I dedicate this story to my partner and to everyone who has carried or is carrying the burden of grief.
Sitting by the bed, holding my hand, you think my mind is fighting against the decision of my body to quit life’s game. My eyes are closed, but I sense your will through the fingers laced tightly around my own. Tenderness is a force and you stake my claim to life through the insistent pressure of your hand. How it has grown over these long years from its immaculate small perfection to this manifestation of adult capability: greeting strangers, shaking on deals, carrying children of your own. From the first moment, holding tight to my little finger in the hush of the darkened hospital room, it wanted to latch onto me and the world. You needed reassuring then; you do now.
Beloved child, my hand rests peacefully in your own. Let it speak to you with the words I can no longer form: I am ready, so let me go.
Quitting seems such a nasty word. I used to think so too. Lying here, I remember telling you not to give up; to keep trying at those school projects, at winning over the sour-faced teacher, at striving to do your best in the world of work and family. So, it is no surprise that you desperately want me to go another round; you aren’t ready for me to hang up the boots and to let this be the final whistle.
Doctors speak in plain language of their expectations for this last round of play. You are resigned, seeming to concur with their prognosis; yet, when they are gone to the next ward, I feel the pulse of rage in the heartbeat of your hand. It troubles the peace I feel begin to slip about me like the blanket I wrapped you in, our blessed first night together.
Beloved child, tuck me into this long sleep.
Strength is sometimes a burden. I sense your head bowed with the weight of this demand: to fight on for my life. You are a pillar of strength threatened by tides of emotion. Let them come; lay down the boulder of your mighty will and trust me that there is no wrong or shame in this. It is ok to feel as small as a pebble, waves washing over it, again and again, caught up in the pounding tides of life; but there is also so much strength, even in the smallest stone.
If the doctor’s words have lit a fighting fire in you, they have quenched my last longings. I have been delivered from the exhausting expectation to struggle and soldier on. My body has long known the relief of a lie-down, now my mind can too. At the end of this illness, I can finally embrace myself once more, body and mind hugging each other tight.
Nurses come, those kind attendees with their needles and bottles to help ease the passing of my days. Quietly and efficiently they dismantle the apparatus that has helped me cling to life. Monitors and machines are disconnected and wheeled away; drips suspend their drops and beeps are silenced. Life lines are hauled out and I am my own net, catching my life’s dreams and memories. Holding them safe inside me, I am ready to let go.
Deep within you, I wish for a long-lost memory to stir. Do you think you can remember our first night together? There was noise, so much! The bustle of nurses, the instructions of doctors; machines robotically noted key data while I gasped my ragged breath and blew blast after blast on the trumpet of pain. Everything was labouring and then you shuddered into this world on a wave of love.
You added your noise, of course you did, roaring in a way that silenced everything else. I knew I had never heard a more beautiful sound than your first-born cry. There must have been other noises: temperatures read and recorded, pens scribbling on charts; your armband identification filled in and the blue plastic snapped onto your little wrist; sheets rustling as they were changed and freshly laid; casters clicking on the floor as we were wheeled to another ward, but I was deaf to it all. The only thing that returns to me, in the serenity of now, is the silence we shared as the rest of the world seemed to sleep; those first hours together when it was just us two, with eyes only for each other.
Eventually you closed yours and drifted off to sleep. I was beyond exhaustion and yet, watching your little chest rise and fall in a rhythm so wonderfully familiar and new, I pushed tiredness away as I held you closer to me. I wanted that night to never end; to put off that moment when we would be parted for the first time, even if you were just in a crib a few feet from my bed. My will was strong but eventually the night nurse came by and laughed at my stoic fight to stay awake and keep guard.
“He’ll be alright, he knows his mum is right beside him. Remember, there’s plenty of time for tiredness in the nights to come!”
She was right. When she lifted you from my arms and placed you in the crib at my side, you never stirred. The last thing I remember before sleep claimed me, was stroking your little hand with the tips of my fingers, realising that you knew I was there, and I knew you were there for me too.
Silence cups us as it did that night eighty years ago. Yours was the small hand then, now it is mine. Things seem different, but nothing really changes at all. Our hands will always reach out to each other across time and space; but in the circle of your memory, you'll reach me and we'll hold each other once more.
Beloved child, my hand rests peacefully in your own. Let it speak to you with the words I can no longer form. Tuck me into this long sleep.
I am ready, and you are too, so let me go.
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144 comments
Oh this was so beautiful! Well done and congratulations! I'm so, so happy for you 💓
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Thanks my dear for telling me to write out of pain. Big writerly hugs.
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I'm so glad you took my advice, but this is all you, your talent and hard work!
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@ Rebecca Is an interesting story, I love that, keep it up
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Congratulations Rebecca! A well-deserved win. The serenity surrounding the piece is so palpable. I'm not sure I've even seen someone capture that kind of feeling so well.
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I'm so happy that serenity rather than sadness is the dominant emotion. Thanks so much Kevin; congrats from you means a lot.
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This brought me to tears. The beginning of life, and the end--spent together. It also reminded me of that first night with my son (my first born) and how I learned about a love I'd never experienced before. So beautifully written--congrats on the win!!
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Thanks Lindsay. When I was writing, I wasn't sure how to best weave in the hope, but I sat back and the idea for the parallel with the birth came quite easily (unlike the birth of my first born!) I'm glad it kindled happy memories; that was my biggest wish for this one.
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This was such a beautiful, moving story. Congratulations on your well-deserved win!
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Thank you Suma. I love your stories so this means a lot to me.
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Rebecca, this story was poetry. It was soft and subtle and comforting. Most of us don’t have the ability to articulate feelings so completely but there can be little doubt your words spoke for us all. Great story. Great writing. Great job.
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Your story's glove caught plenty of emotions too :-) Thanks ever so much for stopping by and the kind words.
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I wanted to win but I’m proud to be shortlisted behind this story. It deserved the victory. I’m so happy for you.
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Oh my Thom, what a sweet thing to say, especially as your story was gold.
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Hi Rebecca, I received an email as part of the critique circle to provide feedback for your story. This is so beautifully written it brought me to tears. What a heartfelt and moving story you have told so well. I was completely hooked (and later sobbing!) from the beginning. You have a wonderful gift.
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This is really very kind of you to say. I'm struggling with a virus so this feedback has given me a real lift. The critique circle is a great way to read others on Reedsy.
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What an emotional piece. While sad, of course, there was so much love here. The child desperately wanting more time with the parent, and the parent fighting to give it to them but also feeling the need to surrender. I really enjoyed the parallel to the mother birthing the child, bringing life, and now the mother passing at the child's side, a life ending. What a wonderful balance. My favorite line (of many) is this: "It is ok to feel as small as a pebble, waves washing over it, again and again, caught up in the pounding tides of life; bu...
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Thanks so much, and extra nice from a fellow Miles! I've just commented on your story :-)
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Yes, a fellow Miles! I was like, "oh hey!" I married into a Miles family; is it the name you were born with?
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It is. My students love teasing me about it; lots of scope for jokes. Is it common in America? It's fairly unusual in England; I've never met another personally. We can be Reedsy family now :-)
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Oh, what do you teach? I teach early childhood music classes to small infants and toddlers, so they wouldn't yet know my last name, or to tease me for it, lol! I've seen Miles more as a first name here than surname. I believe, from what my husband's family tells me, it originated from the name Milosevich, or something similar. Happy to have a fellow Miles in my Reedsy family now!
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And teachers too! I'm an English teacher at an international school in Germany, helps with the story writing! I wonder what else we've got in common across the miles ( dog, 3 kids...) :-)*
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This was a creative take on the prompt, a very moving piece. The parallels between the birth of the child and the death of the parent, how the roles of who is caretaker, who is strong and who must be taken care of, flip. The parent is ready for what comes next - naturally this is a struggle to accept for the child. We rationally understand that death is an inevitability, but that's little comfort when we're faced with it. I wonder if the reverse is true too. When the child was born, the parent fretted over him, but in a way life was also an...
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You're so reflective, what a gift to your fellow scribblers; I love your musings on my stories. I thought it might be too obvious, the hand motif, but this was a raw if universal story this week amd I had to go with my gut and hope it wasn't too cliched. Just read your reply to your Arthur story and I get the deeper meaning now behind the light hearted cutlery brandishing! May need to re-read!
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Congratulations on the well deserved win! :D
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Thanks so much Michal; this feels like a bigger victory as it's so tied up with my mother in law's legacy. My partner is really moved too. Writing has been a real help, which is wonderful.
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This was absolutely beautiful, and so poetic—like a “final words” letter from a mother to her child. This is one of my favorites POV’s—the first person speaking TO someone. It’s like a puzzle to solve who the “I” and the “you” are, and here, it’s just such an emotional unfolding. I loved this sentence. Fantastic imagery. “It is ok to feel as small as a pebble, waves washing over it, again and again, caught up in the pounding tides of life; but there is also so much strength, even in the smallest stone.” This perspective too, of an aged pa...
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Ah Aeris, your kind and thoughtful words, especially the part on the love letter from parent to child, give me hope that I managed to write something universal and still moving out of personal experience. It's not been an easy few weeks but writing has helped.
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The “realness” certainly comes through. So sorry you are going through this!
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Congratulations, Rebecca!!!! 🎉🎉👏🏻
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Finally got there Aeris. I felt like I delivered my heart ( and my partner's) on a plate, so if I hadn't got anywhere it would have been a bit brutal🤣😘
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it whase not long enufe
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