Sunday, October 06, 2024

Anchors


I started this on Friday morning, the sixth day of Camilla's disappearance. I was going to use one of the pale stone threads. Keep it all in white, silver, and black. A memorial. 

Then I dug through my threads. No stone colors in the box. I jumped directly to the color of hope without any context. I had become numb and was looking forward to getting away. I picked Charlie up at school and spent the night with them.  

I blew through Costco on the way home. After a week of impotent anxiety and sleeplessness, it felt good to do something purposeful. Power shopping, not retail therapy. Less than a hundred bucks in less than twenty minutes. There's a win.

I was tired when I got home midday on Saturday. Lolled about. Fed my face. Camped in bed to just make the minutes pass with some mindless TV.  Waiting had become a hideous habit.

That's when Camilla appeared at the dish on the floor under the screen. Her back is dark grey, the carpeting dark blue, and the light was afternoon soft. I stared hard to feel what I was seeing and believe it.

 It's been a long time since this old body&soul felt such an unbidden thrill. I've banked it hard and now I need to take some time to review. I know there are more moments like this to haul out, dust off and experience again. 

I picked the stitching up this morning and the familiar moves brought a measure of comfort. I still didn't sleep well even though Camilla was on the bed with me, by my feet while Salem held down her IKEA pillow at the head of the bed to my right. Sometimes I miss the old California King.



Not everyone is thrilled about her being home. Salem clings and grumbles if Camilla camps too close to me. 

Maybe they adapt to change quicker, without the emotional baggage that we carry. 


I have been working my way through a long list of Things Adults Must Do. It sucks, but each accomplishment feels like a door opening to something new and good. 

I'm making room--headspace--to write. 

Goals are good.

11 comments:

Nancy said...

Yay! I am so grateful you ahve your Camilla home again 💕 I can understand so much of this, even with no cat over here...but with other things. The escaping to mindless, the heavy waiting, the emotional baggage one carries and avoiding Adult things - my list is long too. May you relax into better sleep and continue to tick off those tasks. xo

Liz A said...

the color of hope ... so glad Camilla returned ... now to live through the next month ... hoping there will be a landslide to defeat any question

Stephanie said...

First, from a couple thousand miles away, I am thrilled that Camilla is home. Second, your writing is so good. It wakes me right up and I pay attention.

deemallon said...

I made my comment disappear. Will this one take?

deemallon said...

Okay what I said before is that I agree about the punch of the writing here. So I hope you can get through that list and get on with writing! Happy about Camilla. So happy. And I still think she might have been disoriented by the chlorine burn in the air.

Deb Lacativa said...

Thanks, that's all appreciated.

Deb Lacativa said...

Being an adult is so boring. I'm going to be running off the rails later in the month :)

Deb Lacativa said...

I read HCR and a few others before I get out of bed. Then, no politics for the rest of the day. Books, old movies. Cleaning even!

Deb Lacativa said...

When she gets close to me I ask her, "where did you go? what were you doing." No answers yet. I'm afraid her voice is like Marilyn Monroe's. She is someone who needs protection from tragedy. You may be right about the bad air. I still have a dry, squeaky cough almost three weeks post COVID. When she first came home, she smelled like a dog. It was wierd.

Joanne S said...

possibly a guest sleepover in empty dog house.

Deb Lacativa said...

I was thinking that. Two doors down they used to have dogs that woofed endlessly.