Long Days Journey Out of Night

Long Days Journey out Night

Alone in my room more a cage, a chamber in hell,
Heaven so high so far away
The Darkness creeps in, fills the emptiness with fear, chokes you like smoke
helplessness, Uselessness, NOTHINGNESS

Then the demons come, from the Dark Days Gone Down
They surround you, clawing, Gnawing, TEARING
at your heart, your Mind, your Very SOUL
They have names: depression, Addiction, EXTINCTION

They pull and Pull and PULL
to the cliff, to the Edge, to the END
You fight them
flesh bruises knuckles broken fingernails wrenched away
The Abyss down below, shame and despair worse than death

strength ebbs,
hope fades,
faith fails

Give up, Give in, Give over, you don’t matter,
you never did
you never will
wait, Wait, WAIT

a Bell rings, a door opens and friendship comes barging in,
with a smile brighter than sunshine and a laugh that fills the room
a cup of tea, a hug of sympathy, the promise of mercy
The Demons run from the light, from the Love

Strength Renewed
Hope Rekindled
Faith Reborn

You’re not alone… You never were

Dream A Dream

Dream a Dream

Dream a Dream, of Yesterday
Faded Memories, a Child at play
For a little boy, it’s early May
Picking Daffodils, along the way

In my youth, there was warm sunlight
Love was fresh, passion burned bright
Two hot bodies, steamed the night
For one brief moment, it seemed so right

Summer passed, the World turn cold
What we had, I couldn’t hold
Wedding Vows, cheaply sold
A sad sad story, too often told

Here I sit, racked with pain
Cried for help, no one came
Soiled myself, covered with shame
In the emptiness, go insane.

Dream a Dream, Of Yesterday
Keep the Hope, and Hurt at Bay
One Last Coin, Ferryman to Pay
Come tonight, take me away.

I Beg of Thee,
If you think of me
Forgive,
what I have done
Forget,
what I’ve become

Finis

D.C.Harshman

The Wash Tub, the Granny, and the Troll.

The Wash Tub, the Granny, and the Troll.

A friend was over a while ago, and we were working on the floor in my grandpa and grandmothers “Cozy Cabin”. We Needed some more light so we turned the ceiling light on for a while. The two bare bulbs filled the room with an obnoxious kind of light, and my friend asked me why I didn’t get a lamp shade for it. I told him it hadn’t had a lamp shade on it since I could remember, and I just liked it this way. I didn’t tell him why.

It was the summer of 1965, and mother was going to have back surgery that would keep her in bed for a month or more. My dad decided that the last thing mother needed was to have two energetic boys, ages five and six, pestering her so he decided that it would be best if we spent a month with my Grandparents. My brother Tom and I didn’t know our Grandparents very well at the time, they had come over to our house in the city last Christmas, but we hadn’t visited their farmhouse since we’d been babies. Now Grandpa and Grandma were both in their late sixties, and looking back, I’m not sure they really wanted to have two little hellions dropped in their laps, but Grandma welcomed us with open arms, fresh bread and our favorite meatloaf for dinner, so we thought she was neat-o. But Grandpa scared us, he was tall, very loud, he smoked like a chimney, and had to put his teeth in to eat dinner.

We found out two things about their little farmhouse: they didn’t have either a TV or running water. The first was a disappointment… no Lone Ranger and Tonto, the second was a positive shock. The bathroom was a little shed just up the hill and to the left, next to the shop. And water? That came from a spring about two miles up hill, and hauled around in five gallon metal milk cans. My brother and I thought that we were in one of the TV shows that mother liked… the Twilight Zone.
It was still light outside, and a couple hours until bedtime for two fidgety young men, so Grandma told us to go out and explore around the farm, just stay in sight of the house and we’d be fine. Oh, and BE CAREFUL. The shop had a lot of neat tools but it was the outhouse that fascinated us, for a while, then we went out into the little orchard. It had been a fairly dry spring, but the El Dorado of our exploration was to find the only mud puddle in miles. We were young, we were boys, and we were tired and cranky, so the only thing for our tiny minds to think of for further entertainment, was to have a wrestling match, in the middle of the mud puddle. Not even stopping to consider what other animals might have been in that mud puddle, or what they had done their.

It was getting dark when we were done, and since it dawned on us that we might be in a wee bit of trouble, we knocked on the back door instead of barging in. Grandma stood at the threshold looking down at two small mud pies on her back porch. She began shaking her head and with a small grin called out, “Grandpa, you’d better come see your Grandsons got into.”
When Grandpa came up to the door, with his gray hair standing almost straight up and without his teeth in… he looked just like a kid-eating-troll, I began to shake all over. He looked down at us and asked Grandma, ‘Anna, are you sure they’re ours?”

I asked “Are we in trouble?”

Grandma laugh, “No… your not in trouble, but you are in hot water, or a tub of hot water.”

Grandpa walked away chuckling, ‘I’ll get the wash tub, you get’em ready.’

Grandma told us sternly, “Peel. Go on and get your cloths off. No, no, right here. Don’t worry, no one can see you.”
We hesitated, mom would never have us undress outside in the city. But here? We started slowly, and then got into the spirit of the thing. It may have been the first time we ‘peeled’ on that back porch, but it wasn’t going to be the last.
It was a warm summer evening and by the time we were marched in, we had even more mud on us than before we peeled, we had been scraping it off our pants and playing catch with it.

We marched through the kitchen on newspaper laid down on the floor. In the middle of the living room, under those two bare bulbs, was a huge galvanized washtub half filled with water. Grandpa pointed and said, “BUTTS IN.“ Grandma handed us a bar of soap and an old fashioned sponge and said to start scrubbing. (Years later, I saw her still using the same sponge, and I just had to ask, ‘How long have you had that thing?’ She said, “Oh, since before the war“, “Which war Granny… 1812?”). We sat down in the tub, and Grandpa started pouring. Grandma kept encouraging us to ‘scrub harder’, which soon led to some splashing and giggling. Grandma’s quiet rebuke to ‘Stop Playing’, didn’t even slow us down. But the Trolls rumbling voice. “Now stop that, do you want to get water all over the floor!” After a while, it was pronounced that we had played enough, now stand up.

A gentle cascade of water came falling over my head, into the… muddy water in the tub… I mean it was dark. Two towels came out of nowhere and were quickly wrapped around us. The Troll asked “Anna you got that one? I’ll take this one.” With that the troll lifted me out of the tub and carried me over to his chair. He sat me in his lap and started drying me off. His gruff voice said, ‘Well, we got most of the mud off… although there’s still some in your ears boy.” I must have looked scared because in a gentle voice he said, ‘Don’t worry, your dad got mud in his ears when he was your age… hell I did too, a long, long time ago.”

The last thing I remember that night, is Grandpa wrapping the towel around me, and pulling me close. ‘Go on to sleep now boy. You gotta get some rest. There’s plenty of mud left out there for tomorrow.” I nodded off with a big fluffy towel around me, in the lap of the most frightening Troll I ever knew.

It’s been fifty years now, and in the age of the internet I could find a nice lamp shade to put over those two stupid bare bulbs… but every time I turn them on I can see this big old wash tub in the middle of the floor, and I remember Grandma and the Troll, and I fell a little bit better.

Daniel Harshman November 5, 2012

Brainstorms

Brainstorms: A small Boat on a Violent Ocean

It was 1980, and mother had Asthma. She also had pneumonia, not a good combination. She had just finished the nebulizer treatment and had laid back down. The nurse had given her the treatment after mixing the Abuteral with distilled water using a syringe. It was already dark outside so I didn’t bother to close the drapes. I turned most of the lights off and leaving one on low. I closed the door, not slamming it, so that the sounds from the hall wouldn’t come in: even at night, hospitals were nosy places. I made sure that towels were handy and a couple of wash clothes. I sat and waited, hoping she would be able to get some sleep before the storm hit. It wasn’t just the Abuteral she had inhaled, it was the Theodure and Prednisone they had given her earlier. They were very powerful, and very necessary drugs, that would help her keep breathing long enough for the anti-biotics to kill the pneumonia spreading in her lungs.

Her eyes were closed but she was awake. I could see the first signs. Her hands had that tremor, she was breathing shallow, and she was licking her lips. I moistened a washcloth, warm now, and put over her eyes. She was crying, she reached for the bedrails and held on to them. I said: ‘Easy now, Easy now, this storm will pass.’

The nurse came banging in, she had too, nurses hate closed doors. I let the nurse watch mother for a moment and then ushered her out. I closed the door behind us. The nurse said: ‘I didn’t realized that it was going to be this bad.’

I didn’t bother to remind her that I had tried to tell her. It was her first night caring for my mother and this nurse wasn’t ready for it. When I had tried to tell her earlier, she had painted a condensing smile on and nodded in sympathy and then not listened to a word I had said. We argued about the Pain med, the pain had to be documented, and the diaper, well, it’s best that patient get up and move around as often as they could, and well, sometimes they would get lazy.

I lost my temper. I was tired. I was a full time student, I had a part time job and I should have been home with my brand new wife. ‘I know you didn’t know this was going to happen. There’s something else I don’t think you know, she’s a Manic Depressive, and we’ve just given her some very powerful stimulants. if you’ve never seen a manic episode before, just wait, you’re going to get the full picture. Now, get her some Goddamned pain med, because her neck is going to be killing her in a few minutes… if you don’t know why, there’s an X-ray in her chart.’

The nurse’s professional masked dropped for a moment. ‘I’ll talk to the doctor and see what we can do.’
There was a noise from inside, a cry of a child, frightened and alone. I left the nurse in the hall and went back in closing the door… gently. Mother’s knuckles were white. She was sobbing. I used the cool damp cloth to wipe away the sweat, the tears. I kept whispering to her that it was going to be alright, that we’d been here before and we would get though this again.

The nurse crept in this time with a syringe. She came over and as she injected it slowly into the IV tubing, she stared at my mother’s hands clinched on the bedrail. When the nurse was finished I walked out into the hall with her.
The nurse looked tired and worried. ‘The doctor order pain medication and a mild muscle relaxant, he said it was all we could do for her. I made sure it was charted, so next time there won’t be any problems. He said that you knew her as well as anyone. Can I ask you, why she’s has her hands on…’

I told her: ’Why does she hold on so hard? She’s afraid… sometimes that she’ll fly off the bed and hit ceiling, then sometimes she’s scared she’ll fall though the bed… and then she’ll just keep falling forever. It can be like that… it’s been like that since I was a kid. And yes, she’s seen dozen’s of doctors, she’s even been institutionalized, but there is only so much medicine can do, and all that’ left is love and faith.’ I check my watch. It was past midnight. ’This will soon pass, at least for now. And the shot will help a lot.” Before I headed back in I told the nurse, ’in a little while, send in a aide with some fresh bedding and another gown. She’s already wet the bed. We’ll get her cleaned up and then she’ll sleep for a while, I hope.’

It was about one that morning that mother let go of the rails and curled up on her side. The aide and I quickly got her washed up. Mother kept saying ’Danny’, the only time called me that since I was six… because she was embarrassed that her son was helping clean her bottom, although I had been doing it for years.

As I walked out, I stopped by the nurses station. ’She’ll sleep now, and Dad will be in this morning, before she has to go though it again. I call them Brainstorms, not in the modern sense but in the original meaning. Because it’s like she’s a very small boat and a very large ocean… sometimes the water is quiet, but sometimes you must ride out the storm, and pray that morning will come.’

Thirty years Later:

Some things had changed, the Abuteral had come in a little plastic tube and the Nebulizer treatment had been given by a Repertory therapist. When I had finished the treatment, the RT placed his stethoscope to my back and said, ’Another Deep Breath Please.’ I think he said ’Still quite a bit of dimished sounds in the lower quadrants, but you’re moving air, so the Asthma is better.’ I THINK he said that, I was to busy coughing by some nice yellow phlegm. He said something about Asthma and Pnu to be a bad combination. He had noticed the tremor in my left hand, and the twitch in my right food. I told him it was alright, that it happens this way. He lingered for a moment, he seemed like a nice kid, so I explained, ‘About three hours ago I took 450mg of Theodure and 60mg of Prednisone and now the Abuterual, it‘s just going to be like this for a while. I didn’t tell him that I was luckier than my mother, I wasn’t bipolar. I had been diagnosed with PTSD, probably because of growing up with a mother that was bipolar.

The RT had to ask, ‘Isn’t there something they could do?”

I shrugged, ‘Sometimes the cure is worse than the cold.’

I waited til he left, my God I was already starting to sweat. I was free for a while, there was no IV tying me to the bed.
I still had the Oxygen tubing, but I was use to that. I got up out of the bed, and closed the drapes. It was a beautiful day outside, but it was far too bright. The Price is Right was on. I turned the TV off, it was too loud. I made sure that there were several towels on the hospital table, two wash clothes, one cool, one warmer. They asked me why, the caregivers, but even if I told them, they wouldn’t understand. I was shaking all over now. I had to concentrate. A urinal. I made sure there was a urinal. I made it to the bathroom… I had too sit down… I had too…

I finally made it to back to the bed, it look so soft and inviting. I took a towel… they always wanted to know what I did with all the towels… I put it between my legs, up high… you sweat a lot there… you hope it’s sweat. I rolled onto my side and grabbed the bedrails.

I said the same thing to myself that I had said to my mother all those years ago. Easy Now. This is just a storm and you’re but a small boat on a angry ocean. The wind and the waves were batter you and frighten you. But you have to try and keep an even keel. And remember, always remember, this brainstorm will pass.

The world became small, and very dark for me. I closed my eyes, and the bed felt like it was almost moving. I tried to keep an even keel, and hold on. I was losing control, I was losing myself.

Some stupid little girlie bustles in, asked me in a shrill voice if I was ready for my lunch tray? Are you ready for your Tray? Can I take the lids off? Can I move these towels out of your way?

Someone screams, ‘GET OUT’… ‘GET OUT!’, the voice is mine, and I can not stop it. I would have thrown the crap at her if I could just get a hold of it. OUT OF HERE BITCH. Can’t she see the shaking, the fear, the monster I‘ve become. She runs of the room, crying, scared.

I grip the rails with all my strength, as if I was drowning.

Someone else has come in quietly. I hear April’s voice whisper, ‘It’s alright.’ She takes the stupid tray away. She comes back, hands me a cool washcloth, I rub the sweat off my face. She goes away, closing the door quietly behind her.

I’ll never understand: where does the love of God go, when the pain and the panic turn the minutes to hours, and the days to forever?

God help me. Please.

I realize I’m breathing easier now. I’ve let go of the bedrails and the shaking has slowed. I feel tired, wasted, my muscles are sore. I mange to roll over to the side of the bed, and sit up on the edge. The clock on the wall has travel two hours, almost three. I heard the door open, April came in, whispered if I was going better. I nodded. She took a cool wash cloth, undid the hospital gown, and gently washed my back. She came around, put some blanket’s in the chair next to the bed, and asked if I wanted to sit up now. I said yes and she helped me in the chair.

She disappeared, came back a moment later with the little girl I had shouted at. They changed the sheets on the bed quickly, neatly. April chatted the way she does, about her husband, and her kids. When they were done the little girl turned to me, I looked in her eyes for… revoltion, fear? I saw none, a little sympathy. She asked if I was hungery. I was, but I was shaking to much to hold a spoon. I said some juice would be very nice. The little girl smiled, April told her that they would put some apple juice, he like’s apple juice, in a ‘big’ glass, with a straw… April never made me ask. Before they left, they opened the drapes slowly.

It was sunny outside, Spring was here and a Wren sat outside my window. In the distance was the mountains, with just a hint of snow way up. The world was still there.

My friends and family would soon be in. They would ask me how my day was. What could I tell them?

I’ve been on both places now: I’ve sat in the caregivers chair, watching my loved one hurt; and I’ve laid in the hospital bed, trying to hide the pain. When I was in the Chair I thought it was the hardest place, and it was. There is nothing like wishing that you could do something for your loved one. You swear that you would trade places with them in a heart beat, and at the time I meant it. Now that I’m in the bed, it’s different. I see the pain their eye’s and I wish they would leave. It’s hard enough trying to hang on with them there, and then you want them there, anything to keep fighting this feeling of being alone.

But there is one difference between there and here. When the storm is over, the caregivers can smile and go home to the peace and quiet, and you want them too. But it will never be over for me. The truth is that the next storm will come, and there is nothing in this world that can stop it. It might not be today, or tommowow but it will come. And I might survive the next one and the one after, but sooner or later, I would lose my mind, or my life. It’s hard to explain to people who haven’t live long, or fought hard: but cowardice creeps into ones heart, a little at a time.

I hear a knock at the door, and make sure I’m decent. I ask them to come in. And I remind my self of one more thing I use to tell mother, you either get busy living, or you roll over and just give up. And she was far too old then, and I am now, to learn something new, like quitting.