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M unbearable lightness of Being May 24, 2021
 

Sylvia Plath on Living with the Darkness and Making Art from the Barely Bearable Lightness of Being

lettershome_sylviaplath.jpg?w=680When the twenty-two-year-old Sylvia Plath (October 27, 1932–February 11, 1963) wrote to her mother one bleak January day, both women were wading through a darkness of the soul. Science was only just beginning to hone the tools with which to begin dissecting the elemental mystery of what makes us who we are: how much of our psychology and what we experience as our personhood — whether we call it self or soul or spirit — is a product of our physical constitution, of the particular biochemical processes coursing through our particular infrastructure of matter that we experience as our body. Neuroscience was then an infant science — it still is — and the helix of heredity had just been discovered, hinting at the promise of new clarity on the ancient puzzlement of nature versus nurture, new insight into how much of our psychology is a biological inheritance and how much an ongoing composition continually revised by the confluence of chance and choice we call experience.

Several years earlier, the teenage Plath had begun contouring her consciousness and mapping its psychological promontories, its luminous surfaces and its dark edges, rhapsodizing about the joy of living, thinking deeply about free will and what make us who we are, and composing her first tragic poem in response to a minor domestic accident. Two years before she shaded in what was becoming an all-consuming darkness in “The Disquieting Muses,” she wrote to her mother in a letter included in the posthumously collected Letters Home: Correspondence 1950–1963 (public library):

2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.pngI don’t know whether it is an hereditary characteristic, but our little family is altogether too prone to lie awake at nights hating ourselves for stupidities — technical or verbal or whatever — and to let careless, cruel remarks fester until they blossom in something like ulcer attacks — I know that during these last days I’ve been fighting an enormous battle with myself.

But then, with the presence of mind and the triumph of spirit that allowed her to live through the remaining years of her life — years she filled with some of the most timelessly exquisite poetry ever written — she adds:

2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.pngBut beyond a point, fighting only wears one out and one has to shut off that nagging part of the mind and go on without it with bravo and philosophy… Your present life is the important thing.

There is a dangerous fallacy — a biological falsehood, a feebleness of empathy, an ethical failing — in the view that people who die by suicide after living with mental illness have somehow failed at life. It is one thing to feel deeply the tragedy of that loss, to rue the help not available to them in their time of struggle; it is quite another to fault the faulty instrument itself. It is impossible for any one consciousness to truly know what living inside another is like in the first place — we make art and poems and songs to try to show each other what it is like to be alive in this body-mind. But it is especially unfathomable for a mind coursing with fairly ordinary biochemistry, housed in a brain with fairy ordinary neurophysiology, to grasp what it might be like to live with a mind inflamed by ceaselessly misfiring neurotransmitters or a mind housed in a brain with a large tumor pressing against the amygdala at every moment of every hour. To survive even a single day with such a mind is no small feat. To have not only survived thirty-one years, as Sylvia Plath did, but to have filled those years with works of staggering beauty, with poems that irradiate generations of lives — that is a rare triumph of the spirit.

Mom What you needed May 20, 2021
 
You didn't need me to correct your feelings.
You just needed me to listen, to be clear and fair and parental. 
But most of all you needed me to be alive in a way that would have made you feel able to bear adulthood, because you were terrified of growing up to be a grey faced, stressed out adult that you saw rushing about every day.
I'm so very sorry, Taye that I wasn't that parent.  I'd do it differently.  Is this the most ancient sorrow?
 
"forget not that the earth
delights to feel your bare feet
and the winds long to play
with your hair."  ~Kahil Gibran
 
 
Loving you today, yesterday, and every day.
Heart is forever broken till we reunite in heaven.
I remember, when my brother died, my mother said we should be happy we had him for as long as we did.
He, like you, were a gift from God, and so I cherish the gift, even if your time here was so fleeting.
 
Love,love,love you always & forever,
Mom
Apryll Nakamura Please say hi to your cousin Kyle July 14, 2020
 
Dear Taye-chan,

It's me, your Auntie Apryll.  Our cousin Kyle just arrived there.  Could you please give him a big hug and show him around the place.  He may be a bit confused.

I know you are having fun finding all the best ski slopes.  Kyle liked skiing too, so maybe you can show him where to queue for all the ski lifts - although I suspect in heaven there are probably no ski lift lines, no ski passes (annual or otherwise), and probably no ski lifts at all.  I suspect your own personal angel just flies you to the top of the slopes.

As for me, if I ever do luck out and get to take the "up escalator" to heaven, you will find me at that cosmic Ski Lodge in the sky in the jacuzzi.  Heaven holds no cold, wet, terryfying, humiliating ski slopes for me !!!  No, for me heaven is just lots of cute ski instructors in hot tubs (swim suits optional).

Please introduce Kyle to your Uncle Steve and my dad and tell them I love them very much, and miss them.  Tell them that I pray for them, and with them, every morning and I know they are with me every day - especially when I do dumb things.  I can often hear dad saying "WHAAaaaat !?!?"  or Steve rolling his eyes.  And because I do do dumb things often, it just means I get to spend more time with them in exxpletives, eye-rolling and warm, fun memories.

Please take Kyle to see his Grandpa Jack and Grandma Una's mansion.  He'll get plenty of love, hugs and food there for sure.  Stay awhile and enjoy Una's ozoni which you can now eat year round in heaven !!!  Spend the night and have some of Una's home-made granola for breakfast (yummy), and salad soup for lunch (not so yummy).  Above all, stay away from Una's home-made fermented mushroom juice and herb teas.  Some of Una's homemade health remedies were pretty stinky and tasted worse than they smelled - but don't tell Auntie Una I said that - I want to be invited over for dinner if I can sneak past St Peter at heaven's gate.

Maybe you can all go fishing with Grandpa Jack.  There should be no fishing licenses or fishing limits in heaven, but I do wonder what the fishing police do to pass their time in heaven.  Maybe they fish.

Every morning when I do yoga, I can see the fishing boats leaving the marina or fishermen fishing off the Venice pier, and it reminds me of days fishing with Uncle Jack in Santa Cruz or with Uncle Mike in Salt Lake City, or with Steve, Mark and Dad at the Snake River.

Maybe you and Kyle can all go on a fishing cruise together.  Just a few simple things to keep in mind from your Auntie Apryll:

1.  Do not get emotionally attached to the fish.  Do not look in their eyes and cry.  And if you are going to throw them overboard to free them - never, never, never let your uncles, brothers or grandparents know or they will never take you fishing with them again.  Please say "hi" to all my fish friends in heaven - especially the ones that didn't get eaten thanks to me.

2.  When you go tuna fishing, always take shoyu, wasabi, shoga and daikon with you so if you catch more than the limit, you can eat all the "over-the-limit" maguro sashimi style before you dock (a lesson from Uncle Jack).  But also remember, you do NOT need to eat it all (a lesson I found out the hard way) - although I suspect there are no tummy aches in heaven.

3.  When you go salmon fishing do NOT share any of the fresh caught smoked salmon with friends.  They will keep asking you for more.  Be selfish.  After all, you're already in heaven, what's the worst that can happen?

Please take Kyle to meet your Uncle Tom and cousin Barry.  Barry can give Kyle some Billy Joel cassette tapes and Kyle can show Barry how to download that modern stuff from iTunes (or the heavenly equivelent).  Maybe Uncle Tom can take Kyle golfing or bowling although I don't know how they keep score in heaven if everyone has a perfet game.

Please introduce Kyle to Auntie Josie and Auntie Betty.  I think Josie and Betty are a lot like your mom and me.  Your mom says you are a lot like me too.  I am hoping I can spend more time with your mom hearing stories about you and getting to learn more about you.  That way we will not be such srangers when we do meet (again, contingent on that up-escalator thing).

Until then, I am having a "beter-than-you-could-ever-possibly-imagine" time hanging out with your sister and brother.

Taye, you would be so proud of Weston - he is now a lawyer practicing law with the Attorney Gnereal of the State of Oregon !!!!  Wow !!  And he is studying Japanese language, culture and visits Japan as often as he can.  I know you wanted to study Japanese, and maybe when we all get together we can all find a cloud and talk Japanese and write Kanji together (although I suspect in heaven there may be no language differences).  As I am writing this, I realize this heaven thing is very complicated.  Do they have orientation classes in heaven about heaven?  Maybe like "You're Not In Hell 101"

Thank you very much Taye, for taking care of Kiki during her year of hell in Indonesia.  Please continue to take care of her, watch over her, keep her safe and give her wisdom as she continues to teach God's other little children during this time of pandemic.  She is quite heroic and I am sure she appreciates your help.

Finally, my dear Taye, please take care of your mom and dad.  Your mom wrote a beautiful condolence for your Auntie Suzanne, Uncle Andy and Cousin Alana.  It was very difficult and she struggled so with her own feelings and memories while trying to find the right words to comfort Suzanne and Andy.  I had the great honor of completing her sentiments and attaching a photo from your Uncle Mark to send to Kyle's parents.

Taye, thank you for taking time to read this long letter from your Auntie Apryll.  They tell me you have plentry of free time up there in heaven, so I hope you don't mind if I write to you from time to time.  They didn't really have this web-site thing going when the angels came for Steve and Dad, so maybe you can forward them my messages.

I love you Taye,
I pray for you every day,
I hope we get to hajimemashita someday,
Arigato Gozaimashita,
Ja mata,
Your Auntie Apryll
Dad Tenderness at your core June 13, 2019
 
I was driving back from the house to work from lunch, down 12th street.  The steep hill off Awbrey Butte.  Then right in front of me a mama quail and her tiny babies walked into the road.  The babies were not larger than my thumb.  I hit the brakes and stopped a couple feet in front of them and watched them follow mama quail safely to the other side.  As I started moving again, my mind flashed back to early June 2014 as I was driving Taye to workout from school and a mama goose and her babies stepped in front of us.  I stopped in time and Taye watched them cross.  I was watching Taye.  Her face lit up and that often times coat of armor melted away, and I saw pure love in her face and in her voice as she sighed, “awwww.”  That precious moment and image is frozen in my mind forever.  As it came back to me, tears streamed like rain.
 
Even if I had no calendar, my heart and my body would tell me of the pain and chaos this day brought five years ago.  But today, wrapped within the memory of the little birds crossing the road, is a message of beauty and love and change.
 
As mom and I began the move, I prayed for God to send His Holy Spirit to help mom and me through this upheaval.  To help us pack away all the love, the memories, the hopes and dreams physically, but more importantly into our hearts and souls - and to carry them wherever we go.  God answered that prayer, sending a beautiful mourning dove to watch over us every day and night as we dove ever deeper into the layers of our lives.  And when we were ready to leave for Hawaii, she left too.  In Hawaii, she reappeared for us, just to say “welcome.”
 
Since Taye’s birthday, her spirit has grown stronger and stronger.  Its hard to describe exactly, but she is distinct and clear to me.  I believe, like the mourning dove, she is here to guide us all through these massive changes in our lives and into a new chapter to find and pursue our purpose on this earth.
 
It’s funny. Graduations are happening everywhere this week.  There is always the talk about “realizing one’s potential.” And everyone automatically translates that into money, job, career, recognition, beauty, status, facebook posts and selfies.  Yet none of that is true, not a single thing.  It is about purpose: how do we use our gifts, every breath, every heartbeat, to bring more love, more joy, more compassion and more forgiveness into this world.  That is what this day means.  That is what Taye is trying to say, right now, to every one of us.  And if you are still, and quiet and let it sink deeply into your heart, I know you’ll hear it too.
 
We are at new beginnings.  I pray that each of us will be able to gather up all the love and memories and dreams into your heart, thank God for them, and use them to find and follow your purpose.
 
Love,
Dad
 
 
Mom Missing and loving you will never end June 13, 2019
 
Aloha sweet girl, I woke up at 6 am in Hawaii, and looked out our second story window, and saw the ocean and a rainbow just behind the palm tree, made me feel like you put it there just for me. Had myself a good cry.
 
I remember flying here with you, and on the plane you were telling me all the great food we would eat while we were in Hawaii. I loved going to new eating places with you, and our discovery of Sunflower Cafe in Chinatown.  All the Dim Sum, and the ones we didn't have the nerve to try like chicken feet...but loving all the ones we did eat.  Why did we never return?
 
Every time I pass Chun's beach, I think of the summer you surfed almost every day.  Were you happy then?
 
It's still June 12th in Hawaii, I think this website is set to East Coast time, cause it's posting the 13th.  We all thought of you today, but that is nothing new.  We thought of you yesterday, and the day before that too.  Taye we think of you in silence, we often speak your name.  All we have are our memories and your picture in frames.  Your memory is our special keepsake with which you never part.
 
I have to believe God has you in His keeping, but we have you in our hearts.
 
I've always wondered, maybe she who suffers has special access to God?
 
Be well my sweet darling, I can't believe it's been five years since you left us.  Please be our Guardian Angel now, we need it so badly.
 
My heart still aches for you every day.
Loving you always,  Mom
 
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