Impossible Beauty
I can’t write about anything else until I write about
something that I don’t think is mine to write about. It is someone else’s story, many others’
stories, actually, and yet it has found an uncomfortable home inside of my
thoughts and it will reside there, clogging up every other feeling until I let
it go into the world of letters, which will possibly make it into words, which
hopefully will string into a sentence, which will maybe make some sort of
semblance of explanation. I imagine
death as a line between here and there. “There”
may be something to some, and to others it is nothing. To me, it is hope, but yet so much fear
wrapped into it, that the hope for me is still clouded in walls of doubt, from
time to time. The line then, as I
mentioned, is death. Usually, on a
normal day, the line is wide: the thickness of, well forever, but then, you get
the phone call, or read the story, or open the door, and the line is barely a
line. Someone has grabbed you by the
back of your shirt and shoved you against the thin sheet of glass, so fragile,
you know at any moment it will break and you will fall through to there, or
worse, someone you love will and you will be left staring through the glass. It’s impossible to be here, because now you
know the truth that you were never protected by any barrier. From here to there requires no effort, no
reason, and no amount of worrying or protection could stop it. This is all bad, and this is all difficult,
but this is unfathomable until the force carrying you to this uncomfortable
viewpoint is the death of someone so innocent that it almost makes here an
impossibility. Why be here, when he is
there? No, even worse. It makes your hope in “there” turn into
frustration. Why there? Why them?
Why him? Why her? In the middle
of your questions, you want to feel an answer, but the only answers given are
with such arrogance and absolution that they blur the questions even
further. Trying to find peace and accept
your faith in the middle of all of this can be a difficult thing to do. Letting yourself slip into the black hole of
worry and doubt is much easier. Just let
me wallow. Just let me let it all go,
but I never can.
So here is my resolve,
if you can even call it that. I resolve
that I don’t know. I resolve that I hope
I know and I have faith that I will grow to have more faith, but if I could be
completely real and raw with how I feel, it is that those that believe have
crushed my belief with hate and lack of regard.
I’m talking way broader than death here.
I am talking about all of it. The
walking, talking, breathing, loving, sort of things. And this is where I spiral, back into belief,
not because someone told me “there is a reason for everything”, because I believe
that is a Grade A lie. I believe,
because I have hope, because I have love, because I search for depth. If anyone has ever seen anything beautiful,
and I mean something truly beautiful: the achy, full, breathless sort of
beautiful, where there just has to be something to here and to there…you
know? Could it all be so mundane and
purposeless? I don’t believe every move
is ordained, and I don’t think it’s all chaos either. I think it’s a string of chaos and purpose,
all tangled up and we can choose to simplify it and say that it all will always
make sense (or it will makes sense “one day”) or go the other route and say
that none of it makes sense and everything we do exists for naught, but I think
the answer lies in the beauty of the confusion.
Beauty, to me, is reason in imperfection. It is finding truth in the chaos. It is accepting that there is more, but it’s
up to us. We can’t ignore the promise
and we can’t deny the purpose, but just as much, we can’t deny the lack of it
sometimes.
Does this make any
sense? I’m not even sure myself, but
it’s where I’m at. I ache every day for what
has been lost to so many. There is so
much purposeless loss. I hate it and I
hate that there is no justice in it, at least for now. I wish I could give it all back to all of
them. I’m left with this thought,
though, if I truly believe that beauty can be found in the purposelessness and
the chaos, then every move forward and every smile amidst the enormity of pain
is impossibly beautiful. Grief is
something we have to do and emptiness is something we will feel, but we can
throw a giant middle finger up to death every time we take that next step and
hope in something greater.
“Because God’s children are human beings, made of flesh and
blood, the Son also became flesh and blood.
For only as a human being could he die, and only by dying could he break
the power of the devil, who had the power of death. Only in this way could he set free all who
have lived their lives as slaves to the fear of dying”
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