Since Frog died I’ve only been
able to read light novels with happy endings, and I discovered in the library
an author called Sarah Morgan who fitted exactly those criteria.
I’ve now read almost every single one of her books at least
once, if not twice, if not three times, including the romances she wrote at the beginning of her
career (what me, a one-time serious book editor, reading romances? Whatever
next?) so, when I saw her latest book A
Secret Escape on offer in Sainsbury’s recently, I snapped it up.
At the same time I saw Here
One Moment by Australian writer, Liane Moriarty. I haven’t
been able to read Liane for the last few years because she’s too worldly and
cynical. You can never have too many books piled on the bedside table however, and
it could be that I was stronger now, so I bought that one too.
I spent the first three years after Frog died clearing his Stuff
from driveway, garage, shed and music room not to mention the rest of the
house. He was a bit of a hoarder. Then I turned my attention to the structure
of the place, doing essential repairs and improvements just in case I was going
to move.
This month at last I’m free. I’m without clutter, builders, visits
and visitors. It was deliberate. I
wanted the rest. I wanted to get back to myself. But yesterday morning I wrote in my
journal (my post-Frog record of thoughts and feelings, my best friend, my ladder of recovery), ‘It’s all a bit meaningless without Frog. He was my
purpose and my sounding-board. He saw me, so I was me.’
And I thought of a passage in Here One Moment, which I’m just about managing to read. It's not uplifting me, like Sarah’s books do, but I’m
intrigued by the subject matter – psychic prediction – and I’ve no idea how it’s
going to end.
In the passage, a mathematician is describing a letter she wrote to her fiancé
when he was fighting in Vietnam (no, I didn’t know that Australians were
drafted for that war either). She is remembering a lesson from school.
“… a point is ‘zero-dimensional’,
meaning it doesn’t actually exist. But once you have two points – two
non-existent points – you can fill the space in between with lots and lots of
points, and you get a line, which has length, so it’s now one dimension, which you could argue means it does now exist.
… I told Jack
that when I was with him, I felt like I was close to understanding what I had
nearly understood that day.
I told him I was
a zero-dimensional, non-existent point, floating in space, until I met him."
When I first read that, I cried. As I copy it for you, I'm crying again.
Thank you for reading this blog and being that other point at this moment.
Maybe writing is an answer.