I
used the term “thin place” in the dedication of my first novel, Whittled
Away. I was referencing the US Soldier cemetery at Omaha Beach in
Normandy, France. The same cemetery that starts and ends the wonderful WWII
movie, Saving Private Ryan. I was
saying that a thin place means a physical location where the living can most
easily feel a connection with the dead. A place where the gap, or the wall, or
the river between those of us still breathing, and those gone, is--thin.
Churches
and cemeteries come to mind. Battlefields are another. A thin place can be anywhere
that has been the location of unexpected deaths caused by war or nature. Last
month, NPR radio ran a story about a phone booth in Japan that has become a
thin place. Yes, a phone booth.
The
great tsunami of 2011 washed over 10,000 people out to sea. The bodies of many
of those poor victims were never found.
A
70-year-old gardener lost three family members to the tsunami. His manner of
grieving was to acquire an old phone booth and move it to his garden in sight
of the coast. He put a black rotary dial phone set and a vase of flowers on the
shelf in the booth. He began making regular visits to his new phone booth, to
pick up the receiver and speak to his lost loved ones.
Sounds
crazy, huh? Maybe not so much. Word spread about the phone booth by the sea,
and people began to visit to “call” their own loved ones who’d been taken by
the tsunami. The little glass and metal box became a sought-out, thin place.
A
public radio station asked permission to tape some of the “conversations.” No one objected, and they discovered
middle-aged men, who are normally highly restrained and not prone to showing
emotion, crying as they told their lost ones that things are going well enough,
but it’s hard without them. They updated the dead on the little things the
living were doing, and confessed to their loved ones how much they are still
missed. All that said while holding an old plastic phone to their ear, standing
in a metal and glass box in a garden, looking at the ocean that had swept their
loved ones away.
I
wrote last month that my 91-year-old mother, Betty Lou, just passed away, a
cancer victim. She was a grand lady, blessed with a long life. Mama’s passing
was not unexpected or violent. She left
us in a bed in a hospice hospital sometime in the wee hours of the morning. The
kicker to me is that she died after I’d fallen asleep on the folding cot, just
a few feet from her. The nurse had to wake me with the news. It happened sooner than we all thought,
but…it was my watch, and I was sleeping.
If
I were standing in that phone booth on the coast of Japan, I’d pick up the
receiver, punch in the number 3-1779, our home phone number when I was kid, and
talk to Mama one more time. I’d tell her we gave her a fine send-off at the
church. I’d assure that her oldest son John spoke well at the service, and her daughter-in-law
Nita sang Precious Lord, Take Me Home
as she’d requested. I’d lovingly say that Nita sang with as much beauty, soul,
and grace as any hymn was ever sung, which is true. I’d talk to her about the
family gathering afterwards at her daughter’s Betsy’s house, where more stories
were told, and that we raised glasses of wine to her. Betsy’s good wine, not
the cheap stuff I buy.
Then,
standing there in that phone booth, I’d grip that phone handle tighter, and I’d
tell her that I still remember the day when I was twelve and she listened in on
her bedroom phone extension to a phone call I got from the father of another
kid. Men don’t call kids on the phone, and no doubt Mama was curious.
That
morning, I’d had words and maybe a little shoving back and forth with this guy’s
son during a summer day-camp where he and I were junior counselors. No doubt we
both had been mouthy jerks, not good role models for the younger guys. Our
sniping at each other continued on the bus ride home, and I ended up pulling
off his new fancy hat he’d recently gotten at Six Flags Over Texas. Six Flags
had just opened and the hat was showy evidence that he’d been there. It was one
of those brightly-colored snap-brim jobs with his name stitched on the front
and a fluffy feather stapled to the side. I still remember that hat. Anyway, I
dropped it out the bus window somewhere on the other side of town from where we
lived.
So,
later that afternoon, his father called and lit into me about the hat. I
remember I was scared and the man was being pretty abrasive and made the
comment that he was a special deputy sheriff and could…at which point Mama calmly
said, “Get off the phone, Phil.”
I
hung up, and crept to her bedroom doorway to eavesdrop while my mother did her
own Mama Grizzly impression to this guy who’d taken a step too far towards her
cub. When she finished reaming out the man for threatening me, she hung up and
said, “Philip, I know you’re listening. You WILL use your lawn mowing money to
buy that a boy a new hat.” That was all
she said to me, but she was probably was muttering under her breath, “Don’t be
such a dumb-ass, Son. There’ll come a time when I won’t be around.”
I
dug into my stash of crumpled lawn-mowing dollar bills, and the next day paid
the kid for his damned hat.
Moving
past that story, before I hung up on my phone call to Mama, I’d tell her I’m
kicking myself that I wasn’t holding her hand at the end. Yeah, I was in the
room, but most likely, I was snoring during her last breaths. I wasn’t right
there next to her. I’d ask her to overlook that, if she could, and I know she
would. Then, I’d probably awkwardly joke that I always did have trouble staying
awake after ten at night, just like her.
Sorry
to jerk on your heartstrings this way. I’m too old to carry on so about my
mom’s passing. But, fair or not, you, gentle readers, just became my phone
booth by the sea. Thanks.