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I Have His Laugh

I remember Rosalie, my grandmother not a rose but a worn thorn among flowers saying it was the doctor who killed him. "It was no accident!" she screamed. "They feed him poison because they thought he was a head case." I stood there, in the middle of a perfect suburb that I didn't live in. Clean sidewalks and quiet streets, Jaybirds trading tunes with Hummingbirds. My mom, saying nothing. Building was something he loved a bicycle pieced together from the parts of a thousand different things, a homemade coffee machine that looked like a robot, a model of the titanic as big as a queen sized bed. A great person once speculated that, maybe death comes to you in whatever form you want it to, and I like to think that it came to him in the form of a giant Lego castle, opening up to let him in and welcome him as their new king. I hope his death came to him in Lego's, because it came to me in the form of a 2,000 foot plummet. "Your dad died." My mom said that two days before Christmas break back in 2004 She'd just picked me up from school. That day in P.E. I'd had hard rocks thrown at me for being a minority and my English teacher heckled me because I supported gay marriage. I'd spilled milk all over my uniform. and I'd lost the money I've been saving for two months. Now my mind went back to all of that, as I thought I had misheard her. I said nothing and she repeated it "Your dad died." I heard the sound of crackling in my ears from my theory of hearing a mistake breaking. the indifference on her face was astonishing, but not unsurprising. They'd be divorced alas their past mistakes had sparked friction. I had only seen him 6 times in the last 6 years and she was full of more hate and false compassion than actual love. then, and even now, I know this isn't feeling like home. The cause had been an accidental overdose. Meds for his maniac, million mile thoughts, and painkillers for his broken arms. Mix'em and you've got the worst kind of elixir. The poisoned apple had been bitten, and the curtain had fallen. crying was reserved for mental breakdowns, when the weight of the two vultures that sat on my shoulders had grown to great and my own mind had eaten too much of me. And that is why I didn't shed tears until much later, the day i saw a 10-second video recorded by him. Reenacting the scene of a musical, he held on to a random street pole and spun and once done said "Hey, Jasmin. Hey, sweetheart" Beep end of recording. How that single moment changed me is difficult to describe hearing those words,still now ringing in my ears like a maddening tinnitus I think made me realize that, no matter what I'm doing saying writing Can't shun the world. I can't seek refuge in the clouds, never letting my feet touch the ground I can't shut down when life turns into a baseball hat and hits me over the head. that moment , that day, boot camp had turned into war. My conscription had arrived and instead of running, I took it. now I am crackled glass that refuses to shatter the reflections on the possibilities of reaching that point where I don't hate. Everything helped me carry on. You can find beauty in the most terrible things; you just have to squint.
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Written by
jasmin-alonso
Brazilian
Published
Apr 11, 2012
Lines·Words
114·597
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