Storytime.
Once upon a time there was a little girl with a little curl right in the middle of her forehead. This is a part of her tale very few know. She had 13 brothers and sisters, she the 10th in that row. And yet the only child from the coupling of parents and certainly raised alone. Words like half and step step between them see and none of them came with her each time she had to leave.
There are angels who flew in and out of life each choosing to include she: mothers, sisters, brothers and one who once made her his wife.
The Mother did chase, for years after Daddy’s escape. He chose to steal what Mother’s body did created. His fear overtook logic then logic hid love, the burden too much for a man on the run. Boarding schools and hotel rooms became more familiar than any homeland and though that man was her hero he kept downcast eyes with zero knowing of what it means to leave a baby all on her own.
She was so very small.
Country to country, bed to bed the little one’s scenery shifted and bled and shifted again into the unknown. Decade to decade, no solid ground.
And yet
she learned
to surf
the sky.
There is grief there but also magic here as she claims the true nature of a Warrior. That troubadour's stance became a traveling musician like the Gods were preparing for war.
Dear reader don't fret,
she learned where home truly led.
A valiant place inside.
Before tears come into play it's important to relay, The Mother calls her little girl daily today.
That heroin found her. Hidden well in golden blankets, ferrel foreign oceans cleansing memories frozen in an infants sigh. Their voices have the very same ring, the very same song to each chime.
But that one's a tale for another time.
Our fable unravels nigh the end as the eldest of brothers dies leaving suffering behind. He was the one who looks just like the Father but with far softer eyes.
Fifteen years her senior she never truly knew him but his gentle nature haunts the place where big brothers reside. The loss was sudden because the girl turned a woman, wasn't paying enough attention to the tribe.
She didn't get to say goodbye.
The heartache did surprise her since, as I've shared, he was a stranger but there's something hard about the words that now arise. Words like "family", "tradition" and "home" make a guttural sound from her throat and she notices moments her own
mind strains but gets it wrong
and she cries for the father yet again.
There is a quote, new paint on my soap box, ready for any challenge that comes open. It's from a dying man I barely knew though he touched me through and through.
Oh, He died this Christmas eve with a threat that he can't leave us in truth with words of wisdom said as words of wisdom flew off his hearted sleeve warmed by the hearth of his last breath.
Love.
"Don't put things off and love each other with grace and tenderness".
Yes, these are the notions of a man who knew oceans of devotion for I watched his clan gather him towards heaven with hearts in hands and Light shining bright along his path.
And so as they virtually bury the biggest brother, the little girl has called all the others who she knows will still answer her cry. They are stars disconnected across worlds yet reflected in a manifested, wanton heart of their pride.
I noticed an ancient thread, bare to the bone, holding them together in a collective tone of loss and love and history in a way I can make up stories of these days those hapless poets can finally come
home.
Love,
Mira Black (nee Sahay)
"...love each other tenderly and with grace." G. Curley