There are those days, those weeks and moments in life when the universe comes along and lays its hand on you with such force you feel that you are shattered into a thousand pieces. Your heart lies somewhere in you broken. Pieces of it in your chest and others resting in the pit of your stomach. Your head rests in your shaking hands and tears pour from your eyes relentlessly. The words, when they spill forth from your mouth, are jumbled and tumble about in an incomprehensible dance.
There is a space on the floor between my bed and the wall where I sit when things get too bad. From here, in this little space, where I sit all curled up, I have made all the terrible calls I have had to make in this past week. It is here in this little space that I have cried my biggest tears and placed my head in my hands to hold it when it all feels like it is too much. I am not alone. There are people all over the world dealing with unimaginable things and journeying through inconceivable grief. There are broken hearts and tears all over this planet. I am surely not alone.
Last Tuesday I put my mother on a plane to return home to her English autumn. To the apples waiting on her tree and the last of the pretty flowers in her garden. Her suitcase full of little things she had found that would remind her of me and the crisp golden leaves waiting to fall at her feet. We were exceptionally close. We always had been and she had been my friend for all of my fifty years. The fact that she lived in England and I in Africa did not loosen our bond. We Skyped and emailed and knew daily details of each others lives. She would get on a plane and come at a moments notice whenever I needed her. Sometimes she would just sense that I needed her and be here before I even had to ask.
While she was here we talked of her childhood in post war England and the things she still wanted to do. Of her parents and grandparents. Of life with my father and life without him. She told me of a train trip through the bluebell woods that she so loved and how she would book it when she got back. We walked daily on the wide golden beach near my house that you see above and dipped our toes in the warm Indian Ocean.
She never got home to her beautiful garden and pretty blue house. She never saw the flowers waiting with their bowed heads or tasted those golden apples. Somewhere, just about half way between the hot dusty air of Africa and the sweet damp air of England she had a heart attack. A jumbo jet full of weary passengers was diverted to Abuja in Nigeria to offload my sick mother and continue its journey to where she was supposed to be. A kind man with a foreign accent on the end of a feint line tells me things I do not want to hear. I sit down in that space between the bed and the wall weeping huge gulping buckets of tears.
Through my constant flow of salty wet tears and breaking heart I look at how to get to this far away place in the middle of a war torn part of Africa. I am told it is not safe to go and yet I am asked by the doctor to please rush as she is all alone there. That she has opened her eyes and held his hand for just a moment before drifting back into her unconsciousness. Was she looking for me? I research again how to get to this far away place but my children beg me not to go. It’s not safe they say. I am stuck as half way between going and not as she is between her two homes. I sit between what was and what will be. It’s a terrible place to be. I wait knowing it is only a matter of time until that inevitable call to tell me that very place of waiting is no longer there. I hide again in the space between the bed and the wall. It feels like home now. I think she knew. I think she came to say goodbye.
The universe delivered me an unbelievable blow in the most absurd way possible in what has already been a exceptionally difficult year. I envy generations past that were allowed a certain time to grieve. They sat in their parlours and drank tea and received occasionally visitors for months on end, slowly coming to terms with the new space they found themselves in. Life today is different. I now face the complicated journey of getting her body out of Nigeria and home to her beloved England. I face endless red tape and a long lonely flight to meet her there where the leaves are crisp and her apples wait.
Death is the natural order of things and yet it is never welcomed by those left on earth. My mother died in Abuja. A city I never knew existed and yet now means so much to me. I hope one day I can go. This is all part of my journey here on earth. These are my lessons and I must trust that the universe knows that I am not yet broken and that I have got this.