Monday, January 12, 2009

matapos mapanood ang "the curious case of benjamin button"

-suspension of disbelief.




Permanence


I can't remember how old I was,

but I used to stand in front

of the bathroom mirror, trying to imagine

what it would be like to be dead.

I thought I'd have some sense of it

if I looked far enough into my own eyes,

as if my gaze, meeting itself, would make

an absence, and exclude me.


It was an experiment, like the time

Michael Smith and I set a fire in his basement

to prove something about chemistry.

It was an idea: who I would

or wouldn't be at the end of everything,

what kind of permanence I could imagine.


In seventh grade, Michael and I

were just horsing around

when I pushed him up against that window

and we both fell through—

astonished, then afraid. Years later


his father's heart attack

could have hit at any time,

but the day it did they'd quarreled,

and before Michael walked out

to keep his fury alive, or feel sorry for himself,

he turned and yelled, I wish you were dead!


We weren't in touch. They'd moved away.

And I've forgotten who told me

the story, how ironic it was meant

to sound, or how terrible.


We could have burned down the house.

We could have been killed going through

that window. But each of us

deserves, in a reasonable life,

at least a dozen times when death

doesn't take us. At the last minute


the driver of the car coming toward us

fights off sleep and stays in his lane.

He makes it home, we make it home.

Most days are like this. You yell

at your father and later you say

you didn't mean it. And he says, I know.


You look into your own eyes in a mirror

and that's all you can see.

Until you notice the window

behind you, sunlight on the leaves

of the oak, and then the sky,

and then the clouds passing through it.


Lawrence Raab

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