Elizabeth Bishop's great poem has been much in my mind these days. I haven't lost any "you," the devastating loss that ends the poem with a bang, but, boy, have I lost things.
And I am familiar with and tired of that feeling of panic when one does--the feeling that ALL is lost--not just the keys, but everything. I lost my keys yesterday. I was too tired to fully enter the vertiginous sense grief, but I still went through a cascading range of emotions. Losing a small thing makes me feel that I've lost control of the world and of my mind both. I doubt the many little tricks that keep the day perking along smoothly and, in doubting them, I see how much of my day depends on those little tricks (swipe your MetroCard and turn right down the stairs; walk up 58th if you're getting a latte, 60th if you're saving your money; always take your keys with you to the bathroom; remember to grab your keys on the way out). All these little habits give me the mental space to plan my class (or worry about it), to go over my list of the things I need to do, to listen to a song and release myself from those lists.
Babies struggle to learn about "object permanence." The "fort-da" game or peek-a-boo teaches them the big but ultimately gentle lesson that things that go away often return. But when we adults lose something, it reminds us of the dark side of that game: sometimes things don't return; sometimes they are lost. And, as Bishop's catalogue forces us to confront, sometimes it's not just keys that we lose.
I came across Woolf's version of this in Mrs. Dalloway the other day, lovely because it inverts the usual proportions: Clarissa's unhappiness, arising out of imperfect relationships, is as bad as the feeling of losing a thing. Or rather, her inability to remember why she feels unhappy is like being unable to find a pearl in the grass. Odd, dramatic, certainly contributing to Clarissa's tinselly self, but also wonderfully right:
But--but--why did she suddenly feel, for no reason that she could discover, desperately unhappy? As a person who has dropped some grain of pearl or diamond into the grass and parts the tall blades very carefully, this way and that, and searches here and there vainly, and at last spies it there at the roots, so she went through one thing and another.I gave a big lecture yesterday--ill-attended, but stressful nonetheless. I left my keys in the bathroom just before--though, thank goodness, I only noticed them missing afterwards. Instead of being able to reflect on my performance, I had to trek to my husband's office, borrow his keys, and walk home, tired, wrung out, and a bit ashamed. Of course this is precisely when one does lose things. And it's precisely when one has the least elasticity to absorb the loss.
Someone turned the keys in to security. I picked them up this morning from the supervisor, running in late with oil on his hands--he had a flat tire on the way to work. So it goes. It's November. It's a wonder the world turns at all.
6 comments:
I'd never read this poem before. Thanks for sharing.
I lost both my phone & my blackberry at LaGuardia recently. I didn't notice I had neither until I went to turn them off as the plane was pulling away from the gate. It was devastating -- not because of the info lost (which was a very big pain that I still feel occassionally when I can't find some unlisted number), but because of that very sense of loss of control that you write about that makes you feel like you are loosing your mind. I almost broke down in tears on the plane (isn't that ridiculous?) and would have if it had not been for the commisseration of those seated near me, the flight attendant, and even the pilot who called the airline club where I had been to have them search. I think we all feel that grief when something so minor -- yet so vital to our daily existence -- is lost.
Lovely poem and lovely post. I appreciate the Woolf quote too.
I'm with you on the feeling of lost. I left my purse on the back of a chair at a coffee shop known for the thievery of unattended laptops.
Sinking is how I'd describe it.
I'm working on an author site at the moment,
tradinginmemories.com
and I like the below quote from the site:
The author, Barbara Hodgson, is a book designer and she collects found art when she travels.
She says:
I have abandoned boarding cards before boarding flights, slept securely on my passport in the beds of dubious hotels only to go out and leave it under the pillow the next morning, left my camera dangling on chair backs in cafés. Perhaps I am drawn to jetsam because I am picking up my own tracks, following myself through city streets, retrieving myself.
BTW, someone turned in my purse. My money, my phone, my camera--all there.
My sympathies, Anne.
Here's something I wrote about losing things back when I was a better blogger. (I never found the second half of the post card collection.) (If you follow the whole link, you'll be back to our Barbie conversation.) Just a few weeks ago, I "lost" all of my good jewelry to a person or persons unknown who broke into our house and took it all. I'm into the art of grieving for now. But trying to be thankful for many things. Cheers.
Sorry your lost your keys Ann> I lost my cell and wallet in Orlando Tuesday. Can you e mail me at Columbiaguitar@aol.com?
Best,
David Reynolds
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