This week’s prompt:
Think of a room from your past. It can be any type of room at all.
Take a mental picture of that room.
What happened there? What is it like? What is the atmosphere there? What are the smells, the sounds, the sights? How does it feel?
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I stood in the sterile hallway with my baby boy in my arms. I marveled at how long his eyelashes were and felt his soft, blond hair as he lay in my arms. Tim walked up with a half smile on his face as my mother opened the door to my Aunt’s room.
It was darker in there than I thought it would be and as we stepped inside I saw her sitting up and she was smiling. It smelled like that awful mix of ammonia and vomit and I was suddenly overcome with the sadness of it all.
She just wanted to see us and I wanted to see her, I truly did, but I could barely handle the fact that this was really it this time. My heart wrenched in my chest since I knew this would be my last time to see her. I held back tears.
The baby woke as Tim took him from my arms. She commented on how big he’d gotten and asked if she could kiss him, knowing there was physically no way she could hold him. Everyone was smiling through the uncomfortable-ness, except for me. I’m certain I was not. I told her that of course she could and I wondered what it felt like for her to take in his scent and just be near a baby that was the closest thing she’d ever had to a grandchild.
I wanted to scream that it wasn’t fair, that even after 8 years of this sh*t I knew she wanted to be done. That she was ready. But I still was not. Not ready to lose her. Or let her go.
I leaned over the bed and embraced her frail body and I know she used all the strength she could muster to hug me back.
I scanned the faces in the room – my parents, my uncle, my husband and my son, all here, in this room. The room where she would take her last breath. The room where we came to say goodbye.
But I didn’t say it. Instead I said “I love you and I’ll see you again soon.” She was drifting off from the strong meds when I told her, but I know she heard me.
I sang at her funeral, per her request, and of course I still think of her often. And I know my mother still misses her sister very much and I do too. I hate cancer and I will always hate that room.
Shell says
So heartbreaking.
Melissa says
I know that sterile room oh too well also! I also hate that room & hate cancer. I often talk to my mom & wonder what life would be like between her & my daughter if she were still here. Thank you for sharing!
Nancy C says
Beautifully heartbreaking. How rare to have those “this is it” moments where you know it is it…the last time to say goodbye, or the time a new life will enter the world. This is it.
You capture how it etches itself on your soul so beautifully.
tracy says
SO beautifully written and sad. 🙁
Jen says
There is a similar room in my life that I too will always hate because of cancer.
Megryansmom says
Hugs
Elena @NaynaDub says
Amazing writing on such a sad, difficult topic for you. I’m so sorry that you lost your aunt to the awful beast that is cancer.
Liz says
This brought tears to my eyes, Elaine. I’m so sorry for your loss.
Renee says
That you could have that last hug. That is a precious thing.
This is so sad. I have tears.
amygrew says
Cancer is such a bitch.
Cheryl says
Beautiful. And terrible. I’m so, so sorry.
Home In The Hollow says
It was good of you to sing for her as well as tell her you’d see her again. You will. Great writing!…:)JP
erin margolin says
Oh Elaine. I know that room and that smell, too…I am so, so sorry. But you expressed it all so beautifully and honestly.
logyexpress.com says
This was beautifully written and made me tear up. I’m so sorry for your loss.
Kat says
I know that feeling well. I have a room like that too.
I’m so sorry for your loss.
Beautifully written, Laney.
Dysfunctional Mom says
This gave me chills. So sad and moving.
Cancer is a thief, it has stolen so much from my family, and obviously from yours too. I hate it as well.
KLZ says
SoUnds like there is a lot of love in your family
Jennifer says
I think we all have those rooms. The ones you can’t go into without the memory rushing back and almost smothering you.
Sluiter Nation says
Oh Elaine. The Good-Bye Room. I have been there, friend. More than once. And this brought it all right back. Tears were shed here.
This writing was beautiful though. You described the images of that room so deftly that you took your audience to say goodbye to your aunt as well.
Thank you.
tulpen says
Got me misty eyed.
I’ve been in that room. But as caregiver not loved one.
It is a sacred place indeed.
Kim says
I hate cancer, too.
I came by from TRDC. I like how you got right to the point, made an impact without using all 750 words. Well done.
Christy M. says
I hate cancer, too. And I hate the fact that that room had to exist for any of you.
Hugs friends. And lots of love.
MamaRobinJ says
So sad. I have a similar memory of a hospital room with my grandmother. Almost makes me cry every time I think of it.
Visiting via Mommy is in timeout