This Great Love to Share
We
sat alone by the river when the comet streaked above our heads, a
sharp, clear line that burned into the black. It was a split-second sky-mark, but I can still see it when I pull out the memory. In those days, we spent minutes and hours in
silence. Words are important, but, right then, it was all too much for
words to muddy, and we knew what needed knowing, anyway.
In the middle of the night, we
sat on hard stones and watched each other through the bonfire. He wore the
flames like a wreath around his head. He was sure and certain of his heart; I was timid and bold by turns. Love is often too large to hold quietly,
but I did.
We had no
long talks late into the night about our future, about the number of
children we should have, or about the best colors for a wedding. We
didn't discuss how we'd handle finances nor with what fabric we'd
reupholster our couches when the stuffing spilled through. Mostly,
there were pools of silence, dark and cool. Shadows and spaces in which
to think and feel.
We talked and laughed and muddled a lot, too, forging our way from here to
there. We wrote words, needful ones and nonsense both, filling pages
enough to stretch across the ocean, which they did. We walked and talked
for miles that winter, spring, and summer, and we drove for miles more with music and wind snatching
words away.
I suppose the silence stands out
because now those pools ring loud and boisterous. They hold rowdy splashes and
rope swings and shouts across the riverbed. The surface roils with
young limbs learning to swim. All this noise and mostly happy chaos
sprang forth from pools of silence.
All this love was born of one good friendship.
Now, again, I hear high-pitched hiccoughs and feel a tiny leg quivering in sleep. With bony knees drawn
to his belly, he's a small, whorled seashell curved into itself. Little
goat grunts and high, squeaky sighs come first, and then his eyes roll back into his head as sleep comes.
Living
is knotted and tangled. It is hard and gritty and ugly in patches.
The earth groans, as it must. But simplicity waits in the elemental. Nursing in the middle of the night,
half-asleep, a small body lies curled between my friend and I. The fan
spins, the crickets sing, and I find in all the nighttime noises of a
family sleeping that here, too, is silence, vast and deep.
And in this silence is great love to share.