when I was five and life was a song of excitement and innocence the world was full of mystery and I had never felt the pain of hurt or loss of any kind and then one day a playmate pushed me right off the swing you picked me up brushed me off told me not to cry ‘mommy,’ I said, ‘it hurts’
when I was sixteen and in love for the first time to a young Cuban girl I felt like an adult doing adult things dates and kissing and groping and late-night phone calls with the cord stretched and twisted through the house and under my door and then one day she left me for another teenage crush and I felt world-ending anguish burning, hot, consuming as only a teenager can feel them you held me close told me I’d be ok ‘but mom,’ said I, ‘it hurts.’
when I was thirty-five at the end of my marriage holding on to it with desperate and futile hands trying to be a good father to my sons who put me on a pedestal high enough to rival the gods I fought depression and anger even as I felt co-dependent longing for the woman who was breaking my heart there at the end of that marriage one day you held your grandchildren and me and told us we’d be ok ‘mom,’ I said ‘it hurts.’
when I was thirty-eight and dying from the cancer eating my body repulsed by the very sight of my shriveled and sunken body with chemotherapy eyes set deep deep inside my skull and scars on my body finally making me as ugly in life as I felt inside I despaired and I grieved the loss of innocence in my children and the burden on my new girlfriend one day you sat by my bedside and held my hand, told me the kids and I were stronger than I knew ‘but mom’ I said, looking at their pictures, ‘it hurts.’
when I was forty and strong again, recovered from cancer and from divorce my scars a badge of character and honor with a beautiful new bride by my side a new life to live and a new daughter to love that day you lay in a hospital bed clinging desperately to life machines to monitor tubes to breath nurses to care and doctors to treat I held your hand, like you always held mine, alongside your daughter (my sister) and your other son (my brother) as you breathed your last even as I sobbed at your passing and fell into the arms of my wife and siblings I wondered selfishly who now will hold me like you did like only you could because oh god, mom it hurts.
I’ve been thinking a lot about my mom lately; she passed away in November, 2010. This is for her.