In this liminal space we call old age, simultaneously becoming and un-becoming, growing more and more into my self and out of my life, I go over and over the joys and sorrows that add up to this fine experience of living: at once uniquely personal and utterly universal.
In this limited space where I live and die at once – reminding myself we are all doing that, every moment since our birth, though we only become aware of it later (if we do become aware) – between these parentheses, I begin to awaken. Even as the ‘long sleep’ looms.
Who is the weaver? On whose loom stretches my life?
Someone in a Netflix movie sings, chirpily, ‘What a difference a day makes…’ and I am taken right back to being seventeen, slow dancing with the lights turned low, among other couples at the end of a student party, while on the record player some singer with a sleepy voice, some singer who sounded like Nat King Cole, crooned the words, the soft, electrifying words, as we stood and swayed on the spot together in the crowded room, each entwined pair alone in a circle of two.
A small, inconsequential memory. Nothing of any great importance in my life happened to me that evening. No coupling up with any of the dancing strangers. It was just a place and time where I happened to be, briefly. Not my scene. Yet a flash of music, so momentary, so differently sung, revives it from some old corner of memory, with all the sexual longing which the room was full of that night as the other young bodies around me danced slower and slower, closer and closer, into full embrace, and the music sighed and stopped.
The many tiny moments of my life return to me so, at random, in between the goings-about of my here-and-now. Even the most insignificant now feel precious. This is a thing that happened. This is a thing I witnessed. This is a thing I did. They matter to me, my small and personal days, my unimportant nights. I lived them. They happened to me, each one unique, and will not happen again.
Always / never … now / never again.
Note: After Google insists Nat King Cole never sang it, and I hunt through YouTube for all the male singers who did, it has to have been Frank Sinatra – that exact inflection and tempo – though I remember it as being sung much softer. Perhaps the record player too was turned down low.
Written for Poets and Storytellers United's Friday Writings #207: In Between.

Small happiness-es are like a coating of gold dust as time moves us along..there to illuminate the good things and pave a way for every new step or trusted safe step - and your poems and photos show how much you savour every minute and find beauty in the world(s) we live in - Jae
ReplyDeleteAh, that might be one of the nicest things anyone has ever said about me, Jae.
DeleteWow this is such an incredibly beautiful reflection Deep almost spiritual Love it The liminal space, the memories and I love these questions "Who is the weaver? On whose loom stretches my life?
ReplyDeleteThanks, Marja! It all unfolded quite unexpectedly and I went where it took me.
DeleteFine write indeed, R. Your closing paragraph (and 5-word closing line) sums it up perfectly. Thanks
DeleteThanks to you, Ron., for reading and appreciating.
DeleteGlad you are enjoying your peaceful time of reminiscings. Lovely poem.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Rall. It helps, I guess, to be a natural introvert. (Grin.)
DeleteWhat a beautiful, wistful piece. Memories are like that. Suddenly springing up and then receding into dust.
ReplyDeleteThank you. Your comment is a poem in itself!
DeleteI am breathless, Rosemary. One word ~~ STUNNING.
ReplyDeleteI smile to imagine you breathless! Yet I do know you would have entered into it fully. xx
DeleteA beautiful reminiscence of what seemed inconsequential at the time, Rosemary, yet stored in your mind and heart and recalled now as one of those special moments that make our life worth living. All the best for the Festive Season!
ReplyDeleteThanks Nick, and same to you!
DeleteA deep reflection and at the same time a very contagious piece of writing — it took me back many years to many such moments when nothing happened, but could have.
ReplyDeleteAh, that's a nice way of putting it.
DeleteI love the 'liminal space'. So true that events and non-events appear in your mind, and you don't know where they came from.
ReplyDelete"Who is the weaver? On whose loom stretches my life? "
Your words are like diamonds–their clarity and sparkle.
Happy New Year, Rosemary!
Oh, what a lovely comment, Sara! Thank you. Happy New Year to you too, and to us all.
DeleteWho is the weaver? On whose loom stretches my life? Aha! Good imagery. Nice analysis of what we have done and will do.
ReplyDeleteThank you, much appreciated.
Delete