commonplace occurrence. Daughters break up with boyfriends all the time. I cannot seem to shake the notion that my daughter is doomed to seek out the wrong young men, always believing that she can somehow remake them. Nicholas, for all his gentleness, had problems with anxiety and hyperactivity. And the boy she dated just before Nicholas seemed always on the edge of despair.
            “Don’t you know any normal boys?” I ask Bonnie.
            “And,” she counters, “how would a normal boy fit in around here?”
            She is right, of course. Our lives have been off-balance for so long that we wouldn't know normal if it knocked on our door. I take a long look at my daughter. She is twenty-two and lovely. She has a tender heart and a love for God. Her smile lights up every freckle on her face and her blue eyes sparkle with delight. Her gregarious personality attracts people to her. Some of them seem to be the wrong sort of people. Her brothers, I tell her, always brought home the Lost Boys. She feels the need to date them. Somehow, she thinks she can save the world.
            She reminds me too much of me.
MAY 2, 2001. 9AM.
            I float, a round, white balloon drifting towards the sky and the sun, slowly breathing in and out. Each breath is labored as I try to focus on my lungs. I can still feel the congestion in my chest and hear it in the rasp of my voice. An all engulfing tiredness descends on me in the middle of the day, tempting me to close my eyes even as I struggle through the last class of the afternoon. I would love to give in to it, allowing my limbs to succumb and move no more, my brain to shut down and doze for a while. Instead, I keep floating in my white balloon existence, struggling to keep both feet on the ground when what I really want is to be lifted into the air and carried away on a current, suspended above the green earth.
            Pneumonia, the doctor said when I finally gave into my daughter’s pleading and went. I stayed home for a few days, melting into my pillows but not really resting. Ron paces the floors. The few hours he is able to work each day do not really occupy him much and he asks me constant questions about going to school, setting goals, becoming a “better person.” I am weary enough without his interference. I return to school, still in my balloon state, glad to be floating away from Ron.
            It is not wholly unpleasant, being a white balloon. Nothing—no worries or cares or injuries—quite breaks through the haze. I can fall asleep at the blink of an eyelid, saving precious time usually spent tossing and turning while I wrestle with the problems of the world. Floating white balloons have no problems, except sharp points, of course. These seem easy enough to avoid as I hang in the air.
            My thoughts in this white haze are not always coherent, but they are always gentle. Warm sunshine. Pink roses. Delicate china teacups. With each rise and fall of my congested lungs comes an image of rainbows and tulips, dancing just at the edge of my mind.
            What am I on, wonders my daughter. Nothing. I stopped taking the antibiotic days ago because it made me feel out of control. Or maybe it was the fever that did it. No matter. White balloons have no fevers.
            Eventually, I know, I will need to come down to earth again. Even now, harbingers of disaster lurk on the horizon. Nicholas has taken to calling every night and continually asks Bonnie if she likes him. If she says yes, he laughs and tells her she is weird. When I land again, I will probably find Nicholas’ behavior annoying. I will try to remember that he is both dyslexic and ADHD. Somewhere in the past few days, my mind recalls glancing at an article on autism and the human brain and other learning disabilities. But such deep thoughts are above my capabilities right now. Ron is experiencing his own anxiety problems. Dennis phoned yesterday to say that he is getting laid off and will need some help with the rent money. The stress is just waiting for me, piling up and trying to reach me on my balloon voyage.
            Avoid sharp points, I keep telling myself. Just keep floating.
MAY 23, 2001. 8 AM.
            “Eleven days” is now written on my chalkboard. Am I anxious and eager for the school year to end? I am not fully recovered from my bout with pneumonia. I still feel jet-lagged and have trouble breathing. What I need, I tell myself, is a week in the sun, basking on the beach at Rehoboth and renewing myself in childhood memories. Chances are good that I will not get it. Something always interferes with my escape attempts. Dennis needs help filling out his unemployment forms and is worried about making ends meet. I seem to find it easy to place my oldest son in God’s hands, but I cannot do it with Bonnie. I continue to feel the loss of Nicholas and know that I am too wrapped up her life. But I do not know how to extricate myself.
            Bonnie, Allen, and I are the survivors of the Titanic. We share bonds that no one else does. Dennis, beloved child, was more peripheral to the events of the last two years. I often think I have neglected Allen these past few months, focusing on my daughter. He says he understands. “You've been sick, Mom,” he says. His Mother’s Day card to me was so sweet! It said that he often though he’d like to be as “smart as you are. But that’s way too much trouble!” The card ended with, “Good thing I’ll always have you to help me.”
            I need to find time to contact the family counselor that Margaret recommended. I have waited too long already, but white floating balloons do not need to see therapists. I feel like we are all in a state of limbo. I find myself bursting into tears and not being able to name a cause. Last night a great sadness overwhelmed me and I could not help but cry. It was all over just as quickly, but I know that I need to find someone to talk to. I have two weeks left of school and then graduate classes this summer. I cannot fall apart now.
            Is it all just stress and exhaustion? I get angry at minor things. I seem to always be mad at Ron. I obsess about Bonnie. I've become resentful of the choices I have needed to make for my family, choices that may not have been right for me.
            I am both confused by and angry at Ron. He has turned my life upside down for so long! Each day when I drag my weary self home, he and Allen are plunked down in front of the TV, Why isn't the laundry done or dinner started? Why aren't they at the park or out back playing basketball? But I feel guilty if I complain and Ron becomes defensive. He honestly thinks that doing the dishes and the laundry once a week makes him an exemplary husband! Yesterday I yelled at him for napping on the deck after sitting on the couch all afternoon.
            Lord, I need help. I recognize this. Send someone, Father, someone who can help me. I am so used to being in control, but now I cannot control either my emotions or my thoughts.
            What is wrong with me?

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