This time a year ago I was leaving Mexico.
I was on a boat. I was on a boat leaving Mexico and if I knew that it was the last time I would be seeing my friend Steve Bridges I would’ve asked the boat to turn around and I would have gone back and back and back farther. All the way if I could where nothing was blinding and everything was dark and still in the way things are right before they go bad.
A year ago I sat on a plane, like I am as I write this, and I ordered a glass of wine as I looked through my photos of the retreat and I laughed at the videos of Steve and thought How I love this man. How I love this man.
A year ago I came back from Mexico and laid on my sofa feeling pancake flat and Steve texted me I am laying on my friend’s couch and I can’t stop thinking about our trip. I wish we were back there. Wow. I wrote back me too and in my pancake way I stood up and put on shoes to go teach my yoga class but I knew something had shifted, something was gone, and maybe that was why I felt flat or maybe it was natural after a trip like that to feel so much I want to be back. To feel it so much in your bones that they won’t even carry you. They turn you into a pancake. Pancake yoga teacher. Nothing. Flat. Pancake person.
When he died, I texted him I want to be back. I want to be back even though I knew he was dead.
We made videos the night before we left Mexico. Like little time bombs with messages on them that we planned to watch in a year’s time. When it was Steve’s turn he looked into the camera and said, That was fun. Let’s do it again next year. Hell, let’s do it again next month.
He died within the month.
This morning I got the text that I had been waiting for, the one I knew would come today or tomorrow or yesterday. Ronan died. One of my best friends, the beloved writer Emily Rapp, lost her two year old son this morning as I zipped up my suitcase to head for the airport for my Hawaii yoga retreat. His suffering is over she wrote. His short and remarkable life she wrote. I am numb she texted me privately.
I am numb too. I am on a flight to Maui and I feel nothing. I am hungry. I am not hungry. I am sad. Am I sad? I feel nothing. Where does the pain go? It’s floating up here on the airplane and I am sure will make its way up to my seat if we don’t crash. What happened? How does a mind process this? (I will have the cheese omelette and not the cereal, please.) Ronan died and it’s for the best say the very best intentioned platitudes. My friend Robert held him for an hour yesterday. I asked him what it was like. Everything, he said. It was everything.
What’s it like to hold a dying baby for one hour? One hour in a short life is like ten years in a normal life span. (What is a
normal life span?) What’s it like to hold a dying baby for ten years? He got to feel his last little oomphs right there in his arms (imagine that!) and hold his small fingers (maybe he intertwined them in his own?). He got to brush a few hairs from his eyes and pass him back to his grandparents or his mom and he got to feel a life right there in his arms which would disappear in less than 24 hours into That’s it and It’s over but he got to hold that and stop time for ten years because in a dying baby’s life one hour is equal to ten years. He got to do that and I am glad for that. I love him for that. For being there for Emily and Ronan when I couldn’t.
It makes you want to stop lying.
Why lie when this can happen? When a person can be born and then just like that It’s Over, It’s done. He’s gone.
Why tell untruths as if people care?
I keep having this recurring dream where I am driving and the brakes don’t work. The other night I had it again. I was driving in Philadelphia, over the Benjamin Franklin bridge. The brakes wouldn’t work. I tried pressing my foot into the brake and it only accelerated the car which wasn’t even my car. I swerved in and out of lanes so I wouldn’t hit anyone. It was all my untruths rushing at me. In the dream I somehow made it to safety and pulled out a paper where I had put a big X through a box that said “Brakes.”
I had shut them off myself.
The greatest lie that was ever told was that you are safe. It’s the lie I still want someone to tell me though. (Say it to me?)
Say it to me.
Other lies have been both monumental and petty but with the news of a baby’s death comes a yearning for honesty. There is nothing else. I love you to all the people I love. I don’t care to all the things I don’t care about, and there are as many as the things I do care about. I am happy. I am not happy. All of it. Truths and lies and some half and half.
Once, on a road trip, there was this deer along Route 70, just outside Cody, Wyoming. His eyes the color of headlights. He recognized me immediately. (He was no stranger to regret and he spotted mine immediately ). And with his four-chambered stomach and eyes on the sides of his head, I knew his type too. The cautious, the time-takers, the digesters.
Unlike him: I am impulsive as a flood.
But we knew each other, me and that deer. For the ten years or two seconds he stood there in the road in front of our car.
A basic law of the universe: the implications of what’s been said always mean more than what actually has been said. My deer understood this algebra, this economy of language and therefore didn’t say much. Me: I spit it out as I feel it when and if I feel it. Unlike my deer, I do not contemplate my cud.
I love you!
I love you!
The lies I have told have mainly been to myself but others have been to save face.
There is no more of that. Do you get what I am saying? It doesn’t matter what anyone thinks because once you have held Ronan in your arms for ten years or one hour you see that what is important is the life we make, right here and now. You may not have been the one holding him in your arms for ten years but you get the metaphor, you get the as if. You can almost smell Ronan in his baby and old man smell. The life you make here and now. Not the lies or the I dropped out of college because I was half dead and freezing but I will lie about it so you don’t judge me because no one cares. It does not matter. It’s the life you make here and now because after you get the text that he dies you realize that all you ever had were the moments of holding him, the minutes with Steve in Mexico, the half-seconds with people you love. I don’t know how fast it feels at the end, but my guess is that it feels like ten years. Or maybe 6 months. Maybe less or more. But it won’t feel like much. It will feel like all you had were breaths and moments and a few snapshots with the sun in your eyes like that. You will squint to remember the way the light felt in your eyes, to recreate that and everything else that was blinding and bright and yours.
I love you. The words alive like velvet antlers. Words made of bone. They need a way out! I must speak them. I must tell no more lies. The life that you make here and now. Here and now.
Words: make, here, now, love. Remember them.
The old deer had made it through once more, one more near miss across an ocean of cars, a scuffle of rain, and a sky full of mistakes. He’d found a pair of eyes (mine!) to lock into before going back into the world, alone and foraging.
It makes you want to stop lying, to climb onto the wing of the plane and hang there if you knew you could and sob and swing and fall into clouds like you would if you were a cartoon and could always be safe in a cartoon world. You could sleep on a nimbus cloud and wake up and ten years will be ten years rather than an hour. It makes you want to stop lying and run into the arms of all your beloveds (you’re lucky if you have even a handful) and tell them to keep you there. Hang on to me, tight like this. Tight like this. Keep me here. It makes you want to admit that lying is worthless and dirty and that nothing matters, not really anyway, so might as well buck up and say I love you or I don’t love you or I am so broken or I wish you didn’t die or Yeah, I get that your spirit is with me forever but God damn it I want your body. Forget the spirit! I will trade it for your body and smell and fingers. It makes you want to forget everything and remember everything with equal measure. It makes you want to cry for days and beg the gods or the scientists or luck to leave you alone and leave everyone alone that you love. It makes you want to live like you were meant to all along even in the moments of self-hatred. It makes you all these things.
It makes you.






15 responses
This is so absolutely beautiful. I can feel every word you wrote. Love this so much.
It makes you for sure! Others dont like the changes either but I dont care I see ronans story and I cry and think why pretend I like these people. Why pretend or do anything but love my family and start loving myself. It made me.
Jen, I read your essay and felt compelled to reply. I am so sorry to hear of your loss, your friend Emily’s loss. I’m sure Ronan was a remarkable little guy. I took one of your classes a few years ago when I was visiting my mom in Santa Monica. It was one of the best classes I’ve taken. You are a beautiful writer as well. Best wishes for continued success and enlightenment and peace for all who were touched by Ronan.
Dina Gardner
This is so beautiful and heartbreaking. What an amazing tribute to an amazing soul.
Beautiful piece. Jennifer.
Jennifer,
I stumbled upon your website via your Instagram feed. I love the uplifting and inspirational things you post there. In the strange way the universe works, I was kinda wow’ed the other day when I was reading Emily’s blog to see you posted there. Emily was my professor at Antioch LA several years ago and I have been following Ronan’s story for the last couple years. I didn’t ever know Emily well, nor Ronan, nor do I know you. But I share in your grief and thank you for the sentiments you wrote here. My family unexpectedly lost three beautiful souls between August and November. Grief is a weight unlike any other. Your words grab at it and pry it off a bit. Sadly, we know the familiarity of loss that, paradoxically, feels different every time. I appreciate this so much. Sending love and healing and light to you, Emily and all those who love little Ronan.
This is utterly beautiful and luminous.
Thanks for opening your heart with this essay Jen it was beautifully written. So sorry for the loss of Ronan.
Much love to you.
The greatest lie that was ever told was that you are safe. YES. What a beautiful, extraordinary moment of clarity and sharing. I’m so very sorry for your loss.
Dear Jen: Terribly sorry for your loss and such a beautiful essay you wrote to honor your loved one … Angels with glistening wings, take flight through the stars, from Heaven to Earth, bringing the light of Peace to those who grieve. “It is true” they say, “The one you love is glorious in the hands of God, and at Peace in the arms of the Angels”. Wishing you Peace.
Jen,I am moved to tears once again. So sorry to hear of Ronan passing on…..much Love and some peace to you all. Xoxo
I just finished Emily’s book on Monday. To know that Ronan is physically gone now-we knew it was coming, all familiar with his unspeakably maddening story-crushes the spirit. There are no miracles, we have no control. We have this minute, we have those we love and who love us, we have words and music and sun and hope. When the world loses a baby like Ronan, or a loved one like Steve, we always think ‘I will change. I will visit my grandmother more often than once a quarter. I will be honest and true and I will dedicate myself to only what matters.’ Then days and months pass, we slip, we tell a white lie then a coal black one. We forget to call our mom. We feel awful about it, but it doesn’t burn enough to put us back on the Path. Then someone else leaves us forever. And the cycle repeats. With every synapse and corpuscle, I want this time to be different-it’s what I vowed as I read Ronan and Emily and Rick’s story and I hear it in Jennifer’s words as well. Maybe this time, this baby, this smack in the face will be the one that changes us for the better, forever.
I’ve been thinking of Emily and Ronan, off and on, since I first saw her writing here on the Rumpus. I am sad for them, for everyone touched by the story as I have been. This is a beautiful essay, and thanks for letting us know.
Every word of this essay makes me want to do better.
This is another amazing piece. It gave me tears. I understand and feel you, and I’m grateful for the reminder, even though it hurts. It’s also comforting because sometimes I start to doubt the way I love when I love; but, then I read this, and I remembered, once again, why the present moment is all we have. Love your writing.
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