Waiting For The Bus.
I don’t
mind sleeping through the night, or not getting the medicine together twice a
day, or mixing and weighing his formula recipe.
I don’t miss having songs by the Wiggles or Barney stuck in my head for
hours, or the endless laundry. Most of
the trappings of having a special needs child have fallen to the wayside in these
past sixteen months—except, it seems, for one.
Since
Isaac was almost four, we would wake up, make coffee, get the medicine and formula
together while the coffee was brewing, take the coffee and the medicine into
his room, give him his medicine, sip the coffee, get him dressed, load up his
chair with all that he would need for the day, take another sip, load him into
his chair, find him a movie to watch or maybe just bring him into the kitchen,
then the short wait for the bus to pull up in the alley, load him up and in and
he was gone. I would walk back up the
ramp and sit at the table.—One
boy off to school, the other who didn’t yet need to be woken up— and El and I would wait in the
kitchen, coffee cups in hand, reading the paper, or on our phones, or having a
conversation—like a button was pressed, or a bell had rung, and we were just
remembering to breathe, waiting for the next round to begin.
Sixteen
months later we still wait for the bus to pull up in our alley. Of course it doesn’t. There is no bus and hasn’t been one since January
19th, 2015. But we get up
early anyway, El takes a shower, I make coffee, and then we wait. We wait longer these days…stretching what
used to be ten or fifteen minutes into something closer to twenty, or even twenty-five.
Before
we had children, mornings were always designed to take the least amount of time. I could get
coffee, a shower, dressed and out of the house in half an hour or even less if
needed or if coffee was already made. Mornings
were about effective uses of time, where efficiency is defined by getting out the
door and out into the world.
I’m not
a morning person then or now. I don’t
yearn for the quiet of a house sleeping, or the dim-blue first-light-of-day
filtering through our kitchen window. I don’t get up early to write, or exercise, or
play guitar and if by chance I wake up at five a.m. I force myself to go back
to sleep. Why is it that of all the vestiges
I have shed in this new life, in all the ways my life has been made easier by
death, that this is the last thing I hold on to?
I know that
the bus isn’t coming.
But there
is this moment.
Where there
is coffee,
and I
pause.
and I
breathe.
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