The Not So Pretty Finish-With Etta James’ “Please, No More” in Mind
By Hank Jones
“No more, no more,” had become Shep Wilson’s new mantra once
he got over his rage against his long-time companion, Sarah Long, after she had
set him adrift, had as she said “moved on” to fine herself whatever that might
have meant when she uttered the ugly words of separation one night and then the
next day was gone, leaving no forwarding address and only the thin reed of a cellphone
number and e-mail address to remember her by. It had not been like Shep had not
known it was coming, or could see it coming since Sarah had been making noises
about leaving, and under what conditions, for a couple of years prior to that
sneaking out the next day door. And maybe she was right to make a clean break,
although in his heart of hearts Shep knew he was only fooling himself, only
acting out of his version of male alleged indifference which had been part of
the problem between the pair for the past several years.
Shep kept trying to think through what he could have done
differently, where he had fallen down bad enough to make her leave. And make
him take up her chant of “no more” (not really put that way by her since she
would have used more gentile language that fit her persona but that was the way
that it rang through this latest fire in his head and that was the way he was
trying to think the matter through). He knew that he shared the blame, shared
in the debacle of their love, had lost that magic that held them together for
so many years, and that the little saying that she had had in sunnier times
about how they had been so much in love in those early years and though it
would continue forever. And in the early days, hell, up until the last few
years that love had been as genuine as any emotion that he held dear. Then a
whole series of events, a whole personal deluge of troubles laid him low, and
had made him a grumpy old man. The last month or so, maybe two months he had
tried to take stock of himself (and of her role in their decline after all as
she admitted she could have signaled him more concretely about what was ailing
her, what make her say her own “no more”). Had tried to put, as he constantly
told her against all odds, to put his best foot forward. Unfortunately it had
been too late.
After Shep thought about those early days when they were so
in love, were so sympathetic to each other, fed off each other’s needs, faced
the wicked old world as a pair of waifs, soul mate waifs was the way she put it
one time early on, sipping on a little light wine to numb himself a bit against
the emptiness in his heart, he tried to retrace where he had fallen down (her
shortcomings were her business now and so he looked at the lonely world through
his future path and how he could become
the “new” Shep, get rid of that mantra of “no more” into a better place).
Shep had never been much for reflection, never much to think
how his actions, or better his omissions, would affect Sarah, would make her
withdraw, make her close her heart to him. Had dismissed at least in his on
fire head much of what she would speak of when she was seriously trying to
signal him that things had dramatically drifted downhill. Would not take the
signals about getting help, psychiatric help foremost, that she first gently
and then more insistently tried to get him to undertake. Saw that as her New
Age Cambridge background thing that she was forever trying out (and to his mind
without much success but he kept that to himself especially as she seemed more
and more to withdraw into that world as she got more distraught about them and
as well about her place in the sun, about who she was).
Funny, Shep thought to himself,
in the end, or rather toward the end, in one of those previous downhill moments
he had agreed to go with her to couples counselling (they had tried that route
about twenty years before but both had been dissatisfied with the counsellor
who seemed to be more interested in what she had to say than what they had had
to say). Funny as well that he, not she though, and if he had been wise enough
to see what that meant he could have seen what was coming, he felt that the
then current counselling, and the counsellor, was a worthwhile endeavor every
week (Sarah, before they decided, or rather she decided, to discontinue the
work, had told him that she thought the counsellor was “championing him”
because, as a gregarious type in such situations he had the better of it
against her more quiet and thoughtful responses which tended to be short, if to
the point.)
Shep’s troubles really had started with the advent of his
medical troubles, with what he called “the poking and prodding” of the medicos,
a few years before. Yeah, he knew growing older, getting to be an old grumpy
man, meant that health issues would surface, would especially as he reached his
seventh decade (he knew first-hand as well from his friends of similar ages
that this was the “deal,” the real deal). Shep had prided himself on keeping a
semblance of fitness, of keeping himself heathy as measured by very infrequent visits
to the doctor’s office and of not feeling sick most of the time except for an
occasional cold. Then the deluge, first trouble with breathing and eating
necessitating an endoscopy which found some problems, and medications. After
that bladder problems associated with his smoking many years before according
to the urologist, more medications, and then more recently the final nail in
the coffin (his expression as stated to Sarah many times and a silly foolish
thing to say), the early discovery of bladder cancer after a scope should
unusual inflammations. More procedures and more medications.
One day Shep just erupted, started yelling at Sarah, started
to approach her for which she would later say she stood in fear of physical
danger he seemed so out of control (not at the time though as she thought that
saying anything would only enflame him further). After a few minutes he settled
down, because something of the old Shep, but the line had been crossed. Shep
swore he would stop taking the medications since they seemed to be making him
more aggressive, more sullen, and angrier. As it turned out one of the
medications was reacting poorly with another one and had aided in Shep’s angry
responses to the world-and to Sarah.
If the medications, if the health issues were all that there
were Sarah pointed told Shep before she departed she could have worked around
that. What she could not work around was what Shep called one night the fire in
his head (not helping that inability to “work around” were long-time, long-held
issues around Sarah’s own worth, around who she was, around what was she to do
in the world now that she too was retired, issues which had plagued her since
childhood). In the end that “fire in his head,” that not being “at peace” with
himself was the way she expressed her take on the situation was what made
something snap in her psyche. Shep, as he would admit to himself in a moment of
candor several weeks after she had gone, had reacted to his health issues and
graceless aging rather than getting more rest and taking it easier in life had
true Shep form driven himself even harder in order to leave what he told Sarah
was his mark on the wicked old world. The snapping point for her was that he
seemed indifferent to her needs, seemed to be in a world of his own, and had
begun again to question every move that she made like he did not trust. In a
final stab to his heart she had told him that her own increasing medical
problems were being aggravated by his foul behavior(after being fearful of doing
so since she still worried about his anger if she did tell him this hard
truth).
So this was Shep’s sad demise. Or could have been but one
night a couple of months after Sarah left he woke up one night and said “no
more.” No more acting like a crazed maniac, no more fruitless search for some
netherworld place in the sun. He had read a book, a book on meditation that
Sarah had left behind talking about the benefits of doing such a therapy,
backed up by scientific evidence. (Shep was not sure that Sarah had not left
the book behind on purpose since she, like in a lot of things around his
well-being, had mentioned his doing meditation on numerous occasions in the
past.) So Shep started practicing the art, had real trouble at the beginning in
focusing away from his two million “pressing” forward that day issues and
living in the moment. But as with many things when he gets “religion” Shep is
still at it after a month. His mantra, his focus term, not surprisingly “no
more.”
[Shep would wind up meeting Sarah in a Whole Foods grocery
store in Cambridge several months later and remarked after telling him she had
spent the previous several months in California that he seemed calmer, seemed
to have lost some of that fire in his head, and seemed more at peace with
himself. Had said also that they should keep in touch now that she was back in town and that he wasn’t such
a maniac (her term for his previous late innings conduct). So who knows. All
Shep knows is that he wanted “no more” to do with the old Shep).
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