I Thank You, Mom: A Memoir
Tonight I decided to post a memoir I had to write for my English Composition class. After reading it over, I realized it did possess posting material. I hope you like it, and I hope my professor does, too!
Music
connects powerfully with the memories we obtain in our minds. In an instant, we
can feel pleasure from a cheery pop song, or its opposite form can occur from a
death metal track. I can’t even remember a time when I didn't connect the past
to a song I once heard. We all experience many different emotions, some positive
and some negative, from listening to music we believe interprets the mood at
that particular moment in time. It is, in fact, true that events from the past are
physically frozen in time. But that doesn't mean we can’t revisit those moments
in a mental state of mind.
It was a chilly January morning in
Orlando, Florida. I walked across the school’s campus to third period Concert
Choir. Exhausted from the rushed five-minute sprint through the first brutal winter
wind of two-thousand and twelve, I entered my class, threw my thirty-pound backpack
on the ground against the wall, quickly grabbed my choir binder through the sea
of seventy students, and ran to the warm safety of my chair on the risers. The
class immediately started with vocal warm-ups and vigorous breathing exercises.
We needed to sound our best; after all we were one of the top choirs in school.
And with being one of the few Juniors in a class of all Seniors I made sure
that I worked exponentially harder than the rest.
After
the ten-minute warm-up, we dove right into our relatively new piece of music.
We’ve been working on it for almost 2 weeks and we just about have more than
half of the song perfected. My director allowed us to perform the song up until
we needed to stop and learn the rest of the piece. The song was called, “I
Thank You God For Most This Amazing Day” composed by Eric Whitacre. He arranged
the music from the literature works of E. E. Cummings. In a month from now, my
choir will have performed this for a Musical Performance Assessment (MPA) for
the District of Orange County.
It
was normal for our choir to learn the notes and chords of a song prior to
adding in the lyrics that followed. The third verse was next on our list. Someone
volunteered to read the poetic wording: “How should tasting, touching, hearing,
seeing, breathing, breathing, breathing any- lifted from the no of all nothing-
human merely being doubt, unimaginable you?” (Cummings) All of a sudden, I felt
a strange sense overpower my body. I ignored it and stayed focused on the music
at hand. We sat up in our seats, held our music binders up so we were able to
see it and the director, and began to sing. After the first run-through, I felt
a dizzy sensation. The room started to spin. Was I sick? No, I couldn’t be. I
felt my head and no fever came about. Perhaps it was because I skipped
breakfast. But I did that every morning.
The
second time we sang the verse, my body responded worse than the first. A cloud
of depression hovered over me. My chest felt like my rib cage was closing in on
my internal organs. I couldn't see as there were tears forming in my eyes and
my throat was closing up. Why was I getting this upset? Thankfully I sat in the
back where I was less likely to draw attention to myself.
After
the third time around, I thought I was going to throw up. I looked carefully
and analyzed the lyrics once more. I guess the third time really is the charm,
because I finally understood what was going on. My body was reacting to what my
heart was telling my mind. A friend in my voice section looked over at me with
deep concern. She mouthed, “What’s wrong?” I glanced back at her and after a
brief moment, I mouthed back only one word, “Mom”.
This
particular verse reminded me of the very last time I was able to talk to my
mom. On December twenty-fifth, two-thousand and eleven at approximately nine-forty
in the morning, I said my final farewell to my mother. I was in the Florida
Hospital Cancer Treatment Center. This was my last moment to say what I needed
to say. Referring back to the third verse of the song, I will explain each
sense. How should tasting: I could taste my salty tears streaming down my face.
I was unable to swallow because my throat closed up from being too upset. How
should touching: The feel of her weak, bloated hand as I held on for dear life.
How should hearing: The room was echoing back the loudness of the machines
desperately keeping her alive. How should seeing: My mom was pale and weak from
the disease killing her from the inside. Her eyes and lips bloody from the
dried out skin. Her body was covered in IVs and wires hooked up to said
machines, and a breathing tube was lodged down her throat. How should
breathing: This word occurs three times, one after the other, symbolizing the
timing of the breathing tube inhaling and exhaling. And finally, lifted from
the no of all nothing: I told my mom that it was okay to let go of her physical
body and to allow her spirit to ascend into Heaven.
After
choir class, I had to run out crying so then no one could see me. I never
expected one part of a song to have such a large impact on my emotions.
Continuing to learn the song was a
struggle. At the MPA concert, I cried the entire time we sang because I felt
she was there with me, as I stayed with her at that moment in time. The day
after, I told my director about my experience with the song. He hugged me and understood
saying, “I was afraid to bring this song onto you. I knew it was going to touch
you in some way.”
The
textual meaning of the piece is to thank God for everything he naturally gave
us on this beautiful earth. But as I mentioned before, our minds and hearts
will interpret songs and poetry differently from one another. My heart took
this song in a more personal route, rather than in a religious one. And oddly,
I’m okay with every part of that.
A-plus material?
Allison
Will you be posting more blog entries? Love reading them. :)
ReplyDeleteYes, I will be. Writer's block has taken it's toll on me for a few months but I promise to keep posting. I'll even make it my New Year's Resolution!! :) And I'm definitely open to many topics and suggestions!!
ReplyDelete