Название | Nothing Lasts Forever |
---|---|
Автор произведения | Robert Steiner |
Жанр | Публицистика: прочее |
Серия | |
Издательство | Публицистика: прочее |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781619023550 |
The longer the woman he loves lies or crawls nude, dying and touched only by the man she loves, the less she regards human time and space. He can move her nudity anywhere anytime and from there, and then he can move her nude to or from the piano and from or to the bathroom day or night, moving her to watch her gain a tan, play piano, bathe, encourage her to evacuate her bowels, or steady her below the horizon of the bowl as she vomits. She remains the same dying woman he loves in one place or another at any time or any other, as emaciated, erotic, and restless here or there as now and then. Under these dire circumstances he’s convinced he knows her body better than he knows his own because hers is dying and his isn’t. The deeper their intimacy, the more his memories of her will be memories of dying and its repetitions, memories of who she was while she was dying, memories of who he became while she was dying—she died and he became who he will have been since. Dying identifies the essence of their love, and since their love identifies the essential experience of his life, his despair will be as indifferent to time and to space as is her dying. One day they have nothing more to say concerning life before she began to die, nothing more to recognize after recognizing that nothing they knew before she began dying has been anything other than possible lives each of them might have lived, but didn’t. Now that she’s dying they don’t question the content of their lives or reflect on who they are or what they were or who they’d be if she weren’t dying. After she dies she won’t be anyone anymore and he won’t be anyone to anyone else. They experience everything they’ll ever know of each other, being everything they’ll ever be to each other, being everything they’ll ever be to anyone, being everything he’ll ever be to anyone else. It’s inhumane to be human—discuss, says the woman he loves during lightning, thunder, and curtains of rain that infuse insomniacs with perilous thought and depraved acts. While he can still adore the woman he loves nude, gleaming and skeletal day after day, night after night, his memory will reflect the afterglow of his adoration, translating his obsession with her body into a lifetime of despair after she’s dead. He can’t know in what context he’s going to remember her decades later because something always comes after something else and then the next thing arrives again and again until memory despairs of telling the truth because it despairs of having witnessed it. When he remembers he’ll remember what he needs to remember unless in despair he also remembers what he needs to forget. From the moment he touches her nudity, loving her can only ruin him, as from the moment she admits him to the apartment in her undone dragon kimono her existence invites despair as far as his eyes will ever see. Each time he sees the glowing nudity of the dying woman he loves, everything he’s going to do after her death his future is going to undo. He drinks whiskey day and night because the burden of watching her die is unbearable, but since it’s unbearable he’s never drunk, viewing her performance of dying as a virtue he lacks. As horrible as her dreams of death have been, she’s suddenly begun dreaming of life so that once she wakes she believes for several seconds that dying has only been a nightmare. Once she remembers who she is and where and why because she sees the man she loves, she’s dizzy and vomitous, her heart aching until it closes like a fist. Once it’s over, she says, find out what’s different inside, extending her finger to his nose to remind him of her smell while she isn’t dead. Overlooking the beach, he says that tomorrow or the next day something monstrous is going to rise from the ocean floor, bite off their heads, and disappear under the waves. She walks to him with the confidence of the woman she was before starting to die, with the grace of the artist entering a stage in search of a piano, but now nude and hairless under her mushroom hat and behind sunglasses the size and color of oranges. He sees her enter a stage nude and hairless, sporting sunglasses and a mushroom hat, then she plays hairless and nude for thousands in an audience. When he recites the scene to her, she urges him not to forget it, and he doesn’t so that decades later he’ll remember it in order to recite it. She straddles him, confessing that it’s impossible not to think of a future because human beings spend their lives thinking of one, if not several, thinking more of the future than of the present, but since she’s dying she has to crush thoughts of a happy life with him under her heel by crushing thoughts of even an unhappy life with him. I can’t find a way to think of myself, she admits. Lying in his arms as he lies in hers, she wonders if it’s still a scalp he’s massaging when there isn’t hair on it. Later she walks toward him as steadily as she did before she began to die, each bare foot crossing in front of the other, her hips in symmetry, her back upright, her arms swinging into darkness out of light so that the shadow of her body approaches