On This Side of Heaven
Commuting in the subway has a way of exposing you to the underbelly of the city. On most days, I just want to get out, avoid all the smells that seem to morph into a physical presence and walk in the city like they own a part of it. But try as I do, I can’t seem to avoid it because, you see, I live in a funny part of town. The subway is funny and the neighbors are funny and I can’t seem to muster the sympathy to understand any of the humor.
Anyway, I walk past this man to work every morning. And after work he’s always sitting right at the entrance to the subway station, lines seared across his forehead and jaw clamped tightly into his neck. He begs me for a quarter and I think to myself, “Life can be rough.”
* * *
A couple of weeks ago I walked with a friend in the oldest park in the country. It’s all green and the giggles of children create a wholesome and happy cacophony. It’s Thursday and my hair is acting like it often does on Sunday mornings right after I untwist it. I’m wearing white and my friend breaks into prose about the amphibious duck boat, her hair coiffed into sturdy puffy pigtails. The duck boat is “cool,” I say. A day later I find out that whole families have been splintered apart by the duck boat. One of the survivors, a woman, had lost nine members of her family. “Eeeii Awurade!” I knead my body into my bed and groan. Life can be cruel.
* * *
It’s Monday and my coworker laments how utterly Monday it feels. She’s right. Monday hangs gloomily in the office like a frown. And along it the chill breeze from the air- conditioner dries my nose and makes me thirsty. That Monday also happens to be the warmest day of the week for me. The following day, the icy hands of womanhood wrap themselves around my waist and send painful ripples through my body. I can’t go to work and so I anchor my back on a heating pad and drink hot peppermint tea and beg my body to melt into submission. In the bathroom mirror, I catch a glimpse of tiny burn marks ballooning into ugly black masses along my lower back. I’m startled that my body could rise up and declare war against me like it does. Every month.
* * *
I’m on the phone with my mother and she asks me how I’m doing. “I’m well,” I say. And so with that permission, she tells me about her family. Her mother is well and so is her sister. Her five year-old nephew is a song and her forty-seven year-old brother is a happy task. She funnels them money every month and that’s her way of helping. I get off the phone and realize it’s her way of coping, too. I realize that giving, to her, is a salve for all the open wounds.
I think to myself “Maybe I should give.” I should give to the man at the corner of the street without questioning whether or not he’ll spend the money on food. Give in spite of myself. Lavish the angsty teenagers on the train with smiles and give in to the desire to hold my nose in revolt against the nauseating smells. I should give-in to the desire to mourn. Weep the finiteness and already-overness of this life. Weep the unnaturalness of families ripped apart by death and those yet to be ripped apart by life. Groan and lament the fact that both healthy and weak bodies breakdown. Well-functioning bodies bleed. Here is life on this side of heaven. But I mourn with hope. I mourn with hope because He gave first.
I find that my understanding of goodness is so finite, it fits neatly into a two-by-two inch box. It also forgets too easily. It forgets that for every one duck boat accident, there’s a million automobiles that swim the ocean and earth unscathed. That for every one person who sits outside the subway station begging for money, there’s a million who lift hand to mouth, filling their bellies before the day is over. For every body afflicted with a malady, there’s a million that heal and recover.
I’m young, with only twenty-three years tucked underneath me, and in that time I’ve seen more joy than I’ve seen pain. I’ve seen laughter and tears that spill over from happiness than I’ve seen sorrow. I’ve seen many days I didn’t want to forget and lived in a body that wants to be lived in. I’ve seen God’s grace in difficulty and in ease. There’s also much I can’t understand. Not the pain that assails this earth and the people in it, not the fact that this good God doesn’t fit my image of the round-bellied, white bearded, candy dispensing father who protects his children from all kinds of suffering. But you know what I also don’t understand? I don’t understand why he extends grace to me like he does, without measure. I don’t understand why he’s mindful of me, dusty old me. So when I’m given to question his goodness, I remind myself that none of the good I’ve seen is deserved. Not one.