On missing something you never had…

On missing something you never had…

cute-baby-shoes-dress-carpet-photography-hd-wallpaper-694x417I planned you. Oh, how I planned you. I dreamt about you everyday, for years. Your little face plastered the walls of my mind. You would have your father’s smile and my eyes, and eyelashes for days.

In my mind, I would hold you tight to me, and you would bury your face in the crook of my neck. I would kiss the top of your head. I imagined every facet of your personality and life. Your laugh filled my dreams.

Every month, I would dream and hope and pray. Every month I would wait. Wait for what I longed for. Some sign that I might meet you someday soon. My little love.

Then every month my body would say, “No, dear. Not just yet.” I would grieve. Oh, how I would grieve. My heart would break in a way I didn’t yet know it could. I thought I had known heartache until then, until I longed for you.

But then I learned a new grief. It’s happened three times now. My body ached and the pain mirrored the grief in my heart, and I knew you had almost made it. I had, for just a moment, had that glimmer of hope. Then you were gone. My little love, and it felt as if my heart had left with you.

My precious darling. Everyday my thoughts wander to you and I pray that I will see you soon. Some sweet day, my sweet love.

On saving the last dance…

On saving the last dance…

6920158-Dancing-Feet-0Sixteen years old, in the middle of my high school gym. The lights are low. A mirrored disco ball reflects the multicolored lights of a low-cost DJ. The lights caress every surface of this homecoming dance. We are the only two people on the glossy, wooden basketball court. My red, satin dress ripples around me. My tiara is pinned securely into my hair. All eyes are on us.

Nineteen and in the arms of a handsome young man with warm brown eyes and dark chestnut hair that is always perfectly messy. We circle the dance floor. I rest my head on his chest and I feel his chin settle into my hair. It is my dear friend’s wedding, but it might as well be ours. We are so in love and oblivious to anything else. His hand is on the small of my back and mine is wrapped around his neck, toying with his hair. Everything is perfect. For us, time has stopped.

Twenty-two. Our first dance as man and wife. My long white, satin gown clings to my slender frame. My veil cascades down my back and trails my movement. I gaze up at this man I plan to spend the rest of my life with and his blue eyes are locked with mine. They promise me forever.

Twenty-four. He spins me around the dusty floor of the crowded honky tonk. Indecipherable country music blares overhead and we laugh together. The tequila warms our blood and I am dizzy. This is, unknowingly, our last dance as husband and wife.

Twenty-six and I’m at my new sister-in-law’s wedding. My husband’s brown eyes light up as we dance for hours and hours. My feet are aching and my heart is longing for home, but goodness we dance well together. We anticipate each other’s every move. Spin. Turn. Dip. Turn. Spin. Over and over, one after the other. Those around us may be casting lots over how long our whirlwind marriage may last, but we do this well and everyone around us knows it.

Twenty-eight. His gorgeous green eyes gaze into mine. His broad shoulders tower over my small frame, exaggerated by the epaulettes of his pilot’s uniform. His scent is intoxicating as we slow dance together, a prelude to an adventure.

Twenty nine. He’s back in town. It’s been sometime since I saw him last. We decide to meet for a drink or two. We sit and chat, laugh. For a moment it’s almost like old times. Crazy by Patsy Cline comes on the jukebox and he holds his hand out to me. “One last dance, for old time’s sake?” I hesitate for a moment before taking his hand and allowing him to lead me to the tiny dance floor in the darkened pub. He pulls me close and it feels just like it used to. We always danced so well together. This was one of the only things that was ever easy for us. It feels so good, but as quickly as it started, the song ends. Just like us.

Each of these moments ended. In the end we all slowed down, took a final spin, and let go. I’m still saving the last dance for the one that won’t.

On one last time…

On one last time…

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“When the night has come and the land is dark and the moon is the only light we’ll see.”

This night, this last night. They both were trying their best to memorize every moment. They had had a last night before, but like most last nights, it was wasted. Like most last anything, they didn’t know just what it was, and like most lasts they let it slip through their hands. Unnoticed. Unappreciated. It was not until long after the moment had past, that either of them realized just what had gone. It was not until after that their mind’s eye had tried to reclaim it. Tonight though, the fates had been kind. The fates had decided to give them one more last and they knew it. They knew exactly what this was and they were going to treasure every moment. Tonight they would dance and love and laugh and hold and kiss with the moon as their spotlight and the summer night as their stage.

“No I won’t be afraid, no I won’t be afraid. Just as long as you stand, stand by me.”

They also knew what was to come. All of the lonely nights, all of the days not lived. All of the dreams not had, and all of the never mores and never wouldbe’s. They knew because they already had endured all the lasts and because of that there was an unspoken agreement that there was just now. No tomorrow. No what if. Just now. Because if they gave into the what if’s, the maybes this would be gone. They would be ripped from this gift.

“If the sky that we look upon should tumble and fall and the mountains should crumble to the sea…”

Nothing mattered, but this. This moment. This gift. Nothing mattered but this last time they would ever feel their skin against one another’s. The world could end around them and nothing, not one thing could tear their eyes from one another’s or their hands away.

“ I won’t cry, I won’t cry, no I won’t shed a tear. Just as long as you stand, stand by me.”

On magic and love…

On magic and love…

I remember the moment I realized that I no longer knew how to pretend. I was around six or seven, I suppose. Not quite in the double digits. Of that I am sure. My friends and I were playing Peter Pan. I was supposed to be Wendy. This was one of my very favorite games. Brave and dashing Peter. Evil, but alluring Captain Hook (yes, even then there was a certain mystique to the bad boys, but we shall discuss that later). Lost Boys who need a mother, and Wendy who is more than happy to take up the role. Peter, the boy she loves who she is doomed to never really have. In hindsight, this all set the tone for my existence (again, a discussion for another day).

Not one week earlier this game made complete sense. I loved to lose myself in this world. It was like second nature. I could step in and out of that fantasy land seamlessly. The magic was real. Tangible. It felt so very right.

This day, however, everything changed. This is the moment I began to grow up. I felt it when it happened. The same thing that made perfect sense one week ago now felt completely and utterly absurd. Embarrassing almost. I can remember that even in my child’s mind I was heartbroken over this. Even then I understood, on some level, that this was the end of an era. The last fleeting moments of pretend, of magic and I didn’t know how to undo it. To this very day, I remember exactly how it felt. Like being in a wonderful dream and being doused with a bucket of cold water. It hurt.

I have since spent an inordinate amount of time, unsuccessfully, attempting to recapture those magical moments. Trying to get back to that magical place. The place where dreams come true, there is a prince for every princess, and you could step off of a windowsill and fly simply on the power of a happy thought. Most of these attempts end in the abrupt and painful crash back to reality where people let you down, heartbreak can be crippling, and there is no White Knight.

It has been my experience that the closest anyone ever gets to reaching that place again, is when they are lucky enough to fall in love. It’s like, for that moment, the door that stands between dark, grey reality and glittering, shining magic is unlocked and stands ajar, allowing a brief glimpse into that promising place. For a moment we feel invincible, as though nothing could possibly pull you down. We feel we can once again fly on the power of this wonderfully happy thought. Anything and everything is possible, if we could just get to that door and squeeze through to the other side.

We reach for the knob. Strain.

I think a handful of us are just privileged enough to stumble forward and make it. We have all heard of those few epic loves. Perhaps it was your great-grand parents or an aunt and uncle whom you adored. They struggled and fought and made it to the door.

I think the rest of us tend to fall just short of making it there. The love fractures somehow and we trip and the door slams shut in our faces. Or perhaps it was never love to begin with, just reaching for the wrong door. It looked so very much like the one you remembered from when you were little.

Not many of us make it to the door.  After trying so hard one too many times, we grow weary of it slamming shut. The crash, as it latches, is an assault on our senses. Some of us stop trying to reach it all together. It hurts too much.

I hope someday I reach that door. I hope that I find that prince that will help me find it again and together we will both make it back to that wonderful place. It gets harder and harder to remember what it looks like though. Harder to remember the feel of the wind in my hair as I fly over the Never Land. Harder to convince myself I ever saw the door at all.