Monday, 27 February 2012
IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNICATION (PART THREE & FINAL)
.....Almost everyday, he would buy something for the baby, infant products, children products and books that kids like to read. Bags and bags of it stacked inside his room till it is full. I know he is trying to use this to reach out to me, but I am no longer moved by his actions. He has no choice but to lock himself in his room and I can hear his typing away on his computer keyboard, maybe he is now addicted to web surfing but none of that matters to me anymore.
It was sometime towards the end of spring in the following year, one late night, I screamed because of a sudden stomach pain, hubby came rushing into the room, its like he did not change and sleep, and had been waiting for this moment. He carried me and ran down the stairs, stopped a car, holding my hand very tightly and kept wiping the sweat off my brow, throughout the journey to the hospital. Once we reached the hospital, he carried me and hurried into the delivery suite. Lying on the back of his skinny but warmth body, a thought crossed my mind: In my lifetime, who else would love me as much as he did?
He held the delivery suite door opened and watch me go in; his warm eyes caused me to manage a smile at him despite my contraction pain. Coming out of the delivery room, hubby looked at our son and me, eyes tear with joy and he kept smiling. I reached out and touched his hand. Hubby looked at me, smiling and then he slowly collapsed onto the floor. I cried out for him in pain… He smiled, but without opening the tired eyes of his… I had thought that I would never shed any tear for him, but the truth is, I have never felt a deeper pain cutting through my body at that moment. Doctor said that by the time hubby discovered he had liver cancer, it was already in terminal stage and it was a miracle that he managed to last this long. I asked the doctor when he first discovered he had cancer. Doctor said about 5 months ago and consoled me saying: “Prepare for his funeral.”
I disregarded the nurse’s objection and rushed home, I went into his room and checked his computer, and a suffocating pain hit me. Hubby’s cancer was discovered 5 months ago, his groaning was real, and I had thought that… the computer showed over 200 thousand words he wrote for our son: “Son, just for you, I have persisted, to be able to take a look at you before I fall, is my biggest wish now… I know that in your life, you will have many happiness and maybe some setbacks, if only I can accompany you throughout that journey, how nice would it be. But daddy now no longer has that chance. Daddy has written inside here all the possible difficulties and problems you may encounter during your lifetime, when you meet with these problems, you can refer to daddy’s suggestion….
Son, after writing these 200 thousand words, I feel as if I have
accompanied you through life journey. To be honest, daddy is very happy. Do love your mother, she has suffered, she is the one who loves you most and also the one who loves me most…” From play school to primary school, to secondary, university, to work and even in dealing with questions of love, everything big and small was written there.
Hubby has also written a letter for me:
“My dear, to marry you is my biggest happiness, forgive me for the pain I have caused you, forgive me for not telling you my illness, because I want to see you be in a joyful mood waiting for the arrival of our baby…My dear, if you cried, it means that you have forgiven me and I would smile, thank you for loving me…These presents, I’m afraid I cannot give them to our son personally, could you help me to give some of them to him every year, the dates on what to give when are all written on the packaging… “
Going back to the hospital, hubby is still in coma. I brought our son over and place him beside him. I said: “Open your eyes and smile, I want our son to remember being in the warmth of your arms…” He struggled to open his eyes and managed a weak smile. Our son still in his arms was happily waving his tiny hands in the air. I press the button on the camera and the sound of the shutter rang through the air as tears slowly rolled down my face…. A fatal misunderstanding and the person who loves me the most in this world is gone forever…”Cruel misunderstandings one after another disrupted the blissful footsteps to our family. Our original intend of having Mother enjoy some quiet and peaceful moments in her remaining years with us went terribly wrong as destiny’s secret is finally revealed at a price, everything became too late.”……….
Friday, 24 February 2012
THE IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNICATION (PART TWO)
…….. The next morning, I was having porridge prepared by mother and I felt a
sudden churn in my stomach and everything inside seem to be rushing up my
throat. I tried to suppress the urge to throw up but I could not. I threw down
the bowl, rushed into the washroom, and vomited everything out. Just as I was
catching my breath, I saw mother crying and grumbling very loudly in her
dialect, hubby was standing at the washroom doorway staring at me with fire
burning in his eyes. I opened my mouth but no words came out of it, I really
did not mean it.
We had our very first big fight that day; mother took a look at us, then
stood up and slowly made her way out of the house. Hubby gave me a final stare
in the eye and followed mother down the stairs. For three days, hubby did not
return home, not even a phone call. I was so furious, since mother arrived; I
had been trying my best and putting up with her, what else do you want me to do?
For no reason, I keep having the feeling to throw up and I simply have not
appetite for food, coupled with all the events happening at home, I was at the
low point in my life.
Finally, a colleague said: “LD, you look terrible; you should go and see a doctor.”
The doctor confirmed that I am pregnant. Now it became clear to me why I threw
up that fateful morning, a sense of sadness floated through that otherwise
happy news. Why didn’t hubby, and mother who had been through this before,
thought of the possibility of this being the reason that day? At the hospital
entrance, I saw my hubby standing there. It had only been three days, but he
looked haggard. I had wanted to turn and leave, but one look at him and my
heart soften, I couldn’t resist and called out to him. He followed my voice and
finally found me but he pretended that he doesn’t know me; he has that
disgusted look in his eyes that cut right through my heart. I told myself not
to look at him anymore, and hail a cab. At that moment, I have such a strong
urge inside me to shout to my hubby: “Darling, I am having your baby!” and have
him lift me up and spin me around in circles of joy. What I wanted didn’t
happen and as I sat in the cab, my tears started rolling down. Why? Why our
love couldn’t even withstand the test of one fight?
Back home, I lay on the bed thinking about my hubby, and the disgusted look
in his eyes. I cried and wet the corner of the blanket. That night, sound of
the drawers opening woke me up. I switched on the lights and I saw hubby with
tears rolling down his face. He was removing the money. I stared at him in
silence; he ignored me, took the bank deposit book and some money and left the
house. Maybe he really intends to leave me for good. What a rational man, so
clear-cut in love and money matters. I gave a few dried laugh and tears
starting streaming down again. The next day, I did not go to work. I wanted to
clear this out and have a good talk with hubby. I reached his office and his
secretary gave me a weird look and said: “Your husband’s mother had a
traffic accident and has just dashed off to the hospital.” I stood there
in shock. I rushed to the hospital and by the time I found hubby, mother had
already passed away. Hubby did not look at me, his face was expressionless. I
looked at mother’s pale white and thin face and I couldn’t control the tears in
my eyes. My god, how could this happen?
Throughout the funeral, hubby did not say a single word to me, with only the
occasional disgusted stare at me. I only managed to find out brief facts about
the accident from other people. That day, after mother left the house, she
walked in dazed toward the bus stop, apparently intending to go back to her old
house back in the countryside. As hubby ran after her, she tried to walk faster
and as she tried to cross the street, a public bus came and hit her…I finally
understood how much hubby must hate me, if I had not thrown up that morning, if
we had not quarreled, if….In his heart, I am indirectly the killer of his
mother.
Hubby moved into mother’s room and came home every night with a strong
liquor smell on him. And me, I am buried under the guilt and self-pity and
could hardly breathe. I wanted to explain to him, tell him that we are going to
have our baby soon, but each time, I saw the dead look in his eyes, all the
words I have at the brink of my mouth just fell back in. I had rather he hit me
real hard or give me a big and thorough scolding though none of these events
happening had been my fault at all.
Many days of suffocating silence went by and as the days went by, hubby came
home later and later. The deadlock between us continued, we were living
together like strangers who don’t know each other. I am like the dead knot in
his heart…………………..
One day, I passed by a city centre Chicken Inn, looking into the glass
window, I saw hubby and a girl sitting facing each other and he very lightly
brushed her hair for her, I understood what it meant. After recovering from
that moment of shock, I entered the restaurant, stood in front of my hubby and
stared hard at him, not a tear in my eyes. I have nothing to say to him, and
there is no need to say anything. The girl looked at me, looks at hubby, stands
up and wanted to go, hubby stretched out his hand and stopped her. He stared
back at me, challenging me. I can only hear my slow heart beat, beating, one by
one as if at the brink of death. I eventually backed down, if I had stood that
any longer, I will collapse together with the baby inside me. That night, he
did not come home; he had chosen to use that as a way to indicate to me:
Following mother’s death so did our love for each other.
He did not come home anymore after that. Sometimes, when I returned home
from work, I can tell that the cupboard had been touched – he had returned to
take some of his stuff. I no longer wish to call him; the initial desire to
explain everything to him vanished. I lived alone; I go for my medical checkups
alone, my heart breaks again and again every time I see a guy carefully helping
his wife through the physical examination. My office colleagues hinted to me to
consider aborting the baby, I told them No, I will not.. I insisted on having
to this baby, perhaps it is my way of repaying mother for causing her death.
One day, I came home and I saw hubby sitting in the living room. The whole
house was filled with cigarette smoke. On the coffee table, there was this
piece of paper. I know what it is all about without even looking at it. In the
two months plus of living alone, I have gradually learned to find peace within
myself. I looked at him, removed my hat and said: “You wait a while, I will
sign.” He looked at me, mixed feelings in his eyes, just like mine.
As I hang up my coat, I keep repeating to myself “You cannot cry, you cannot
cry…” my eyes hurt terribly, but I refused to let tears come out from there.
After I hung up my coat, hubby’s eyes stared fixed at my bulging tummy. I
smiled, walked over to the coffee table and pulled the paper towards me.
Without even looking at what it says, I signed my name on it and pushed the
paper to him. “LD, are you pregnant?” Since mother’s accident, this is the
first time he spoke to me. I could not control my tears any further and they
fell like raindrops. I said: “Yes, but it’s ok, you can leave now.” He did not
go, in the dark, we sat, facing each other. Hubby slowly moved over me, his
tears wet the blanket. In my heart, everything seems so far away, so far that
even if I sprint, I could never reach them. I cannot remember how many times he
repeated “sorry” to me. I had originally thought that I would forgive him, but
now I can’t. In the western restaurant, in front of that girl, that cold look
in his eyes, I will never forget, ever. We have drawn such deep scars in each
others heart. For me, it’s unintentional; for him, totally intentional…
Thursday, 23 February 2012
THE IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNICATION.....(part 1)
Just two years after our marriage, hubby brought up the idea
of asking Mother to move from the rural hometown of Rusape and spend her
remaining years with us. Hubby’s father passed away while he was still very
young. Mother endured much hardship and struggled all on her own to provide for
him, see him through to a university degree. You could say that she suffered a
great deal and did everything you could expect of a woman to bring hubby to
where he is today. I immediately agreed and started packing the spare room,
which has a balcony facing the South to let her enjoy the sunshine and plant
greenery. Hubby stood in the bright room, and suddenly just picked me up and
started spinning round and round. As I begged him to put me down, he said:
“Lets go fetch mother.” Hubby is tall and big sized and I love to rest on his
chest and enjoy the feeling that he could pick me up at any moment put the tiny
me into his pockets. Whenever we have an argument and both refuses to back
down, he would pick me up and spin me over his head continuously until I
surrender and beg for mercy. I became addicted to this kind of panic-joy
feeling.
Mother brought along her countryside habits and lifestyle with her. For
example; I am so used to buying flowers to decorate the living room, she could
not stand it and would comment: “I do not know how you young people spend your
money, why do you buy flowers for? You also can’t eat flowers!” I smiled and
said: “Mum, with flowers in the house, our mood will also become better.”
Mother continues to grumble away, and hubby smiled: “Mum, this is a
city-people’s habit; slowly you will get used to it.”
Mother stopped saying anything. But every time thereafter, whenever came
home with flowers, she would ask me how much it costs. I told her and she would
shake her head and express displeasure. Sometimes, when I come home with lots
of shopping bags, she would ask each and every item how much they cost, I would
tell her honestly and she would get even more upset about it. Hubby playfully
pinched my nose and said: “You little fool, just don’t tell her the full price
of everything would solve it.” There begins the friction to our otherwise happy
lifestyle.
Mother hates it most when hubby wakes up early to prepare the breakfast. In
your view, how could the man of the house cook for the wife? At the breakfast
table, mother facial expression is always like the dark clouds before a
thunderstorm and I would pretend not to notice. She would use her spoon and
make a lot of noise with it as her silent protest.
As I am a dance teacher in the Children’s Palace and am exhausted from along
day of dancing around, I do not wish to give up the luxury of that additional
few minutes in the comfort of my bed and hence I turned a deaf ear to all the
protest mother makes. From time to time, mother would help out with some
housework, but soon her help created additional work for me. For example: she
would keep all kinds of plastic bags accumulating them so that she sell them
later on, and resulted in our house being filled with all the trash bags; she
would scrimp on dish washing detergent when helping to wash the dishes and so
as not to hurt her feelings, I would quietly wash them again.
One day, late at night, mother saw me quietly washing the dishes, and “Bam”
she slams her bedroom door and cried very loudly in her room. Hubby was placed
in a difficult position, and after that, he did not speak to me for that entire
night. I pretended to be a spoilt child, tried acting cute, but he totally
ignored me……. I got mad and asked him: “What did I do wrong?” Hubby stared at
me and said: “Can’t you just give in to her once? We couldn’t possibly die
eating from a bowl however unclean it is, right?” After that incident, for a
long period of time, mother did not speak to me and you can feel that there is
a very awkward feeling hanging in the house. During that period of cold war,
hubby was caught in dilemma as to who to please.
In order to stop her son from having to prepare breakfast, mother took on
the “all important” task of preparing breakfast without any prompting. At the
breakfast table, mother would look at hubby happily eating his breakfast and
cast that reprimanding stare at me for having failed to perform my duty as a
wife. To avoid the embarrassing breakfast situation, I resorted to buying my
own breakfast on my way to work. That night, while in bed, hubby was a little
upset and asked me: “LD, is it because you think that mum’s cooking is not
clean that’s why you chose not to eat at home?” He then turned his back on me
and left me alone in tears as feeling of unfairness overwhelmed me. After some
time, hubby sighed: “LD, just for me, can you have breakfast at home?”
I was left with no choice but to return to the breakfast table…….(to be continued)
Saturday, 4 February 2012
An Inspiring message of Love & care...
A frail old man went to live with his son,
daughter-in-law, and a
four-year old grandson. The old man's hands trembled, his eyesight
was
blurred, and his step faltered. The family ate together nightly at
the
dinner table. But the elderly grandfather's shaky hands and failing
sight
made eating rather difficult. Peas rolled off his spoon onto the
floor. When
he grasped the glass often milk spilled on the tablecloth.
The son
and
daughter-in-law became irritated with the mess. "We must do
something about
grandfather," said the son. I've had enough of his spilled milk,
noisy
eating, and food on the floor. So the husband and wife set a small
table in
the corner. There, grandfather ate alone while the rest of the
family
enjoyed dinner at the dinner table. Since grandfather had broken a
dish or
two, his food was served in a wooden bowl.
Sometimes when the family glanced
in grandfather's direction, he had a tear in his eye as he ate
alone.
Still,
the only words the couple had for him were sharp admonitions when he
dropped
a fork or spilled food. The four-year-old watched it all in silence.
One
evening before supper, the father noticed his son playing with wood scraps on
the floor. He asked the child sweetly, "What are you making?" Just as
sweetly, the boy responded, "Oh, I am making a little bowl for you and
mama to eat your food from when I grow up." The four-year-old smiled and
went back to work. The words so struck the parents that they were
speechless. Then tears started to stream down their cheeks. Though
no word
was spoken, both knew what must be done. That evening the husband
took
grandfather's hand and gently led him back to the family table.
For the remainder of his
days he ate every meal with the family. And for
some reason, neither husband nor wife seemed to care any longer when
a fork
was dropped, milk spilled, or the tablecloth soiled. Children are
remarkably
perceptive. Their eyes ever observe, their ears ever listen, and
their minds
ever process the messages they absorb. If they see us patiently
provide a
happy home atmosphere for family members, they will imitate that
attitude
for the rest of their lives. The wise parent realizes that every day
that
building blocks are being laid for the child's future.
Let us all be wise builders
and role models. Take care of yourself, ...
and those you love, ... today, and everyday!
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