Road trips bring about closure when you are
least expecting it. Spending three days on the road begs for realizations,
epiphanies and the like. A week ago, I ended the adventure of helping my friend
move from Los Angeles back to Charlotte, North Carolina. We took Interstate 40
the majority of the way home. We drove. We drove a lot. We drove well past the
point where continuing to drive made any sense. We watch the sun rise in the
Mojave. Linds points out that it looks like God is shining a spotlight. I
agree.
We drive. We take pictures. We make silly videos.
We drive some more.
We get sick of driving.
The
first leg of our trip was about 19 hours during which I experienced a range of
emotions spanning from alacrity to despair. Watching Linds say good-bye to the
life that she had established on the West Coast brought about the harsh
reminder that in just two weeks, I would be dong the same on the East Coast.
Somewhere
in the middle of the Mojave, I thought of our family friend, a gentleman in his
90's named Aubrey (or as my mother calls him “Aubrey-pooh” or “Pooh” for
short). The best way to describe Aubrey would be in the stories that he lived
and constantly has told. We met him in a predominately white church during what
my dad affectionately likes to refer to as “the Most Segregated Time in
America,” or 11 am Sunday morning. We sat unassumingly in the back. While
others quietly wished us back to where we came from, after the service, Aubrey
came rushing to shake our hands and tell us how happy he was to have us joining
the congregation that week. This was not Southern hospitality; he meant it.
A
survivor of Pearl Harbor, he told us of hearing bullets whiz past his head
during the attack and somehow emerging unscathed. He told us stories of
adventure and family. He told us stories of loss. He offered up his
personal adventures so graciously that even as he told you explicit turn by
turn directions for a town you may never ever visit, you were aware that you
were blessed to be receiving such information from him. As we drove through New
Mexico and Arizona, I thought of Aubrey and his travels with his wife across
the U.S. I thought of the map in his home with all the places he had visited
diligently documented with colored tacks. I wondered how many times he and his
camper had driven along the same road I was capturing with my camera. How many
roadside attractions had he stopped at? How many pictures of the sunrise had he
taken?
When
someone dies, it forces you to realize all the questions you didn’t ask. It
forces to realize the limits of the time we share with people.
I
found out that Sunday we had lost Aubrey. And while I regret that I was not
able to make it to his funeral, I realize that funerals are for the living. I
don’t think that he would be hurt that I wasn’t there. My sense of closure
comes from his stories. My closure comes from knowing that I once had the honor
of spending a week of my summer caring for him after surgery. My closure comes
from a friendship that crossed race and generations. My closure comes from the
knowledge that Aubrey lived a good life. My closure comes from the thought that
we probably got to see the same sunrise on the same desert.
One
of the most infuriating things about saying good-bye is that we don't quite
live our lives on a timeline. When you say good-bye, you don't know exactly
what you are saying good-bye to. Loss forces you to say good-bye.
Loss
forces you to realize all the minute details, the turn-by-turn directions you
have forgotten. I bet Aubrey could have told me the best way to get Eugene.
les
2 comments:
I know you will treasure all memories, road trip and Aubrey
this is beautiful and i am so happy that after closure comes a new blank page
Post a Comment