I come from a long line of them, so some days I believe that
I am wired like this and will remain so until my last breath. While there are other times that I
recognize a capacity to trust and detach from the outcome and live in the
now. Despite my efforts to
overcome, I am a chronic worrier.
The other day while I was driving my son opened the door for
some reason and promptly closed it.
In a flash, I pulled him toward me so he would not get sucked out of the
car from the vortex force. Science
and experience does not prove that this will happen in a motor vehicle going 25
miles per hour. This fear is a
childhood fear that I did not outgrow.
Driving through Scarborough
marsh on occasion, the brackish water would flood the roadway. Instead of closing the road, vehicles
would be directed through the water.
My older sister or brother would hold me tight as I would simultaneously
shriek and cower under the shield of their body. I envisioned floating away to the ocean and my mother losing
total control, being washed out to sea.
While some fears had little basis, they were real for me.
There was a period of time, in my childhood that the
next-door neighbor would babysit me along with her three children. We would play toss with a small rubber
ball, climb trees, ride bikes and hang out with the family dog named
Sandy. I had always wanted a dog,
but my mother adored her cats.
Sandy would be nearby as we played, ever present and loyal. It was a carefree existence really, but
I grew to hate it following an incident that remains clear fifty years later.
One day, my babysitter got a phone call. We all tumbled into the Rambler and
soon I heard the sad purpose for our trip, Sandy had been hit by a car. Sandy was dead. We would pick her up to bring her home
to be buried. I remember a short
ride in the car and then returning to the car to come home, I remember nothing
in between.
I remember closing my eyes tightly, because I did not want
to see Sandy’s still, dead body.
The babysitter, despite pleading with her to allow me to sit in the
backseat with a healthy distance between the dead dog and me, forced me to sit
in the front seat with the dog at my feet. I did not want to come in contact with death. My feet curled
around on the car seat as I coiled making my body as small as could be. A quick initial peek at the buff
colored dog revealed just how close I was to the unthinkable. Alive one minute. Dead the next. I do not know why I am afraid to view
dead animals or to touch them. In my four year old self, did I worry about
catching it? Did I overhear a
conversation about the health risks of touching anything dead? Recently, it has only been my close
experiences with my mother and father’s passing that I have been able to look
at people that have passed.
I am trying to overcome my fear. I know that in my lifetime I will continue to encounter
death and ultimately will experience it up close and personally.
2 comments:
I'm sorry for your loss. Death is such a hard thing to understand and come in contact with. I'm a pretty chronic worrier as well, but it's only because we understand how precious those in are lives truly are.
You capture that feeling of worry and the stories behind it reveal a lot. I,too, come from a long line of them.
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