The day of my sister’s wedding—the sixtieth anniversary of the atomic obliteration of Hiroshima—was extremely emotional for me.
I knew it would be, and very seriously considered grinding its edge off with some prescription painkillers before leaving the house that morning.
But fuck it.
This was only going to happen once. Regardless of how awkward and overwhelmed and vulnerable I would feel, I knew I needed to feel it.
I wanted to feel it.
By the end of the ceremony, I was welling up like a baby gorilla whose mother had just been murdered. I hung around the narthex of our family’s church. Before extensive renovations, this space was the chapel proper, where my siblings and I participated in countless services and pageants together. I waited for the crowd to empty out of that once-sacred antechamber, until only the nucleus of my family remained.
My sister gathered up her dress, walked over to me, gave me a big hug, and said, “Don’t worry, brother, I’m still your sister.”
“It’s not that,” I rasped. Words did not fail me so much as my entire higher functioning was viscerally immolated by a synaptic blast wave. I don’t know how I found the ability to release what I felt.
“I’m just so happy for you.”
Hours later, my parents looked out over a gathering of hundreds of friends and relatives. To keep his composure, my dad said nothing and cast his gaze downward. Despite the obvious parallelism between the two of us on this day, this is a story I don’t know how to tell right now. Maybe it’s not even important.
“You’ll have a tendency to focus yourselves inwards,” said my mother, speaking for both herself and my dad. “But remember, the two of you are part of a community, and you should focus your love outward.”
That moment has decayed, but the shadow of those words is still and forever flashburned onto the concrete of my soul.
this is beautiful. the hiroshima-atomic bomb-ness bookending it is really powerful.
i like that your writing here is becoming more freely emotional. i feel that in a lot of the things i read back when you were in school (and maybe it was because they were for school) were still emotional but there was a lot of distance and often a thick protective layer of wit/irony/sarcasm there. they were less direct than your writing now. i like the change.