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Sunday, April 2, 2006The Diskette
I saw the metallic reflection from across the room. It was peeking from behind the television, and, knowing that the television was a 200-pound object, I knew I hadn't moved it since it was placed there last June. I was in the midst of gathering workout clothes to use after work that day, as I was going to try my luck running sans-treadmill with Nick. I was a bit frazzled, but curious nonetheless. I turned my back to the incongruity and failed to act unimpressed. I dropped my tee-shirt and stumbled, in my haste, across the room. It was a very sorry sight, I am certain.
My curiosity knew no satiation as I found the object to be a diskette. A diskette! When's the last time I've even had a 3.5" floppy drive on my computer!? Any computer!? That would be the very first computer I ever bought 100% on my own, back in 2000...the laptop that I still gripe cost me $3,500. Not having the appropriate drive, why would diskettes be anywhere to be found? It was quite the quandary...and not having the appropriate drive as stated, how would I even know if anything was saved to the disk? I, being the clutter-hating sort, was going to toss it in the nearest trash can, but something, some shred of intervention, kept me from doing so. How did it get there? I held the nondescript, unlabeled black disk in gentle hands and turned it over once...twice...three times...the light catching on the silvery slider. And, a recent conversation with Brenda replayed in my head, how she custom-ordered a floppy drive in her new Dell so she could transfer files from her former, CD-Burner-less machine—the one she gave away for parts-harvesting. It was very early in the morning, and the house slept. I found my way to the aforementioned Dell and, inserting the disk, elected to explore the contents in the A: drive. I found something there that chilled me, warmed me, and overwhelmed me...taking away my desire to write a single word for days, tearing at a too-often ignored wound and salving my heart. A letter from my mother...my mother to whom I bestowed my 2000-era, $3,500 laptop, a comely Gateway I named Meg. I can't determine when she wrote the letter, when she was still able to walk down a flight of stairs, and my eyes overflow when I think of her writing such a piece and leaving if for me to discover in a future without her. Brenda says she feels like Mom has been around lately, touching our lives...the supernatural is beginning to lose the edge of "super" for me, and the unexplainable has become my reality. My mother touched my heart in life, and she still has a hand there. I couldn't decide if I wanted to share the letter here. I cried for the longest time after I first read it...I've only read it a handful of times, for the void echoes too profoundly when I remember the writer, the one who felt those words, is forever gone from this life, this world. And, I questioned myself, why would anybody want to know exactly what my mother thought of me? Where is the interest in that? But, you should know what kind of a person she was, and how beautiful her sense of love and devotion really was. You should know that no better mother ever existed, nor best friend either. You should know that no one can ever come close to the height of her grace, her generosity. You should know that she fought until the very end of her life, telling us just days before she died, "I'm not as sick as you all think I am." You should know, by her words, the magnitude of the woman I am missing so completely:
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I cannot think of a deeper love than that between a Mother and Daughter. I know that you treasure that love Laura. I can finally see why YOU are so special. Yes honey, you were blessed with an Angel Momma. I weep for your loss.
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