a moment’s pause

so, this is the last time i take the journey south, bound for dublin, on an outbound ticket. next time it’ll be a return.
tomorrow i’ll back up over the border in a van to move all my worldly possessions.

100 miles seems very far today. but as i stood on the platform at holywood with my suitcase and looked out over the lough, feeling my throat choke up and my eyes prick at the corners, i realised i felt relief mixed with the anxiety and sadness of such a significant day. relief at having a different view in the future. of how the past 4 years (almost) have been against this backdrop with so much sadness and loss. each time i have looked out over the water, that was in years before shared and home, having then changed irrevocably… each time looking out over the water acted as a reminder of things i’d rather forget.

i’m moving so that i have a different view. a life less scarred by memories. the memories i associate with dublin are older. and having been in belfast for 8 years, i have been able to leave much of the past it holds to rest. so that now it feels like a new place. so here i am, on a train, leaving the past behind.

as i sit here on the train as i have done so many times in recent months, and as i hold back tears, all i can say with conviction is, i want the future to be different.

::

later….

as the train passed Newry and crossed the border the sun finally appeared, and a feeling of leaving turned to going toward…

tomorrow i will have some, “see you soons” that will catch in my throat. but for now, the view from my parentals’ balcony is of hills and trees exploding in spring green and there’s dinner on the stove. so i’ll be thankful. for tomorrow will be a long day with a 200 mile round trip in the van and moving as much stuff as it’ll take and there won’t be time to pause and take in the beauty. and then a weekend of unpacking awaits.

::

the writer’s almanac for today tells me it’s annie dillard’s birthday. which is worth a pause in itself in which to feel good about the world. it’s a better place for her having been in it.

also from the almanac, Leisure, by William Henry Davies. which i haven’t read in years. hard to argue with…

What is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
No time to stand beneath the boughs
And stare as long as sheep or cows.
No time to see, when woods we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.
No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night.
No time to turn at Beauty’s glance,
And watch her feet, how they can dance.
No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.
A poor life this if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.

::

as an old Irish saying goes,
not one of us is promised tomorrow.

LB

lost love 2

no amount of coffee
no amount of crying
no amount of whisky
no amount of wine
no no no no no
nothing else will do
i gotta have you
i gotta have you

– the weepies, gotta have you on :: Say I Am You ::

so much of life is spent living with what you cannot have, however much you gotta have it…

LB

for lost love