I did not know what I would write this morning as the treeline got etched in wisps of ivory blond—until I remembered I did not get to properly grieve you. Not really, anyway. Sure, I wrote you a poem. Sure, I teared up now and again, like I am now when I think of everything you did and offered, but mostly, selfishly, I miss your listening, that nonjudgmental smile I saw clearly across the keyboard even when your face, bright as high noon, was hardly ever in my view. That day I said you were glowing, hair like a river of thinly sliced amulets, fine and white-gold, and you had done your face with makeup I’d sent you. That’s how I see you in my cadre of memory—not as that broken biome you had to fight off for too many decades, not as someone who needed food pantries or subsidies, or someone who couldn’t afford their own home. Not with the blindness you learned to work around with grace and wile, or as our too-early conversations, but as what we said across the screen when neither of us could sleep because we both were having pain, and hurting was something we couldn’t stay in bed with. And I barely know what I am saying now because I can’t see my own keystrokes, and I was always one who made a lot of typos, never having been able to put my fingers in the right places. But if anyone is reading, if anyone cares enough to listen, if anyone cares about something different than just a friendship, I want them to know that sometimes, what we need is someone who has shuffled along in life in our own bodies, someone who knows what it is to be threadbare and hopeless, crying because it is all too, too much, but also, that we do not succumb. In fact, it sometimes means we need to make new clothes, or perhaps share our old ones so someone else feels new, help them wear those awkward hems and hand-me-downs with as much pride, as much dignity, as anyone who shops Manhattan—because you, my friend, my peer, held far more value than any gourmet haberdasher, and what you gave me, I could not repay in cheap trinkets or tote bags or anything else I could afford. But I’m glad I helped you feel treasured. I’m glad you believed I had something worthwhile, that I helped you feel golden and beautiful—even if nothing gold can ever stay. You stayed. You stayed. Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt, copyright March 25, 2024, all rights reserved Traci served as a mental health Peer Recovery Specialist. She loved animals and believed in their healing power. We chatted online nearly every day for years. She was my friend, but she was more than that. Her strength, determination, endurance and tenacity were something to experience. I still miss her, the way she inspired me to be my best self, the way she understood my brain (which is not easy). Love you, Traci. I see you in the sun.
Posted in Katherine's Coffeehouse