![]() |
| January 2009 Pete Esvelt |
My brother Pete showed up in a dream a couple of months
ago. It was more than dreamlike in
realism. I mean, I can remember the
dialogue, which is unusual in my dreams.
He was just standing near a wall in a room with some other people, maybe
a barroom or a party. He looked
perfectly normal, and wore a slightly mischievous smile. I stared at him in disbelief, wondering if my
eyes were playing some kind of mean trick.
Finally finding my tongue, I said, "It's you. Isn't it?" He said, "Yes". I said, "But...you're dead." He said, "How's that working out for
you?" I guess I could have replied
a bit better, but I’m pretty
inarticulate in my dreams. I woke up not
feeling a bit disturbed by the interaction.
Now I can answer him, having thought a bit. In the time since I recall the precise
instant (though I was sleeping in the next room), I woke up to the realization
his soul had left his body, I can talk about it. Happiness began to come in gusts of warmth
like surprise winter guests, about a year later.
The tapes that rewound involuntarily with the most horrific images and
thoughts of guilt have quit, by and large.
I no longer awaken every day greeted by them. I can swing my feet to the floor from my bed each morning and put one in front of the other without feeling heroic in the effort. I can see the fog inside a bell jar and put
distance between myself and it because the warning signs are clear. Sometimes that exercise renders me insensitive
to others' pain but it saves me. The
bell jar Sylvia Plath writes about didn't magically disappear a year after the
deaths of my brother and mother who died ten weeks apart, leaving me without
any remaining immediate family. So now,
when I awaken with no cloud to fumble through before I face the
day, I'm breathing wonderfully fresh air.
The poison of depression didn't drift away in one fell swoop because of
this or that. It came and went and is
always dangerously near. I owe my recovery in large part to the individuals in my
communities who welcomed me when I was most in need; they were lifelines to
me. I set out deliberately to connect
with cousins, in-laws and friends, making long journeys in some cases to be
with them. I instinctively gravitated
toward those vital elements of my life as if they were water for my parched throat and I couldn't get enough in my extreme
neediness. The other element I needed
was simple activity. If I didn’t get
these feet from the bed to the ground and to then keep moving I knew the most
intense and seemingly natural impluse was to quit moving altogether. No breakfast.
No lunch. No work. No play.
It felt perfectly natural to distance myself from the world around
me. For around six months I felt I was operating through some sort of mind-altering substance. That would explain some of the
poison in the bell jar. Then I walked
around for a year and a half feeling
like surely everyone could see the embarrassing problem I had of a kind of
disablement, akin to a broken arm; I wasn’t all there. But I'm out of that jar. I'm even over the anger, which erupted with
such ferocious, instantaneous insanity I had no idea where it came from. I still don't know. I'm just grateful I still have some loved ones
who saw me through it all. The person I
am now, wouldn't have wanted to live with me then
Tomorrow will mark the third year since Pete died. It occurs to me that I can now memorialize
him with fondness free of the perpetual reviews of grim images surrounding
his long battle to the end. I suspect
that means I'm more or less past the PTSD.
I like to think of the mornings that he visited me when he was alive, as
if by some sort of time travel or channeling.
I'd lie in bed greeting the day with the awareness of him vivid in my
emotional well-being. He was simply
there, ever conscious in myself, my brother.
I'll never know if he shared those moments; sadly I never asked
him. They didn't even demand a response
from him; they were a more-than-usually realistic reminder of the ever-present part
of my existence he was. I think many of
us share an intimacy with siblings born within two years, that never departs
us, having shared so many hours of primal infant discovery. No other
experiences between people can compare to those powerful bonds. I wasn't close to Pete for most of my adult
life. So now, when I reflect on those
mysterious moments, I know I didn't expect communication from him and, indeed,
didn't really much need it. I just felt
his existence as one of the four walls around me that held my life, the others
being myself, my mother and husband. Now with
him gone I no longer feel that wall. I
began to realize my part in the four walls of his life a number of years before
he died, though. It became clear that my
visits on holidays were major landmarks in the seasons of each of his years. He always welcomed me, and in fact looked forward to seeing me months in advance. I
verified the power of that bond when he began to die, and confirmed it for the next 18
months. I began to call him daily, and
the links clicked back into place effortlessly with conversations that went on
and on. I just let him shoot the breeze
with whatever came to mind, starting with the words, "What's new with
you?". Each day until the last
seven, he had something to talk about, though he chose for the most part to
avoid his own mortality. Some days were
a bit harder to get the words moving but I wasn’t ready to quit trying, ever. He did a remarkable job of maintaining his
razor-sharp wit and for the most part, cheerful
demeanor through the inevitable indignities of a slowly-failing body. For those eighteen months I was his closest
friend, and I know for a fact that my phone calls lit up each day for him with some moments of warmth and companionship when he most needed it. From the distance of these 250
miles between here in Tacoma and his home in Spokane I knew I’d be hard-pressed to offer much better than simple
friendship. It didn’t feel to me as if
we had lost any time between us as we struck back up our fraternal bonds; the
words flowed as naturally as a fresh spring breeze. And he had no hesitation to expose me to the
rawest details of his condition when I visited, asking for intimate help when
he needed it. So I can honestly say we
never truly drifted apart those decades of our adult years. As much as I always knew him to be my one and
only brother he obviously always knew me to be his one and only sister.


No comments:
Post a Comment