Archive for the ‘mental illness’ tag
when her heart broke
I have always felt ill-equipped intellectually to read poetry. Perhaps I hadn’t enough life experience or the right frame of mind to appreciate what a smart man so simply explained to me is “just concentrated prose.”
And so I have read a bit of poetry recently.
“Music Swims Back to Me” immediately took me to a time my mother broke into a million pieces. My father’s mother, my beloved grandmother, the only mother figure my own mother knew, died. We were all distraught. She was the most loving, funny, silly, sweet person all of us knew. My mom had a horrible mother. My grandmother took my mother in when she was 17, cared for her, and loved her as her own for 30 years.
So, when my grandmother died, my mom left us for months.
She was with us physically, but so far gone emotionally, we had no idea what to do. Most attempts to coax her out into the world were met with anger, lashing out, screaming, complete and utter despair-filled, fetal position on the floor, sobbing. She checked out of life.
She remembers little of this now, many years later, long-recovered from this break. This wasn’t the first time my mother exited reality for the broken place in her mind. Her recollection is disjointed, makes little sense. Yet she remembers details so tiny and specific, I often think she created them in her mind to soothe herself: the exact shape of clouds on a particular day; music on the radio when we would go for drives; a book I suggested to her. These are the sort of details she would never, ever remember under normal circumstances.
Having had my own tortured mental breaks in my life, I know how important these tiny, pleasant bits are. What swims back to you when you are broken is what keeps you, in the sane times, remembering why you never want to go back again if you can help it.
