I’ve been following your life as it was in the year 2009, via your words, and other’s words to your words. Denial, Infatuation and Heartbreak catch my eye. It’s all quite healthy, positivism and sense and all. Eschewing the marshes and glaring a flashlight into the heart of the mist.
I’m sure we’ve wondered, you and I: ‘Do we mean love, when we say love?’ (Samuel Beckett). How does so simple an emotion, so plain an exchange, taper at the ends like ancient, blue paint when confronted by what we were and what we have done and what we will do? What did we do to the sun of our universe? You know the answer: ‘So many stories, some apologies’.
Let sense and sensibility stand where it may. I will stand with you. In your marshes and your mist, in your implosions and fulminations, in your stories and your apologies. I think people ought not to mind our train wrecks. We live for the sentiment, not the prize. When we sit and talk to people as the sun changes direction, something inside us unfurls; unravels its wings until we swell and unbecome into everything. Until we expand throughout the universe in the full throes of our emotion. Because we can.
And if anyone is to understand that life moves on, that we continue to perform at our best despite of anything, it would be you and I. Because in all our hours we are only ever ourselves for small hours in the night. In those tiny windows the sun we never had may haunt us, the mistakes we made may torture us, and the truth of our feelings may be revealed to us in all its truth and sense. It is because of those moments that we continue to write words that spark concern for our good sense of practicality, or cause wonder at the depth of our intended emotion, since they seem to be the antithesis of our daylight selves.
But you know, and I know that ‘Death is the only great conclusion to a great passion’. And we live with that. You know and I know, that love is wanting, and wanting is not having. Hence by the a = b= c so a = c theorem, since love is wanting and wanting is not having then love is not having.
As for questioning our sense:
We've got ninety-nine per cent the same genes as any other person. We've got ninety per cent the same as a chimpanzee. We've got thirty percent the same as a lettuce. Does that cheer you up at all? I love the lettuce. It makes me feel I belong.
Caryl Churchill
Dear people. Let us feel like we belong.
Love always,
Your big sister.