Lucky

By Insertponceyfrenchnamehere
- 20575 reads
It’s the best thing for him. You must insist. Intensive neuro rehab. Keep fighting for it. That’s what they all said – what they told me to do, so that’s what I did. Funding is difficult. Patchy. You have to fight. I am quite good at that kind of fighting. In the end we won. Lucky us.
It’s been more than a year since the rehab started, and in all the places - quite a few now - they do a three monthly review. Each one starts with a potted history and it’s like Chinese whispers. Each time they get it wrong in a different way. Each time I correct them.. Each time they ignore me. It doesn’t seem to matter that I was there. I know. I saw. I see it every time I close my eyes. I see it when I wake up in the middle of the night. I can see it now – clear as day. Every second.
Nearly two years now. It feels like yesterday and a thousand years ago. This is what I saw. This is what I see every day. August. Cold and rainy. Summer storms. Waking up, drinking my coffee, looking out at the wheat field, I’m .. I don’t know what I am. Nervous? It’s all been so quick. Last minute. I’ve spoken to friends who’ve done it, spoken to friends who’ve helped people through it. Read stuff on the internet. Each one says something different. The rehab place – the one he had an appointment at the day after – they reassured me. I said “it’s not dangerous is it – cold turkey? He is fifty…” “No” they said “…generally not. Not like alcohol withdrawal”. We only had one day – less than one day to get through before going there, registering. Then they would prescribe something – not methadone – something else, to help with the symptoms. Good old NHS. Lucky us.
The sky: beautiful in the very early morning. Dark, almost navy blue from the thunderstorms, and the ripe wheat glowing golden white in the sunrise. A wonderful contrast. Past the field. Just in the corner of my vision, along where the trees begin, a rainbow – fresh, bright, sharply defined, brand new – the way they are before they fade. I take a photo of it on my phone. I think I feel a bit like I did when my sons were young and they caught something horrible – chickenpox. Grit your teeth. Get on with it. It isn’t going to last forever. Batten down the hatches. All that kind of thing. We can get through this.
I send the rainbow to him – perhaps he’ll turn on his phone when he lands and it’ll be the first thing he sees. A good omen. Focus on the positive. Stiff upper lip. I have done my best. All the stuff he asked me to have is there. Stoly in the fridge. I bought it the night before and dropped the first one in the carpark at Waitrose – the recyclable carrier bags aren’t very strong. Glass everywhere, the stench of alcohol. I go back inside to tell them and it’s all handled efficiently and without fuss, as you would expect it to be. Someone comes out to sweep up the glass. They give me another bottle of Stoly. Good old Waitrose. Lucky it happened there.
The last time we spoke – before he left - He was frightened. Trying to not let it show. I was frightened – trying to sound reassuring. We can get through this. Face it together.
There’s no sun by the time I get to Heathrow. It’s a cold grey drizzly August morning. British summertime. I am wearing shorts and impractically high heels but it doesn’t matter because we’ll be jumping in the taxi soon and then we’ll be home. So it doesn’t matter. It’s part of my two fingers to the world. Meant to be reassuring for him. You should always wear impractical heels when you face something difficult.
Survival rates for cardiac arrest outside a hospital are officially dire – both here in England, and in Tucson. They hover around 17%. He is lucky. I am lucky. We are both lucky.
It’s been twenty months. I am on a writing retreat. Never done one before. Beautiful place. Never been here before. The weather couldn’t be more perfect. The other people couldn’t be nicer. It’s peaceful. Perfect. Beautiful. I’m so grateful for all of this. Each morning I sit down out here to write something to match. Maybe tomorrow.
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Comments
I was going to thank you
I was going to thank you Jeand because it was so long ago I thought I'd wrote it. I'm hoping to strike Lucky and get another from my favourite writer.
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Oh my!
This piece rocked me back. Raw, honest and truthful. I am in a kind of rehab with gambling. Five years now, but only gamblers know how I really struggled. In the same way, I cannot honestly say 'I understand' but I can and MUST take note and try.
Thank you
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Hi
Hi
Thanks for picking me for the story of the week, but please don't put it on facebook and twitter. I put in the things we do when we write stories, that I didn't want it available to anyone not on the site.
Jean
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I can reiterate about not
I can reiterate about not wearing high heels when you're going out on the 'batter.' I think it was Ibsen who wrote something about not wearing good trousers when you're going to fight for freedom and truth, well not in your own living room anyway. Doubly hard when you're drunk as well. Having been through the rehab kerfuffle several times this rang true, but then I am drunk at the moment. Hang on: the ticker tape machine is buzzing----no it was Mike Tyson who wrote about freedom, truth and high heels.
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Insert, it's been ages.
Insert, it's been ages. Please can we have some more? The story is yours, it's private and personal, it belongs to you and is your pain. But you could write about afterwards, culminating in the light grey/dark grey kitchen units.
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Engrossing read! Thanks!
Engrossing read! Thanks!
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Beautiful rythm and flow to
Beautiful rythm and flow to this piece.
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I loved the meandering flow,
I loved the meandering flow, like that of a well bedded stream knowing exactly how to make one walk it's entire length of bank just in case there's a trout at the next bend... masterly written, so much so that I just simply had to pause on my trip to here at every comment... Bugger the trout... catching the admiration found in each sage remark within your stream was a far greater catch! Take Care
Rob
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A strong piece. I agree with
A strong piece. I agree with the above comments that they staccato rhythm of the sentences contrasts well with the optimism the narrator is trying to project. They also have a nice contrast with some of the relaxing imagery - the wheatfields, easy morning coffee.
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Where do I start. I loved
Where do I start. I loved every word and image they describe. But perhaps the ending for me was the most charged and provoking of emotions....Sadly hoping for a beautiful tomorrow one could write about. I felt this piece was not fiction and that makes it the best fiction of all. Thank you for the pleasure of reading this work.
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Yes, really good piece!
Yes, really good piece! Totally absorbed me, which is rare these days. Maybe because I'm one of those rare out of hospital lucky ones. And still here.
Peter
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This a very well written
This a very well written piece. I admire your writing style; it's very inspiring!
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well i'm glad i didn't ask
well i'm glad i didn't ask whether you were male or female, though i supposed the latter. the high heels. anyway, step-by-step empathy, he's lucky beyond that, you are a hell'uva writer. rich, concise, smart, engaging. glad to have read your story. pretty good. Swep
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Thank you for FB
For this story. I am enjjoying your writing very much. Today I learned that repetition can be a useful tool in defining emotions. I am afraid to use it, the fear of being boring or trite. I appreciate your comments on my story - Poem Pimp, which I veiw as a bit amateurish. It's still in transit. Could do with a bit more work, but there comes a point where we move on. I do understand the connection now between your work and mine, the themes. I want to post longer prose but stranded by the scope.
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You should write and post
You should write and post more y'know. And look at all the comments made back then!
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Rhythmic and powerful. Yes,
Rhythmic and powerful. Just realised I've read and commented before. Lemme try another story.
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