~ Sparrow ~
*Written in 2012 for a memoir assignment at Boston University*
August 6, 2005. I
woke up at eight in the morning in my top bunk, warm underneath my covers.
Though I felt lazy and tired from staying up all night with my friends, the
sun that pierced through our shabby curtains beckoned me to start my day. It
was camp, after all, and every day at camp was a good one—at least it was for
me at French Woods Festival of the Performing Arts in upstate New York.
I was excited to
wake up next to new friends. Though we had only met only three weeks prior, I knew
I could tell these girls anything. We shared embarrassing stories, clothes,
bathrooms, and problems. We went to awkward basketball court dances together,
skipped water-skiing electives, and roamed around the camp past curfew, inevitably
causing trouble. I woke up that morning happy to be drowsy in a bunk of creaky
beds, insect-ridden bathroom stalls, and erratic electricity.
I
hopped down the bed latter and performed my daily morning ritual: wash face,
brush teeth, and get dressed to obnoxiously happy music blaring from the main
office’s speakers. Good Day Sunshine, a
Beatles classic, vibrated through bunk G13B, waking up the girls who always
attempted to sleep through breakfast. The
Beatles got it right today, I thought.
Just
as I finished putting on my sneakers for my tennis elective, my counselor hesitantly
approached me.
Something’s
wrong, I sensed.
I felt a knot form in the in the bottom of my
throat. When my counselor wasn’t her perky self immediately, when her words came
out in an oddly serious tone, I began to worry. She told me that I had to go to
the main office immediately.
I
had only been to the main office once before, and it was for a serious bunk
meeting. I wondered what I could have possibly done to warrant the main office. I knew it entailed talking
to the head of camp, Ron, who wasn’t the most forgiving.
A
sense of dread overcame me during my lonely walk downhill to the office. The
sun was bright in a cloudless sky and campers played volleyball on the sand. I
saw familiar faces practice songs for the next big musical production while dancers
twirled and leaped across the green lawn. While I would have normally embraced
everything around me, my sight was obscured by the rampant thoughts that clouded
my vision.
The
rest of the afternoon unfolded in scenes shifting from complete blurriness to
clarity. Right when I entered the
office, my world was clear. A head counselor who I knew placed her hand on my
shoulder and escorted me to the camp directors office. The big wooden door
opened slowly and to my surprise, I saw my family sitting on the big black
couches in the room. My dad, sister, and step-mom looked at me as I entered the room. Their expressions were somber and filled with grief as they motioned me
to sit down on the couch. This is when the world began to get blurry.
Before my dad
could let out a word, he choked up. Short but intense breaths interrupted his
speech. His eyes began to water and turned a pinkish-red. I couldn’t help but
release the emotion I had been stuffing down my throat; it poured out of me in streams
that came and went with my arrhythmic breaths. I listened to my dad’s voice
quiver. It seemed like he was fighting with his words, and the words slowly
defeated him.
After one deep
breath the five words that would change my life forever escaped his mouth:
“Annie’s no longer with us.”
My head fell to my
knees—it was impossible to look up. I felt the weight of my tragedy like heavy
blow to the head; my forehead pounding, my vision blurry, I prayed to wake up
from this nightmare. Reality could not be so harsh.
My mind started
gathering images of Annie. I felt I could reach out and touch her, feel her
arms’ embrace, hear her voice sing me to sleep. A slideshow of memories
appeared before me. I saw us walking down the streets of NYC, hand in hand,
singing a song from RENT and laughing at the faces we make at each other.
My sister: so
radiant, her voice like an angel, her spirit boundless.
Then I recalled
how troubled she was by the disease that hijacked her mind and forced her to do
the unthinkable.
My flashback spiraled
into one of my saddest memories with Annie. She was sitting on her bed at my
grandparent’s apartment in Manhattan and sobbing into her hands. I was only
twelve—I couldn’t grasp the depth of her depression. She told me she didn’t know
why she was sad either. She sent my grandma and me to CVS pick up some medicine
with a name I couldn’t pronounce, and we quickly brought it back to her. I
returned to the apartment to see her eyes closed—she was lost someplace in a
dream.
From her
expression, she appeared more content in her dream world. It was not as hard as
the real world. It was safer.
When I woke up
from my flashback, I hugged my dad for what felt like an eternity, until we knew
that it was OK to let go.
We decided to get
some fresh air, so we took a walk around camp. We stopped at a grassy spot by
the lake and sat down. We didn’t say much; there was no need. We sat there, in
silence, for a while.
My dad asked if I
could feel her looking down on me, and I replied yes, because I could. I saw her in the branches, in my reflection in
the lake, and in the sand. I saw her in the bird that seemed to fall straight
down from the sky.
When the bird shot
back into the air and became just a tiny spec within the wide blue, I realized
that she was never actually falling. She was always flying—in her own direction—to
a safer place.
~~~~
~~~~
“I have to remind myself that some
birds aren’t meant to be caged, that’s all. Their feathers are just too
bright…and when they fly away, the part of you that knows it was a sin to lock
them up does rejoice…but still, the place you live is that much more drab and
empty that they’re gone.”
-- Shawshank
Redemption
Comments
AS A CHILD you had such greats power ' and I can still see this child in you, every time we see each other, this is your FIRE OF LIFE ENERGY, keep it warm.
Love U alot'
your Friend.
Shai.