The moment I saw the obituary on his Facebook page, I
thought it was a Facebook joke. You know those stupid gimmicky bullshit spam things
that people pass around online: 'click here to see how you'll die' and you put
in the requisite personal info and then you get this tombstone image with your
name ' Here lies Bill Smith 1979-2042 'and some supposedly humorous epitaph: 'Run over by alien crossing ocean while eating
squirrel sandwich. ' You get the idea.
That's how the world has become right? One big fat fucking
joke I guess. Except this time it wasn't. It wasn't a joke at all.
When it really sank in, though, when I looked at his
handsome face and familiar smile beaming off my computer screen, when I read
the painfully surrendered words of acceptance that his mother wrote, when I
realized it was so fucking true and real
and final it made my stomach ache in a way I can't explain. And that's when
I just fell into this deep, immediate despair.
And in that despair – in
the pacing I suddenly needed to do in my small house, the frantic pacing I did while
I processed this end to a life, while I cried those honest, wet tears that hold
you captive, his whole life, and mine too, flashed before me - I began to
look back, back, back.
It was like some part of me that I'd held onto all these
years - some part of me that I could call up and revisit, someone who knew me
when I was so young, someone who I also knew when he was so young, before the
inescapable damage of the world weighed heavily on our souls with it's
burdening angst but also it's overpowering joy, when our lives lay out before
us, this big, amazing thing to be lived and we were just beginning it – that
part of me, that part of us, was just now gone. And it had been gone for
several months. I just didn't know it.
The thing is, it wasn't gone. It was just encapsulated. The
way you put something in a newel post for a century. All tucked away like a
diary or a scrapbook. The way life happens in your mind. Pockets of the past
stored up there like a grandmother's sweater in your brain. All you have to do is go up there and root
around in the pockets and you'll find them all. This life, this person, now had a beginning, a
middle, and an end. I was just so unprepared for the end.
He was my friend. My lifelong friend. And he was one of the
purest friends I've ever had.
When I say pure, I mean we were never lovers. We never even
kissed. We were just true friends, first a boy and girl, then a man and woman,
friends. It is true we both liked one another in a 'more than friends' way. But
it was always at different times. During highschool, I liked him but he liked
Annie Leef. (Which made me not like Annie
Leef. She seemed fake and you could tell she bleached her upper lip. I couldn't
think of anything else bad to say about her. Just: how dare she.) Then he
liked me but I was infatuated with Sander Robinson. (Which made him make fun of Sander Robinson for any reason he could
find. Usually something like: what
do you see in that kid? Guy is a total 'squid.') Then, a few years later, I
liked him but he had a summer love out in California. Then, more years after
that, he liked me but I was fully into the idiocy of my twenties by then. We
were just never in sync that way. And we weren't meant to be. We were just meant
to always be friends. I'm glad that we had that innocence, that we had a pure
and true love for one another. That is a pretty rare thing.
We met at Proctor Academy, a small private school in New
Hampshire, when I was 13 and he was 15. I can't even recall how we met only
that we were always friends. I was a freshman and, as he informed me, therefore
a 'boeuf' while sophomores were 'squids' and all I knew was that I just wasn't
cool. But he made me his friend. And he never let me down. Sure, he teased me,
and made fun of me for being young and unaware, but he also loved to come to my
parents' house for weekends and he got me stoned for the first time in the
Blacksmith Shop at school. It was underground and dark and interesting and he
was always making things down there. Not a lot of students hung out there. So
it was kind of our place. He made me an iron key in that shop, too, something I
probably still have in the attic of my parent's house in Maine. I remember when
he gave it to me. It was a gift. No big deal because that was his way. But his
eyes said differently. He was just a giver.
Every May 3rd, every single May 3rd
since 1987, he got a phone call from me. "Hey Matt, it's the official Coke
Holder, Happy Birthday." I was the 'official Coke holder' because one time
he asked me to hold his soda for him while he zipped up his parka at the Duke's
Den (the snack shack type place where you could get junk food and sodas on
campus) and when I went to hand it back he shook his head and smiled that huge
smile of his and said, 'Nope, from now on, Jess, you're the 'official Coke
holder.' Uh huh, I get it. I'm your little kid-sister type personal slave.
Because, I'm sure, at that point, I was the one with the crush. His eyes were
that crazy blue that draw you inexplicably in and I'm sure I looked at him like
a little whipped sap. I mean, c'mon I was only a kid. And at that point, he
knew he had the power. So that was that. Official Coke Holder for life.
When I think back to my years at Proctor, I remember so
clearly the hill between the dorms and the dining hall, and when I was walking
by myself up and down that hill I would listen to my Walkman. It was a
Christmas present from my parents and it was the smallest Walkman they made
back then. I was listening to Peter Gabriel repeatedly. All the students at
Dartmouth were blaring his new album out of their windows and I remember
feeling like one day I'd be one of them. In my mind I was becoming one of them
already, practicing to be an adult. That hill would get slippery with ice from
so many students going up and down it all day and it was treacherous and windy.
I would hold my body tight and prepare to fall each and every time. I never
fell but I was always ready to fall. That hill sort of embodied my adolescent
self-consciousness. Always ready to fall.
I remember the strange sense of loudness all hidden in the
silence at dusk (do you know that sound? Simon and Garfunkel defined it best
and it all made sense to me in my adolescent pangs of insecurity.) It seemed to
call out from the purple-blue gray skies when we were all returning from a
long, satisfying, red-cheeked afternoon of skiing. I remember the sheen and
gleam of new fallen snow and only one sound in the near infinite stillness: the crunch of boots underfoot. Some of
the most profound moments that defined my heart to this day, were moments when
I was alone, crossing campus at night, seeing warm lights an people moving
inside buildings and the glowing moon overhead, and things like simply looking
out across at the stunning expanse of fresh snow in all it's glittering
mystery. So much gratefulness can exist in these small moments if you let
it. The total awareness of the
tenuousness of this life can give you so much during these reflective solitary
times.
Orchids have this same sparkling in their white petals. Have
you seen this? It is absolute magic. It is a perfect visual language. Snow has
this very thing. And snow holds onto it, keeps it, protects it, speaks it, all
winter long. All you have to do is watch and listen. And when you live in this
climate, when it seeps into your soul, when you live within this precarious
dance of death and rebirth, when you witness your own life unfold in periods of
deep slumber and vivid consciousness, the intricate details form a world that lives inside you for your whole life.
Every time we had a chance to catch up, usually on the
phone, he was recovering from some kind of accident. He was, always it seemed,
dancing with the devil, testing life, pushing it, living it in a passionate,
full way that most people wouldn't and don't . But it was his way, his journey,
his life's blood. It's what he loved. Whether it was racing Ducati's at 125mph
or extreme skiing or (in his mother's words) existing with ' that willingness to take a risk, to dare'
whatever it was that fueled him at the time, Matt was happy just living life to
the fullest in the way he knew how. I know he almost died once before. He was
in the hospital with so many broken bones. Motorcycle accident as I recall,
although I can't be 100% sure on that. All I know is that it was bad, whatever
it was, and it was a close call. We weren't always in constant contact but we
were never that far off from the major events of our lives.
When I was at acting school at Emerson College in Boston in
1993, he wrote me a simple postcard. It was no big deal. Just a chatty postcard
from a ski trip to Crested Butte, Colorado, from one friend to another. He
invited me to come ski with him, even offered to loan me the money to get out
there. Then he said in typical humorous Matt style, better yet, get your
parents to pay. But I knew he'd fly me out there. He asked me to come be with
him so many times over the years. Looking back, I wish I'd taken him up on more
of his amazing invitations. I think of the experiences I could have had.
I've kept that little postcard with me all this time. In
fact, I've always known exactly where it is wherever I've lived. When I was in New
York, it was on my fridge. In Los Angeles, it was tucked into my blue velvet
journal. When I lived in Philadelphia, it was in the stereo drawer. Here in
Florida, it has been in my office, second drawer down. It's always been with
me.
All this time. Matt's
familiar handwriting. A postcard to me. A nineteen-cent stamp.
My aunt came to visit this week and she offered to help me
organize my house a bit. She's a genius at organization so, of course, I jumped
at the chance for her help. So we started going through my books and papers. She
suggested I give at least some of my books away but I love my books and just
can't get rid of them. So she started stacking them to arrange them better. And,
among the stacks, there was this old, hardcover coffee table book, something I
hadn't looked at in years and years. It was given to me by my grandparents,
when I was far too young to appreciate it. The book is called 'The Musicians' by Sempe. Sempe, if you're
unfamiliar, is the artist/cartoonist whose work appears regularly on the cover
of The New Yorker. It is iconic and often comedic.
So I flipped open the very old, very unappreciated book with
its torn and curled dustjacket that has been carried from place to place for
decades. Immediately inside was a piece of still-fresh-looking academic notebook
paper. It was the beginning of a letter. 'Dear
Matt' it began. I couldn't believe it.
Just a couple sentences. That was all: 'I had such a great weekend with you. We need to relive the 'Blacksmith
Shop days' but I guess we can do that when I come visit you in August…'
Here was an unfinished letter that just lay there, frozen in time. Just waiting
for me, for this week to open up this old, old book and stumble upon it.
There was no date at the top, nothing but my unmistakable handwriting
that was indicative of me at around age 14. Why was I seeing this? Why now? Why? I can't help but wonder.
It's as if he's speaking to me even now. Like God put that old Sempe book there
for me to see. Like God said, he's still
with you. Matt is right here. He's here right now.
Some people, like postcards we pack up and take with us
wherever we go, some people never leave us. Matt will never leave me. Even
though he's gone now, even though his life was cut tragically short, he lived
his life the way he wanted to, the way he needed to. And even while miles and
time separated us, we were never far from each other's thoughts. I carried his
memory, his spirit, simply embodied in a paper postcard, from place to place, through
the journeys of my life.
As my mom and I both remarked while walking the beach just
today, 'He had a look in his eye, didn't he?'
'Yes, he did.'
'What do you think that was?'
"He was so handsome, so wonderful, so right there with
you…but…'
'There was a thing apart. Right? There was something about
him, a look in his eye, that was…apart somehow.'
'I know. Apart. That's it.'
'Yes. Like he wasn't long for this world and he knew it.'
Like he wasn't long for
this world and he knew it.
There are so many more memories of him that I have, the
usual stuff I guess, details that aren't all that important. It's who he was, what
his soul was about and what he meant to me that I hold dear. His face I can clearly
see, his walk I can see, he walked like he was on air, he was somehow just not
even tied to the ground. He had this weightlessness, this contagious energy like
he was going somewhere. Anyone who knew Matt knows exactly what I'm talking
about. He was always moving. Always searching.
When people die young, they are always young. He'll never be sick or old. He'll always
be beautiful and handsome and full of life. And as sad as it is, it's a
reminder that your own life can be gone just as suddenly. And it's so important
to remember that each day is the only one you have. That's what I will try to
remember when I get caught up in some stupid bullshit going on, when I'm
short-sighted about a work disappointment or some guy I liked who treated me
like dog shit, or being annoyed by someone who takes too long to order their
damn latte at Starbucks. It's easy to forget how good you have it when piddly
stuff gets in the way. But it's so, so, so important to be grateful. So
important to be grateful. Gratefulness affects every part of your life – and
makes life better for everyone you ever touch.
And, after all, when I look around, this is all pretty damn
good. This life I have is pretty good.
Matt has always been with me. I've tucked him into old books
and journals, packed him up and moved from place to place, kept him alive in
papers, in letters, in photos. He is one of my soulmates in this life. And he
is not just a memory of when we were young and all the things we went through. His
life is an entire world inside my heart.
1 comment:
What a wonderful tribute. Matt has woven himself into your life and will be with you forever. What an amazing guy he was.
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