Losing Amma, Finding Home by Uma Girish
Author:Uma Girish
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Hay House
Published: 2014-12-13T00:00:00+00:00
16
SLIDING INTO A DEEP SLEEP, I STEAL MOMENTS OF PEACE. But somewhere in the murky light of night, fitful dreams sneak in: Amma is writhing in pain, sheâs screaming, sheâs being wheeled away on a gurney, I am screaming. Finally, the nightmares release me from their clutch. A delicious inertia claims me in the pre-dawn hours. When I eventually awaken, grief rushes at me: fresh, raw and real. I shut my eyes tight, lose Amma all over again.
Itâs Sunday morning. I wander around the apartment, an untethered balloon, directionless, lost and floating. I didnât know a two-bedroom apartment with two people in it could feel so desolate. Our apartment is well-heated, but Iâm shivering uncontrollably.
The phone is silent. I havenât made any friends here, mostly acquaintances. But then, weâve only been in Chicago nine months, and Iâve spent two of those in India. Not a lot of time to cultivate a social circuit, plus I wasnât really very sociable, with my life turned upside down. No one really knows me. No one knew my mother. It is a painfully lonely place to be in.
I gravitate to my laptop and open my e-mail. It is the quickest connection to Chennai, the only place I really want to be.
A snowstorm of condolence messages drifts into my inbox.
An aunt writes: â⦠losing a loved mother makes us feel orphaned, as if we are cast out alone in the world â¦â
âIâm sure words are pretty meaningless under the circumstances, but I do hope you find the strength and acceptance to cope â¦â from an editor friend.
âWhat a sad time for you, especially being so far away from her ⦠Iâm sorry that you cannot come back as a tutor this semester â¦â writes my ESL supervisor.
âPerhaps God was kind enough not to let her suffer too long â¦â a well-loved teacher writes.
A friend, my pregnancy buddy (she and I had our babies a few weeks apart) writes, â⦠I went through the same experience in 2001 with my Ma. I am almost crying now, feeling your grief and recounting mine ⦠now I can see Maâs smiling picture every morning and think fondly of the angel I had (and still have) in my life ⦠it will be the same with you â¦â
But the next two e-mails punch me with the power of profound loss.
A friend from Madison writes, â⦠I can only imagine that it must hurt like hell, particularly since you are not only far, far away, you are also in a place lacking in the comfort of friends and family, others that you know and are familiar with ⦠time marches on, inexorable and unyielding, proving we are ourselves just ephemeral, proving that we should not take ourselves nor our beliefs too seriously, instead focusing on our lives now ⦠I have no idea if you can drive up here, but if you care to, you are always welcome. You know the place, the house, the room. Come here for laughter,
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