Dear Jared,
It’s been seven years since you killed yourself. This past
year has been emotionally tougher for me than the past few, and I have
struggled with keeping my own life, so deciding how to mark this seventh
anniversary has proven more than a bit difficult. I have spent hours staring at
blank paper with tears in my eyes and heavy blood in my heart, sitting in the
library, at the cabin, in bed, and in parking lots, wondering what I could
possibly write that would make sense of everything I feel, persuade others to
get help before they abandon all hope, and relieve some small measure of the
mighty grief and pressing guilt that plague me to this day.
I considered writing a piece on the things I have learned
over the past seven years about suicide and its impact on survivors, but
everything I wrote sounded selfish and insensitive. For a few days I considered
recounting my own emotional struggles over the past several months, but again,
selfish and insensitive, with a touch of melodrama. I thought I’d write a short
story about searching the shallow waters of the Lamprey river for your James
Dean watch, the one that fell off your wrist during one of our canoeing
adventures, but I found myself lost and alone in a canoe made for two, riding a
tidal river of memories and paddling without success against a thick and salty
current of regret.
I was told in therapy a long time ago that I would one day
be angry with you, and that only then would I be finished mourning your loss
and be able to move on with my life. A week or so ago I fell apart and wondered
if that time had come. I spent some time alone in the woods, recklessly
chopping down tall trees, shooting invisible targets with Grandpa Bond’s
shotgun, and driving higher and higher into the thinning air on roads and
trails that were not meant for careless drivers.
But I’m not angry with you, not yet. Maybe it would close
some doors if I were, but for now they remain open, and I suppose that I am
glad, because inside those rooms I can sit and visit the rawest of my emotions,
the ones that remind me I am alive. In recent weeks I have caught myself seeking
sensory overloads. Standing naked and sweating in the hot sun, banging my head
against my fist, and staying awake until my head hurts have provided stark
reminders of what it is to be alive, and a strange, cooling relief from
everything burning inside of me.
Don’t fret and worry yourself over my situation, however;
these frantic moments are few and far between. I have Elizabeth and the kids,
and with them in my life I remain a fair distance away from that dark line, the
one that you stepped over, the one that you crossed and kept walking away from
until you were lost into a place from which you couldn’t make your way back. If
only you had found someone like Elizabeth, someone to cling to, someone who you
couldn’t bear to leave behind…
So, the kids are good…
Caleb is determined to write professionally, and that makes
me smile. It helps that he is blessed with talent, more than I ever possessed
at his age. He will improve with time, experience, and practice, and the world
will know his name for it. He talks about you a lot, telling me what he
remembers about you, and stories about my life after you died, but from his
perspective. Caleb inherited so many of your mannerisms and ways of thought
that I sometimes have to gulp at the air around me when I see you in him. I
don’t think he minds when I call him by your name, a mistake I have made often,
because he loves you, and because he know that his resemblance to you is that
strong.
Hannah is a can of gas thrown on a gas-fueled fire, with gas
raining down on it from a gas cloud above; she can’t stop, she won’t stop, and
the world better stay out of her way. She won’t be completely happy until she
is eating fruit and doing yoga in Bali, and I hope to someday visit her there
and try my hand at both. A couple of weeks ago I shaved her head (at her
request), and she looks beautiful. Being an independent teenager, she doesn’t allow
much physical contact, and the time spent with my hands on her head and my
fingers tangled in her long hair was like water to a withered sprig. She is so
much like me that I feel a heavy guilt to think that I may have cursed her
future, but I know that she will do better than I ever will at life.
Solomon is my sea anchor, stabilizing my worn and swaying
vessel in white-capped stormy seas. The kid makes me laugh and pulls my lips
into a wide smile on even the darkest days. He has a quick wit to accompany his
scampy charm, and is loved by anyone who gets to know him, except for his
school principal, for whom the boy has little if any respect. Solomon has
smooth criminal moves fueled by a confidence that I would kill for, and yet he
lacks any hint of pride or malice in his heart. He draws, he writes, he dances,
he loves, and he jokes, all of them well, and I can’t wait for the world stage
to throw wide its curtains for his one man show. Fortunately for me, he has
made a conscious decision to stay young for the time being.
Elizabeth misses you. She is soft and quiet about you, holding
her Jared moments close to her chest. I often wonder what my life would have
been like had I embraced you without conditions from the moment I met you, the
way she did. I admit to being guilty of stealing the limelight when it comes to
grief over your loss, but she has never once accused me of being selfish in my
emotional hijackings. She is patient with me, believes in me, and has
permanently hitched her wagon to my sad, stubborn, aimless and weather-beaten
mule, expecting a sudden strengthening of muscle followed by a frightening
burst of speed towards the starting line of success. Her confidence in me fuels
my greatest fear, which is that I will let her down.
As for the world, it marches on in your absence. Technology
is outpacing thought, greed has all but broken the spine of necessity, and discussion
is losing ground to contention. I love so much about this world and all it
offers, but a greater and greater part of me wishes I had long ago followed my
teenage dream of heading into the Alaskan wilderness to homestead. I hope that
I have succeeded in teaching the kids (and in the process remind myself) that
in the end, no amount of wealth, gadgets, knowledge, faith, or possessions will
be counted when it comes time to determine whether you were a good person or
bad.
I wish you were here to see the happier moments and share in
the bouts of laughter when they come, because on most days they outnumber the
sad. But you aren’t, so I will do my best to live well until we meet again.
Fortunately, I am blessed to have a small but able crew that is willing to push
me forward through the storms and the darkness. I will be forever sorry that I
could not, that I did not, that I would not, do the same for you. It is my
great regret, and I cannot truly make amends for it. Perhaps the best thing I
can do is to find some measure of anger towards you in this life, so that our
next time around can be as sweet, fun, loving, and thrilling as the first one
should have been.
Tonight I will spend some time up in the mountains, hoping
to see the bear that has taken to visiting the cabin in search of something
sweet to eat. I spent a few nights up there alone this week, and I watched him
the other evening as he lumbered through the green. I felt no fear as he came
closer to me, only a reverent thrill at seeing him in his wild habitat. Free
from any other care but that of achieving the happiness that would come from
filling his belly, his innocence reminded me of your simple and sensitive desire
to be nothing more than happy, filled with love from others.
This letter has been a bit heavy, and I don’t know how to
end it, other than to say that I wish things were different. I wish I was
writing you about our upcoming road trip through the southwest, and how we are
going to chase tumbleweeds, climb colored mountains, and meet weirdos in
strange and beautiful places.
But things are not different, and they never will be.
You know what? That kinda makes me angry…
Your love is so clear. Your ideas so succinct. "Technology is outpacing thought, greed has all but broken the spine of necessity, and discussion is losing ground to contention. I love so much about this world and all it offers..." You're grieving. We are many of us grieving. It's such a mixed up, out of whack world when humans gather and judge. And grieving is not succinct.
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