Rage Against The Dying Of The
Light-With Dylan Thomas’ Poem "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Goodnight" In Mind
By Fritz Taylor
Richard Roche, normally for public
consumption an easy-going, laid back and kindly man, was angry, no better, in a
rage. (Somehow the anger of his wickedly harsh childhood had gotten dissipated
over the years for let’s say when he was in his late teens or early twenties he
was as likely to throw fire and water as to seek to reason with anybody. So
much for a little backdrop to fill the reader in on where he had come from to
earn that easy-going demeanor.) That rage came with a name Lila Crawford, his
long, long time companion who had recently given him his walking papers. That “recently”
was well over two months before the time in question so his anger, his rage
needs some explanation. No question that Richard (not Rich or Rick) and Lila
had had their share of problems in their relationship which had spanned three
decades. Somehow, some way, Lila a few months before had decided that whatever
ailed the relationship could no longer to fixed, except by separation, a final
separation.
Who knows what might have sparked her
anguish, maybe it was that since her retirement Lila was at wits end about what
to do with the rest of her life. A big theme when she gave Richard his walking
papers had been that she had to find herself, had to figure out who she was and
that the journey had to be alone. Richard tried to reason, argue really, that
he did not understand why her angst and alienation could not be addressed in
the context of the relationship like it had been on several previous occasions.
Lila had said that this was different, this was deeper. Closer to the nut was
what Lila had sensed were dramatic changes in Richard’s demeanor which had created
what she called, and he agreed when it was pointed out, undue tensions in the
household. He admitted that his health issues over the previous several months
had made him cranky, irritable and a pain in the ass.
He had been poked and prodded some many
times by doctors and their cohorts that he was sick unto death, well almost
unto death, of the whole thing. And then there were the medications, plural on
that word, which were making him crazy (and one of them was doing some damage
that way as he later found out, too late later found out). That, the diagnosis
of bladder cancer which he had been battling (which he had been in denial about
for a period), and his turning sixty had unwound his usual public consumption
easy-going ways. From her perspective, from her own considerable health issues
point of view she had cut him to the quick when she said that a major cause of
her recent illness problems could be laid to the tensions created in the
household by him, that he was causing her illnesses to rage unabated. That was
the final sting that told him that whatever had happened over the recent past
they needed what in his mind was a separation. That like in many interpersonal
relationship matters between them she was miles ahead of him.
After finding a temporary place along
the seacoast in Maine for a month through the good offices of Air B ‘n’ B
Richard moved him small bundle of precious and necessary goods (okay, clothes,
books, a few utensils and the mandatory computer complex complete with printer).
The place was to be rented for a month (the limit of the stay in any case since
the owners were closing up for the cold weather Mainer winter) at which time
Richard had figured that Lila would have come to her senses and be welcoming
him back into her embraces again. Even before that month was up Lila made it
clear that the separation in her mind, at least the living together part, was
final if not irrevocable and they had argued over that since, as usual Richard
had assumed that they had agreed on the month and that was that. Naturally he
was dead-ass wrong about how serious she was about the break, about the need
for the break. She cut him to the quick again by telling him that her health
had improved with the lack of tensions around the house in his absence (they
had agreed that she would stay in their long time residence since he was more
of a rolling stone in his ability to move and then there were the cats who knew
no other abode but that place, and incidentally were a separate cause stress
for her since they were young and full of pent-up energy.
Although Lila had gone up to the place
Richard had in Maine to signify in her mind that her earlier idea that they
would never see each other again had been premature and not well thought out
she nevertheless insisted that she need an undisclosed amount of time to get
her own life in order (her term had been the diplomatic wishy-wash “for the
foreseeable future”). The net effect, no the gross effect, remember Richard had
been angry, no again, in a rage over this latest set-back but he had to go
along with it-what else was he to do when she didn’t want to live with him. He then took a place, a winter
rental in a seacoast town in New Hampshire under loose tenant at will conditions
(meaning that with thirty days’ notice either party could break the lease). His
idea was if the Empress recalled him he could get out from under without too
much financial damage (moreover he wanted to be by the ocean for reflection and
an occasional run to keep in shape so there was a certain method to his
madness). And so he moved south closer to Boston where all his connections to
the known world were.
Richard had made some changes though
during the separation, which Lila had commented on positively although without
giving in an inch. He had under her initial guidance taken up meditation daily
in order to get some peace within himself, to calm down and to accept the idea
that he had both cancer and had slowed down with age both ideas repugnant to
his psyche but there it was. The meditation, something he had laughed at in
previous suggestions by Lila had actually helped. When Richard got into
something he believed in he was “all in” and he was in that kind of mood (‘all
in” a term he had used a couple of years previously when they had been under
Lila’s suggestion again in couples counselling and once he got his head around
the idea he actually like it, certainly thought it was useful).
Moreover having
been cut to the quick by Lila’s remarks about how he was affecting her health
something that had plagued her as long as he had known her he started
reflecting on where things had gone some badly, where their early love had
drifted to a very bad place. He was determined to “win” her back.
Now all of these Richard insights were
well and good but it takes two to work this kind of thing out even though he
now had gotten “religion” but her continual rebuffs of his attempts to
reconcile had, well, left him with feelings of rage, with a sense that he was
lost. This rage had no place to go, had to break or it would put more fire in
his head than he could he use (the “put out fire in his head” a phrase he
picked up from a song by Patty Griffin where her lover was in his own
problematic world). That rage in his head had initially driven him to seek
another companion via a senior citizen on-line dating service which proved
fruitless to quell his angst.
The thing finally blew up in his head
around Thanksgiving, around the season where family and community come into
play. He had had, and Lila had as well which is where they “saved” each other
during this holiday season, horrible times around holidays when they were kids
and even sixty years later Richard could feel the sting of the past coming on
with nobody to help him get through the thing-his Lila a distant memory for
that purpose. He determined that he was through with her, decided to let her
have the house, having nothing more to do with her, to drift to California and
start anew, maybe some find somebody out there so that his morbid fear that he
would die “alone” would not come true. So filled with rage for several days
which even multiple daily meditations would not curb he was about to call her.
Before he could do so she called him, said she had been depressed around the
holidays and could she come up and see him. Yeah, sure. That is what their
thing had always been, why he always liked the pleasure of her company. “Yeah,
sure come on up.” Sometimes raging against the fading of the light is the only
course though.
[Although Lila was adamant for the “foreseeable
future” about not living together they did agree to see each other on occasion
as a result of that meeting but who knows where that will lead if anywhere.
F.T.]
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