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Thomas Cleary's avatar

Oddly enough I experienced a feeling very similar to what you’ve described but under totally different circumstances.

The city in which I live has become increasingly expensive and I had to take on a sometimes friend as a roommate to pay rent.

All went about average until one day, shortly after I had been in an accident, the roommate took me grocery shopping.

In the way there someone abruptly cut him off in traffic. His temper flared and before I knew it he was using both of us and the car as a block to prevent the other driver from getting ahead of us (somehow he’d maneuvered us past the motorist) and yelling back out the window at the other driver all while driving forward.

By this time I was agitated and told him tersely to watch where he was driving. He didn’t speak a word the rest of the time until we got home.

I could still sense the rage within him as I walked to my bedroom and shut the door. Suddenly I heard all manner of things being thrown at the door with quite a bit of smashing sounds, thuds and cursing.

A few of my books had been ripped up, a bottle of wine broken, glasses from the cupboard pushed to the floor and dishes demolished. He was out on the front steps, smoking.

When I asked him why he decided to destroy things he just laughed defiantly. “By the way, I threw all of your groceries in the garbage can.”

Not surprisingly we went our own ways. I hobbled through the rest of the lease, barely making ends meet but felt oddly at peace.

I found that I was best on my own but most importantly was that this experience had opened my eyes to the ephemeral nature of things.

Yes, it hurt that three books of some poetry I definitely admired were now history and that I could survive on less food than I thought but what I really took from the blow-up was that things, physical objects, were only important to me because I vested them with this significance.

In a way I have to thank that individual for giving me the opportunity to realize that the essentials in life are within and not outside of me. And, just as surprising, once I began living this newfound realization the universe (through my friends as well as through fortune) began returning those objects (in new forms).

I find myself now, in the autumn of my life, more ready to face disaster and even my own death with a much better sense of calm.

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Caroline Hadley's avatar

Love this poem and love your words and pictures.

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