The Tonic of Birdwatching for Silent Sorrows (Excerpt, Continent of Ruby)


I know Florida birds. After my divorce, I took the children bird-watching on the golf course behind the house where we lived, a prime place for such a pastime. The grounds were meticulous. Artificial turf blended seamlessly with the wild lushness of bear grass, palms, live oak, and canals. In this landscape, the modern and ancient Florida Everglades was compromised nicely with the championship golf course and the palatial homes that surround it. We never saw the owners of these estates; despite their wealth, they never seemed to be out enjoying their pools, tennis, or basketball courts. Their houses stood at attention, as if guarding their rich owners. Even when the security guard in his golf cart stopped and ordered us to get off the course because people in the houses complained, I voiced my right to be there. (Unlike the others in the gated community, I refused to take part in their belief that nothing was good enough, not even the beautiful golf course with its reminders of an ancient Everglades and exotic birds.) I let him know my house was located on this enclave and that very high luxury taxes were paid annually for my right to enjoy the golf course. Anyway, we were not in anyone’s way. The golfers were done for the day and only birds and my kids and I remained.

During that time, paradise was ours. The sun set like an orgasmic orange glaze in the horizon and the birds emerged from their hiding places. With our binoculars, reference books, and journals we proceeded to note what we saw. Birds were everywhere. There were tiny terns; fishing cormorants; luxuriating anhingas, spreading their iridescent wings to dry in the sun; red-love pouched Magnificent Frigate birds; voracious turkey vultures waiting for death and stink to eat; tuxedo-clad storks; aggressive boat-tail grackles, pouncing on females when mating; hoot owls safely ensconced in the branches of live oaks; pure white ibises waiting on the edge of the shore to stab fish with their sharp beaks; and the erratic-flying fruit bats that wait all day to make an appearance in the early evening. 

My children drew the birds in their journals. They read about them in the reference manuals and learned of their mating rituals, eating habits, and migratory patterns. I knew the birds were no replacement for their father, who had recently moved out of the house, but they became a distraction that gave them a sense of thriving life and stretched their imaginations beyond their consuming sadness.

Regardless of all our distracting afternoon activities, though, our sadness could not be completely shaken, articulated, or even shared with each other. When we got back to the house every evening we walked around solemnly, as if we were three separate islands, existing solely off our own resources. I only wished I was the type of parent who could sit the children down and, in a self-assured and confident voice, promise them a better future and a plan for achieving it. But I was in no condition to articulate anything.

During the first months of the separation my emotions bubbled inside me so vigorously that I kept the action focused on bird walks and on the trivial activities of the day, like the brushing of teeth, the eating of vegetables, and the completion of homework. I couldn’t delve into anything further. One of my main preoccupations became the future of the red photo albums my husband kept neatly arranged on shelves in the study. I stared at them constantly in disbelief, stood at the threshold of the study mesmerized and frozen by what they now meant. Really, I couldn’t figure out what relevance happy memories had and whether their destruction would provide me consolation by destroying evidence of a once familiar past now gone awry: Pictures of eloping in a courthouse in Mississippi, adopting children in Russia. Celebrations of baptisms and birthdays only elicited questions of how best the pictures should be destroyed. Should I tear them apart one by one, burn the albums in a fiery pyre by the pool, or just leave them alone? In the end, I decided to banish them to the study where they had always been, close the door, and bar anyone’s entrance to the room.

My children’s reactions to the separation were more subtle: Lara, my seven-year-old, who might not have fully understood the situation in its entirety, started leaving her classroom without permission, and Alex’s grades started slipping. Subsequently, I signed them up for counseling with the school psychologist who made them draw pictures of their feelings: empty houses, unhappy faces, blank pages. 

During those months we were all about moving the action along, nipping it in the bud, not falling prey to our debilitating sorrow, but instead standing alone, stoic, and resolute. That is, until the night I heard my ten-year-old son cry himself to sleep. His father had always lain beside him in bed, answering all his questions: How high is the moon? Are the stars really white? Eventually, he would drift off to sleep and my husband would leave his room. Really, Alex never slept through the night until he was eight years old; he was always waking up and crying about fears of childhood monsters.
After my husband left the house, I did the nighttime routine with the children as if nothing had changed, reading their fairy tales with fervor, mimicking the voices of wolves, birds, and pigs, and praying solemnly for their safety. I usually read to my son last. Then I would scratch his back, place a kiss on his cheek and tell him I was in the next room, when, in all actuality, I would be pacing the halls, which I believed he heard me do. And I paced every night, until my pain exhausted me, falling into maybe two hours of sleep in the early morning hours. 

While I was walking around the house one night, I heard my son’s whimpering from somewhere deep in his pillow, muffled and almost indistinct, as if the sound had gotten caught in the vents of the central air unit and were now traveling with the cool air emitted from the ducts. Yet I heard it clearly, and it stopped me in my tracks. For the first time in the whole ordeal, I realized that my children’s pain was just as deep, silent, and cutting as mine. For a moment, I stood at the entrance of my son’s door and looked at him, as if in a trance. The boy who was always strong and resilient didn’t want me to know he suffered, didn’t want me to suffer any more than I already did, so he made sure he held the sides of his pillow around his small head. His gesture made me strong enough to walk over to him, place a kiss on cheek, and a whisper in his ear that everything would be okay.  That night, we huddled together side by side until he drifted off to sleep, and for first time in those first brutal months of the separation and divorce, it felt like a quiet, warm rain fell on both of our distant and isolated islands of pain.  Read my exciting memoir, "The Continent of Ruby," available at: https://www.amazon.com/Continent-Ruby-Memoir-Because-sometimes-ebook/dp/B00TT5DDWO?ie=UTF8&*Version*=1&*entries*=0

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