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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Anticipating the Launch



I stand on the back porch looking up at the southern stars, watching lazy traces of comet dust flaring across the sky.  I remember the singular appearance of Haley's Comet in my lifetime, the year my Nana died.  I ponder the content of a life, singular events in context.  The dog alternately paces, then sits, then paces beside me, waiting for another flash of a laser pointer. 

I listen to the distant rhythmic surf.  There is no wind, and so on this night the sound travels to my ear from the more distant and rocky Cable Bay rather than sandy Taipa Beach.  I have lately been overcome, weeping silently day after day, projecting forward past another singular event rushing up to meet me, my daughter leaving for university.  Dialectical synthesis eludes me, wondering how I will bear her departure yet also knowing that I will.

An owl calls, another responds, my ears triangulate their approximate positions.  The dog paces, sits.  Another meteor trails across the sky.  Why do I not bring her out with me to share it with me?  Have there been, can there ever be, enough walks, talks, moments spent together on the back porch watching bits of comet tail burn in the atmosphere? 

Is this the loss I anticipate?  That I will not be able to casually access her lambent presence?  My opportunities for a goodnight hug, an after-dinner movie, a conversation about the day just past or the day to come, will be limited.  To this point in our lives, she has been as available to me as a sky strewn with stars, occluded only by an occasional and impermanent veil of clouds.  But the future --  our future interactions will be akin to these falling stars, fiery traces of star dust.