Sunday, March 24, 2013
1:30pm
37˚F
"Its arrogance will break your heart"
As I sit under
this long white sky, I ask myself what I’m really doing here. Why do I come to
this cemetery? Is it because I want to know about dying? Is it because I wonder
what these bodies all around me already know? Do they know? Can they tell me
where my soul will leave my body or if it will? Can they tell me who will protect my body after death? Can they tell me anything I
don’t already know? Maybe when it happens, when we are severed from this life,
our souls forget we ever lived. Maybe that wouldn’t be so bad. Would it be fair
for us to die and then continue to die knowing what we have lost? Some say it
is worse for the ones left behind. The families that have to deal with the sky
every morning, knowing its blue will rise over a world missing of someone.
Something is
new here today. There are no deer anywhere in sight, but all around me there
are freshly buried bodies. I have never seen this before—bodies so vulnerable.
The only thing separating them from the world, from me, is the dirt. For the
first time, I don’t feel welcome here. I feel like I’m invading on this space.
That this is something I shouldn’t see. Before this moment, I could forget the
bodies were under this ground because they were hidden. There were no mounds of
dirt rising out of the earth to remind me. There were only gravestones that
acted as shields as if they were symbols of the bodies and that the actual
bodies didn't exist. But now I know they are here and I feel like I'm exploiting
them. I’m looking at these bodies in their most fragile states and they have
no knowledge of my eyes. They have no way of breaking my stare. They have no
names. They are alone with only the dirt separating them.
"Two weeks ago / we had to coax it / into taking her body"
At this
moment, I begin to realize the importance of the dirt. The way it is able to cover
the bodies with its burnt orange body without breaking—a dirt body made up of
thousands of individual pieces of body. How much we need the
dirt in death. How much we need it to tell our love ones that yes we are gone,
that yes this dirt is proof. How the dirt is able to merge with the
dead as if it were an extension of them, as if it were the dead. I wonder if
the dirt knows that its dry and cracked skin is and will always be the body’s
last blanket. If it knows that its role in this space is to protect the body at its
most vulnerable state. If it knows how the body uses it to prove it’s leaving,
to be guided into the earth. If it knows how much we need it to hold us in the
end.
There is an
unusual cold today. Not an uncomfortable cold or a cold you cannot bear. But
the kind of cold that shocks you into life, that forces you to see because you
will focus on anything to distract yourself from it. I miss the deer in this
kind of cold and wonder if they are not here because of what they’ve seen. I wonder
if they too felt they were exploiting the bodies and left. I cannot help but wonder
if the dirt has become numb to its job.
"Today, / after a light rain, / I see it hasn’t bothered / to conceal its seams."
___________________________________________________
The Dirt that Holds Us--Blog
Entry #7 Inspired By:
“Dirt”
By Jo McDougall
Its arrogance will break
your heart.
Two weeks ago
we had to coax it
into taking her body.
Today,
after a light rain,
I see it hasn’t bothered
to conceal its seams.



What a deeply moving post, Marguerite. I love how you ask yourself what you're doing in the cemetery - what solace can you find there? Death is the one thing we will all experience and that thought, no matter how unconsciously, controls much of what we do (at least that's my belief). Thanks for including the poem by Jo McDougall.
ReplyDeleteThere is an openness and vulnerability here, yours contrasting that of the departed, that lends raw and overwhelming emotion to this entry. You're connecting with the earth, literally, here in ways that give us all reason to consider the larger questions of life and death.
ReplyDelete