Monday, June 3, 2013

Right Where I Am: One Year, Two Months


Yesterday when I came back to my house after working on Balthazar’s memoir at the coffee shop, I crossed the busy thoroughfare we live on and climbed the set of concrete steps that leads from the sidewalk to our front yard. On the mottled, peeling steps of the front porch I found a small Christmas stocking. Written on the white trim, in what looked like pencil, was a faded letter B.

December would have been Balthazar’s first Christmas. We bought a snowy owl Christmas ornament that functioned as his avatar, took a picture of Jasper next to it and sent it as our Christmas card.  But we didn’t hang a stocking for him; that would have felt weird. I had never seen this item before. When I say the stocking was small, I mean it was baby-sized. Also, it’s June.

I picked up the stocking and carried it to the side yard, where my husband was weed whacking.

“What the fuck is this?” I asked, holding it up.

“I found it when I was clearing out the front,” he said. “You know how much trash gets thrown in there.”

It took him a second to realize what I was saying. “Oh,” he said. “I hadn’t even thought of that.”
I assumed that was why he left it for me, because he thought it was as odd as I did. But he had just tossed it on the porch as an interim step before taking it down to the trash bin.

I’ve said it before: I don’t believe in signs. And what would his message even be? “Mom, I’m here. Give me some candy?” I don’t want to make too much of it, because I am putting in a constant, daily effort not to be a crazy person. From little tokens left on the porch it’s a hop skip and a jump to séances in the dining room with Madame Blavatsky rapping on the table.

I guess what I’m saying is that Balthazar is always around, and in everything, from the book I’m writing to the trash in the yard. That’s as true now as it was the last time I wrote a check-in piece like this, almost one year ago.


7 comments:

  1. Wow. This is just...chilling and bizarre and beautiful.

    But it's signs like this that I look for and hold onto. How strange and wonderful at the same exact time. ♥

    ReplyDelete
  2. He is around...in your heart, on the wind, in the sunshine. And a little bitty stocking. Sending love and remembering Balthazar <3

    ReplyDelete
  3. What a story. Sometimes things come to us
    Remembering Balthazar with you

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love Balthazar's snowy owl ornament and your description of his little stocking.

    I find that I have to give myself a good mental shake from time to time, to keep myself away from seances and the like. But, in truth, they are always around. My daughter is still a part of my family and my life although it is not the role that I would have liked her to play. I'd picked out something a little less. . . . ghostly? But yet, there is she is. And there is a comfort in that. And things that might or might not be signs.

    Thank you for this beautiful post.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I don't believe in signs either, but sometimes I will see something that seems sign-like to me and it is a disappointment, often a profound one, to remind myself that I don't believe in signs. I am beginning to wonder if maybe I should just give in to them, take all the comfort they can offer.

    My gone girl is always around and in everything, too. That is a comfort, though comfort of a strange kind.

    Thank you for sharing Balthazar and your experience.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I apologize to the person who commented on June 24: I accidentally deleted your comment! I enjoyed reading it and it's nice to know I'm not the only crazy one.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I wish that none of us had to live in a world without our child/children. Sending hope and hugs to you and Balthazar.

    ReplyDelete