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| Image credit: Photo by Express Monorail on Flickr Licensed under Creative Commons |
In the dream, I was driving on a highway laid out like silver thread between my home and the nearest big city. My husband was seated next to me, smiling, and I could feel the kids safely at home, laughing with their babysitter. It was just before sunset; the day's dying rays were golden on the water and the softly swaying dry grass as we approached the bridge.
My husband looked at me, and for a split second, I lost focus. I stopped looking at the road, and the car simply drifted serenely off the bridge and started plunging down, down before I knew we were in danger. We fell like Alice down the rabbit hole, falling for so long we seemed to hang suspended in the golden air. I felt like one often does feel in an accident: as if I were seeing everything in slow motion and if only my body would move as fast as my mind, I could do something to prevent the inevitable moment looming ahead. But the water waited unyielding below us. And I knew we were going to die at the end of that long fall. I had killed both of us in that momentary flicker of attention. My children were going to grow up without parents. I just hoped they would be asleep when the babysitter called and called the cell phones that would ring on without answer, wondering why we were so late.
I turned to Mark to say I was sorry for killing him; sorry that he was paying the price for my inattention. And he lookedsaidthought, "We all make mistakes, sometimes very bad ones." But he didn't blame me. He held out his hand and we sat, holding hands and falling, waiting for the impact that never came, as I woke with a start. I sat up, shivering, as the images flashed on my waking mind in the cold gray dawn, and I assigned the dream the moral: "I am feeling guilty for not paying enough attention, not being present enough, for my kids."
Irrational as I know it is, I have been terrified of driving that highway ever since. The dream was so vivid, that when I enter the stretch of road leading to the bridge I can see my dream self plunging off the side. If I hit an uneven stretch of pavement and the car jolts or swerves slightly, I feel my heart racing, my body taut with anxiety. I fear that at any minute, I might lose focus, lose control and lose everything. It only takes an instant to make a mistake from which there is no recovery.
I was driving that highway today, with my kids unusually occupied with drawing in the back seat, when I started to feel numb with panic thinking about the bridge. My kids' lives depended on me. Other drivers lives depended on me. And am I really to be trusted? My hand could slip on the steering wheel. Or jerk. Or freeze. What if I have a seizure? What if I fall asleep? What if I get a brain aneurysm? What if I suddenly become diabetic right here in the car and my blood sugar becomes unstable and I pass out? What if I panic so much I black out?
Of course, the only real problem was the panic, which was stubbornly refused to respond to either rational thought, meditation techniques or faith. I eyed the traffic, wondering where it might be safe to pull off and breathe, grumbling to myself, "I so need to talk to my doctor about anxiety meds. This is ridiculous. I can't function. What is really going on here? This isn't just about a stupid dream."
And my mind, as if relieved to have finally been pressed with a direct question, brought up an image of my destination: a park that formed a green oasis in the barren concrete, steel and glass of the city. We were meeting friends there, visiting from out of town. But eight years ago, on the day he hit bottom, my husband went on a different kind of visit there: a picnic to that park with one of his... What's the word for it? Lovers seems too intimate, mistresses too urbane, and acting out partners, too sterile. In any case, they met. The picnic was the appetizer, the foreplay, the prelude, the rising anticipation. Rolling the food on their tongues, then wiping their lips, packing the remains and walking, toward her house, her bed. I can see the way his hand slipped down the small of her back as she pulled him close under a tree for a kiss. Right there in the park. For anyone to see.
We were going to drive past the street to her old house on the way to the park. We were driving on the highway Mark had traveled, secretly, back and forth, from her house to our own. Was this panic -- over this highway, over loss, over lack of control, over mistakes from which there is no recovery -- not about the dream but a twisted response to past trauma? Was the dream, perhaps, not really about quite what I thought it was either? Those thoughts washed through me like water, like crystal clear liquid truth, taking the panic and the looming shadow of future annihilation away with them, leaving me staring at an old scar, still sometimes tender to the touch.

Thank you for writing again. I have missed your voice, which eases my own journey. I was thinking, maybe when you are not in the mood to be writing, you could do a re-post of one of your favorites, maybe a seasonal or something?
ReplyDeleteIt's hard, this living in the co-existence of wisdom we now have that we all make mistakes, and the sting of old scars. Again, thanks for sharing.
The trauma never seems to go away. It shows up in the most unlikely of places and in the most likely places. It haunts our dreams and becomes our waking nightmare. I've had one really delightful dream and every time I drive up that stretch of highway, I replay the dream in my head. Wrote about it here: I live for that happy moment when my day is all wonky and I'm driving home from running even more errands.
ReplyDeleteI love you. I know some of those places and my blood runs cold just thinking about them, but you have the healthiest approach to handling those traumatic moments of anyone I've ever met. Not perfect, but healthy enough to see you through.
If it's okay, I'd like to kiss your boo-boo and give you a (((hug))). I think Mommy kisses are magical even if the one being attended to is not a child.
A parting thought from one of my favorite poets, Oscar Wilde: “A dreamer is one who can only find his way by moonlight, and his punishment is that he sees the dawn before the rest of the world.”
I'd like to add that catching the first blush of sunrise always seems to be the day's blessing upon me. But Oscar Wilde was secretly a vampire and had to be home b4 daylight or he'd be in trouble for his evening activities. ;)
Smooches!!
-Sophie
The trauma never seems to go away. It shows up in the most unlikely of places and in the most likely places. It haunts our dreams and becomes our waking nightmare. I've had one really delightful dream and every time I drive up that stretch of highway, I replay the dream in my head. Wrote about it at As Is: A Nocturnal Musical a long time ago on my blog: I live for that happy moment when my day is all wonky and I'm driving home from running even more errands. I see that small expanse of highway and know of the possibilities that could occur there.
ReplyDeleteI love you. I know some of those places and my blood runs cold just thinking about them, but you have the healthiest approach to handling those traumatic moments of anyone I've ever met. Not perfect, but healthy enough to see you through.
If it's okay, I'd like to kiss your boo-boo and give you a (((hug))). I think Mommy kisses are magical even if the one being attended to is not a child.
A parting thought from one of my favorite poets, Oscar Wilde: “A dreamer is one who can only find his way by moonlight, and his punishment is that he sees the dawn before the rest of the world.”
I'd like to add that catching the first blush of sunrise always seems to be the day's blessing upon me. But Oscar Wilde was secretly a vampire and had to be home b4 daylight or he'd be in trouble for his evening activities.
Smooches!!
-Sophie
I love this post. Those flashes of insight are so startling and freeing. I wonder if the scars will ever cease to be tender. I hope so, but in a way maybe I hope not. Sometimes it feels too easy, now that the scars are not raw and bleeding, to slip back into an existence that is less conscious. That little shock of pain grounds me in the life that I have, reminds me of things I don't want to face, giving me the opportunity to face life as it is once again. I am thankful for that in a way, because as good as it seemed and felt before, now I know I'm strong enough to stay with fear and pain like a palm tree in a storm. I treasure that, and my tender scars keep me connected with that strength in some way.
ReplyDeleteWow, MPJ. I feel this post down to my bones. It's amazing that you've just figured out what that dream really meant, especially since you seem to be working a really active recovery. Trauma is really something. Sometimes I wonder if I'll have flare-ups when I'm 90. I sure hope its resolved by then.
ReplyDelete