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The Phone Call that Did Not Come

  • Writer: Alice Wyatt
    Alice Wyatt
  • 6 hours ago
  • 2 min read
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PERSPECTIVE



I only have one voicemail - 

one from four years ago


this birthday comes

and goes

with no

Happy Birthday Mama!




I push the green triangle


PLAY


from that old message,

over and over and over


… give me a call… just if you get 

the chance. I’d love to hear your voice.


Oh, sweet thing.

What I wouldn’t give

to hear your voice

one more time.



Why don’t I have 

every voicemail you

ever left me?!




Because I always picked up.




I need to remember this. 

This fact that changes everything.

Not that you are gone or that I miss you,

but the guilt, the agony, the lie


that I didn’t care enough to save your messages.




When you called,

I always picked up. 




PERSPECTIVE


What a gift

this knowledge. 


To live in the present

enjoying the NOW

no awareness of sorrow to come



Like your very last phone call

Hey Mama!

Hey Adam!

What’s up?

Nothing much.  How about you?

All good. 



And from your perspective, you were,


 All good.


plans made

boxes mailed

goodbye letters sent


only phone calls left to make

parents, siblings, partner

one by one by one


What were those last

“goodbye - talk soon”s 

like for you?




the lies you told

so we would not realize

this was the last time we would hear your voice


your finger pressing END

on every relationship you held dear


I am not able to go there 

without tipping over into 

the horror of it

a place I told myself I would never go


yet, you called it peace

the releasing of one thing

the beginning of another



In the end, it's ultimately about


PERSPECTIVE,


like only having one of your voicemails

because,


I always picked up.


========================================================


It is embarrassing to keep writing about the same thing. Adam. I miss Adam. I wish Adam were here. I wish Adam hadn't chosen to die. Yada. Yada. Yada. Then I have to process the WHY? of embarrassment. Because I should have it figured out by now. He's gone. It's done. Move on. Write about flowers and birds or even politics for the love of God.


I keep coming back to this idea of Perspective. Life is lived in our heads. People are joyful despite the most dire of circumstances and vice versa. I have so much to celebrate yet still wake up with a weight on my chest that makes it hard to breathe. When I talk to Adam, it is often with anger and resentment. "How could you do this to me? To us?" I long for the day when I reach out, touch his picture, and say, "Love you, buddy. Thank you for the gift of your life." That feels a long, long way away.


Perspective requires Patience I suppose (:


PS It was Jane who actually said, "I always picked up." I snatched that phrase for the power it held to explain so much of what we wrestle with.

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