It's 6pm on
Friday, and I'm writing to a few thousand friends I have not met yet. I am
writing to ask them to change our plans and meet a little while later. Here's
the thing.
Janet has
been the most consistent relationship of my adult life, and that is just a
fact. We've lived in numerous houses, and jumped a few make shift families, but
it's always really been the two of us. She slept in bed with me, her head on
the pillow, and she accepted my hysterical, tearful face into her chest, with
her paws around me, every time I was heartbroken, or spirit-broken, or just
lost, and as years went by, she let me take the role of her child, as I fell
asleep, with her chin resting above my head. She was under the piano when I
wrote songs, barked any time I tried to record anything, and she was in the
studio with me all the time we recorded the last album.
She's my
best friend and my mother and my daughter, my benefactor, and she's the one who
taught me what love is. I can't come to South America. Not now. When I got back
from the last leg of the US tour, there was a big, big difference. She doesn't
even want to go for walks anymore. I know that she's not sad about aging or
dying. Animals have a survival instinct, but a sense of mortality and vanity,
they do not. That’s why they are so much more present than people.
Sometimes
it takes me 20 minutes to pick which socks to wear to bed. But this decision is
instant. These are the choices we make, which define us. I will not be the
woman who puts her career ahead of love and friendship. I am the woman who
stays home and bakes Tilapia for my dearest, oldest friend. And helps her be
comfortable, and comforted, and safe, and important.
Many of us
these days, we dread the death of a loved one. It is the ugly truth of Life,
that keeps us feeling terrified and alone. I wish we could also appreciate the
time that lies right beside the end of time. I know that I will feel the most
overwhelming knowledge of her, and of her life and of my love for her, in the
last moments. I need to do my damnedest to be there for that. Because it will
be the most beautiful, the most intense, the most enriching experience of life
I've ever known. When she dies.
So I am
staying home, and I am listening to her snore and wheeze, and reveling in the
swampiest, most awful breath that ever emanated from an angel. And I am asking
for your blessing. I'll be seeing you.
Love, Fiona
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