THE DARK

The thing I remember most is the darkness.

How light-less and hopeless everything seemed, there in the little house with the sagging roof and rain pitter-pattering into our many, many buckets..

And it was cold. But that's hardly surprising with wind sneaking in through broken, boarded windows. It wasn't bad in the summer -- it was almost like air conditioning.  But the Winters, oh, Winters were bad.

We did have heat as long as the power was on. But it seeped out. Even when we tried one very cold Winter to cover the windows, and even the walls, with emergency blankets, hoping to bring something like insulation to the party. The emergency blankets were even a bit pretty, all silvery under the few lamps we had.  Kinda Christmasy. However, the sagging roof panels, stained with black and green mildew and spotted with rotted insulation, kinda dampened the appeal.

But it wasn't completely horrible. It was just the way it was. Living like that, you learn not to see the bad side of things, or you'll be crushed by it. You look for the tiny spots of light that make it bearable.

Like the family of birds just beyond the broken-down front porch. We'd take a bit of the money we had for food and bills and buy bird seed, so they came again every day, and we could watch them because that was our TV and radio. That little feather family. And we'd look forward to them every day and sit, later in the dark, talking and replaying whatever cute thing they did that made us laugh or smile. And that's what you focus on. That's what gets you through.

Finding places to sleep was a problem. That was difficult. When we first arrived, the only bedroom in the back had taken far too much damage to be usable. We tried putting plywood on the floor so we didn't accidentally fall through the soft spots, but we eventually opted for the living room, as it was in the best condition. But it did take the help of several 2by4s to kept most of the ceiling from falling in on us while we slept.

Finding a place that didn't drip was also a challenge. It kept changing. I don't know how many times I thought we'd found a good place, then one of us would wake up in a start from a face full of cold, dirty water from a new, drippy spot.

The spiders weren't fun, either. Wet, rot, holes in windows and walls, and you have more than your fair share of spiders. Some so big we thought about naming them. That one, his name is George. And over there, she's Bertha. I don't know. Kinda silly I guess. But you do things, to keep from screaming sometimes. And laughter is the best medicine.

What's funny?

Sometimes, I miss that place. Can you imagine?

It was cold. Wet. Miserable. And Ugly as Hell. But it felt safe. I don't know why. We almost froze to death there one Winter during a prolonged power outage when the drips finally stopped dripping and made icicles in the house instead. But there is a strange melancholy when I think about it. That sad, bitter-sweet little house. Where someone, at some time, was probably happy. And we saw it, slowly and quietly to its death. Buried now in blackberry brambles and vines.

Swallowed, once and for all, by the dark.


January 12, 2015 -- Teresa Challender