Thursday, January 14, 2010

What it was Like when I Died



I died last Tuesday when I was out for a walk in the cold night air. There are train tracks close to my house, but the train doesn't run too much after dark. Well, tonight the train was running so I had to wait for it to pass. I remember thinking that I like how waiting for a train to pass is the one kind of waiting no one ever seems to mind. It seems we're just happy to be safely on one side of the tracks or the other, as we sit back and respect the deadly iron power shaking the earth as it passes by. Once the train was only a spot in the distance, I safely crossed the tracks and was back on my way to nowhere.

Now, I've been walking the better part of 25 years. I get the concept. I would say I'm even pretty good at it. I enjoy stepping out the front door and just walking for a while. But for some reason, on this achingly normal Tuesday, I tripped over my own feet and tumbled towards the curb mouth first like a lion about to take a big bite out of a gazelle's rear end. It's funny. A life full of so many moments, some more impressive than others, is ended by one moment so clumsy and mundane.

I don't remember thinking about death or seeing my life flash before my eyes. Mostly because all I could think was "Idiot, walk like you have been since you were an infant! Moron!" Next thing I knew, I was standing up, pain free. Only, I was looking down at myself. My dead self, to be exact.

It took about thirty minutes to get over all the stages of dying: panic, denial, depression, sadness, anger... you know, all the stuff we think we're above until we actually kick the bucket ourselves. I guess that's when I realized that I was missing the most important point. Despite seeing my dead body lying there, I was still breathing and still standing on 2nd street in Claremont, the little town I have called home for only a few months. I had to call my family. Reaching into my pocket to grab my Samsung Propel, my hand went right through my phone! It wasn't kind of like in those movies about someone dying and having an out of body experience; it was exactly like in the movies. Great, even my death is one big cliché! I needed to get to my family, just in case this weirdness ended and my soul actually started the trip to heaven or...wherever.

Since I was not able to touch anything, I kind of figured my car was useless too. To get to my family, all I could do was start walking down I-40 and hope that my ghost legs were stronger than my old ones. Walking along the side of the interstate, it was obvious that no one could see me, even though I saw them as I always have. In my current state of...um…deadness, I laughed at myself for carefully walking along the side of the road. With my family in Vale more than twenty miles away, I started running in the middle lane, against traffic, just because I could.

It took me most of the night to get to my parents' house, but at least I was right about my new legs not getting tired. As I stood in the driveway of my childhood home, a dark thought overwhelmed me. What if someone had discovered my body back in Claremont and my mom already knew? Was I even doing the right thing by coming here? All I wanted to do was let my family know that I was okay, but how many people really feel comforted by a ghost? So I just stood outside the front door for an hour or maybe two, very conflicted and very dead.

As it turns out, all of my worrying was a waste of time. No one would wake up. There was no way at all to interact with my family. I couldn't pick up a pen or make a candle flicker or mess with electronic devices or any of that cool stuff. I was a weak and pathetic ghost. And I wanted my life back. I left my parents' room, walked through the wall and laid down in the grass in the backyard. Through the rest of the night and next morning I cried.

The grass was wet with dew, and the sun was hot on my face. Waking up in my parents' yard reminded me that all of this was not a dream as I had prayed the night before. For a moment, I wondered why I could feel the grass and the sun, yet any object I tried to touch went right through me. Maybe it was because of man's connection with the earth, or some other hippy nonsense. Or maybe God was saying "Ha! I can still screw with you even though you are dead!" Either way, I felt so completely alone. It felt like I was hidden from not only the eyes of everyone I had ever loved, but even God did not see me. I thought of all those times I passed up the opportunity to be with the people I truly cared about. I wondered what the Hell I was thinking all those years, never really getting all that close to those I loved so much. Now, knowing I could never talk to them again, I felt like the biggest fool who ever lived. What was so important that the people in my life had to come in second place behind whatever else I was trying to achieve? Oh wow, I held a steady job and had a neat little convertible. Well, Mr. Fantastic, what good is that doing you now that you are D E A D? Well, how about it? Moron.

I slept on the lawn for a couple more nights, knowing that I needed to figure out how to move on to wherever my new home was supposed to be. I couldn't do it. I could not leave my family or my friends behind without telling them I was okay. But, was I okay? Not really, but that's what we do to the people we love. We lie to them. And I wanted to tell them this great lie one more time: "Hey, I'm okay."

I promised myself and I promised God, that If I ever got a second chance, I would worry more about the people who loved me and less about the mundane tasks of living. All of that garbage could worry about itself for all I cared. I would get things right if I could only try again. "Please God, give me another chance...Jesus Christ help me!" I screamed in anguish before collapsing onto the ground. Somehow, my tormented heart was hushed for a moment and I fell asleep on the soft grass one last time.

I rolled over in bed and saw that it was already 7:30. Damn, I'm late for work!

7 comments:

Joyce Moyer Hostetter said...

Wow! Mouth hanging open here. That was an amazing on-the-edge-of my seat sort of story.

Lots of processing going on, huh?

Thanks, and forgive me for bossing you around but you better keep writing!

Anonymous said...

I wish not agree on it. I regard as warm-hearted post. Expressly the designation attracted me to be familiar with the whole story.

Trevor Franklin said...

Thanks Joyce. Seems my writing is always tied to whatever I'm mulling over in my head, which is one reason it may be a bad idea for me to write a novel. Each chapter would be a completely different style and focus, frustrating even the most forgiving readers and causing general mutiny against the writer.

Ms. Anonymous, not sure I follow all of your comment, but I thank you for what I do follow.

Sacrred_beauty said...

I really liked it something we should all think about b/c while we have all the material things we tried so hard to accumulate they all fade when our time comes. We will never know when it will happen or how but the materials we have here we can't take with us just the regrets of things unsaid loved ones unsure of what is to come of us. We will never live on in our cars, houses, or anything we possess....but the memories of others and of lives we touched is how we will be remembered and their is nothing more valuable than that. No car will remember that time you went out of your way to wash it no house will tell the story of when you cleaned it and no computer will tell of when you de bugged it....but your friends will tell of the time you were there and helped them through the impossible....your family will tell of the time that you did the one thing that made there day something small that only you could do....and your co-workers will tell of the time they came in down or upset and just talking to you made there day worth getting through. So I think this should make us all realize just what we should pay more attention to. It was wonderful as always and eye opening.

Amy Lizzy said...

Amazing post Trevor! I was all up in it and dang that alarm clock. Did you write this on a Monday?! ha

Seriously, great thoughts and excellent way of processing them!

Give us more.

Anonymous said...

Amiable brief and this mail helped me alot in my college assignement. Say thank you you on your information.

Anonymous said...

I like novels that change style and focus. It keeps the reader's mind working. And I have a feeling that you could create enough sameness to tie it all together.
...just my two cents...