"I want Mom. When is
she going to be back?" my younger brother asks, his voice cracking with
emotion.
"I don't know buddy - but everything is going to be ok."
I feel so bad that I can't give him what he's wanting - his mom. I sing him a song till after awhile he falls asleep.
I was 12-years-old, and it was late at night. I had just finished tucking my younger brother Daivd in bed. Both of my parents were gone over at the hospital taking care of
my older brother, and I was alone with David. It had been like that for the past couple of days. I walk out of his room and with all the lights still on, I stop
in place - the house is so empty. In that
moment I realize there's no one to sing me to sleep and tell me that everything
is going to be ok.
I put my snow clothes on and go outside. It's cold and a foot of
white is covering the ground. I make an
angel in the snow and look up at the stars that glimmer so clearly in the
country sky. I was
overwhelmed with how small I felt compared to them. I thought with all of these stars and the universe so big, there
has to be at least one person out there who feels just as alone as I do. I imagine someone else looking up at the stars from some other
place, in that same moment, and thinking the same thing. And somehow, we were
connected and I was no longer alone. That
thought gave me the comfort that I needed to make me feel like I was a part of
something larger.
I was thinking about that night of star gazing the other evening,
as I was watching the philharmonic play a free concert on the Great Lawn in
Central Park. I looked
up from the grass and past the dark silhouette of tree tops to see a sky that
was so blank and so strange looking without stars.
There's a similar feeling of small-ness, and feeling like you're a
part of something bigger in the city. Maybe
that's because the buildings are so much taller, and there are crowds of people
walking at all hours going somewhere to do something. When I see all of the people around me and the building so
large, I get the same feeling that I use to get while star gazing. The business and the grandness makes me feel like I'm a part of
something bigger here. Even though
I'm a very small part of it, we're all small parts making up something bigger.
I've been in NYC for a summer internship for almost 3 weeks now. Each day I feel more at home. I'll be updating more often again over the next summer months!
i just love visiting your blog..!!
ReplyDeletegood luck with the internship….i know you shall do well..!!
You are a beautiful writer.
ReplyDeleteThank you Brittany!
DeleteBest wishes with the internship. BEAUTIFUL writing.
ReplyDeleteAw thank you Judy!
DeleteI always feel a bit sad when I can't see the stars in the sky
ReplyDeleteYes, there's nothing quite like looking up and seeing lights in the sky
DeleteI love to read what you write.
ReplyDeleteAw, thank you so much
DeleteWow, don't even know what to say, but this was beautiful. Love your blog!
ReplyDeleteVery happy for you, Esther! Your writing sparkles with those NY city lights. Enjoy creating, learning and living there.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed reading this :), I took my time with it, and it felt like poetry. Staring up at the city-sky of Lyon at night was the same - a mass of purple clouds and no stars. Arriving back home into the middle-of-nowhere NZ was like an awakening - the sky was filled again. In some ways, nothing connects us, but then everything connects us: matter, emotions, time and such.
ReplyDeleteI wish you luck and joy with your internship! :) And I look forward to reading more.
xX Zoe
I remember my first 4th of July in NYC 11 years ago. I was on a rooftop in the East Village and could see the black silhouette of all the buildings back-lit by the fireworks. After a while, I noticed that there were crowds of people on all those rooftops. They were all there in the dark together watching the same sky.
ReplyDelete