In
2015, then-16-year-old Aidan Kingwell was tasked by her English teacher
to write to someone who had influenced her in some way. The result was this letter, addressed to Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Mary Oliver, whose words—her poem When Death Comes,
specifically—had helped Kingwell during a particularly dark time as a
young teenager, and during moments of depression ever since.
Frustratingly, despite my best efforts, I’m not allowed to reprint that
poem here; however, I’m sure you can find it elsewhere, including in
Oliver’s New and Selected Poems, Volume One, first published in 1992. Thankfully, it’s not essential. This letter is a powerful piece of writing that stands on its own.
Dear Mary,
I
know it’s an unconventional subject for a letter: death. A fact of life
that most of us endeavor to avoid, or at least ignore. But I, Mary — I
have walked side by side with death all of my life.
I
was thirteen the first time I read your poem, and at that time in my
life, there was a good chance that I would not see my fourteenth
birthday. I had been depressed since age ten, but I had never received
any treatment. My mind was very dark; I dove deeper and deeper into my
own twisted thoughts with each passing moment. I was someone who was
simultaneously terrified of dying and yet obsessed with the idea. I was
suicidal, which is a state of being that I cannot well describe, because
there are not words that can describe such utter loss of hope, such
bitterness and pain and unrelenting sorrow. I wanted to end my own life
so badly that most days I could not find one single reason for living.
It was not a cry for attention; it was a feeling of utter self-hatred.
There is also no accurate way to describe the feeling of hating yourself
and your life so much that you long to end it all. It is a feeling of
being trapped, of being insane, of being hopeless. When you are
suicidal, you are like a wild animal just barely being contained by a
thin human shell. Your soul is empty and your heart is blackened and
dead. You have no straws left to grasp, no ladder to climb out of the
abyss; the only rope offered to help you scramble out is in the shape of
a noose, and after weeks or months or years, that noose begins to look
very, very appealing.
So
there I stood, face-to-face with death on a daily basis, wondering if
each new day was the day that it would finally consume me. I was afraid
of my own mind. I found no comfort in wooden crosses or the taste of
bitter crackers, nor in the deluded words of psychiatrists. That
eventual uncertainty — the uncertainty of the terror of my own death —
haunted my footsteps as I walked from day to day, wearing it like a
heavy, bitter cloak. The very idea of my own death was killing me.
Then,
one day, in my seventh-grade English class, I was presented with your
poem. My teacher referred to it as “a dark poem with a note of hope
underlying it,” but within it, I found so much more. Within it, I found
new life. My mind opened up as I read your words; I was a frail but
inspired butterfly clawing my way from a dark, putrid cocoon. The way
you spoke, Mary; the way you talked about death, and how he will come to
buy you with “all the bright coins from his purse,” how he will come
“like an iceberg between the shoulder blades.” I could tell: you knew.
You knew what it felt like to be owned by death’s shadow, in the same
way that I was then. You had felt the same terror, the same
all-consuming dread. But you were also strong. You faced death and said
that it did not own you; you had looked into death’s dark eyes and said,
“No, you cannot have me; I am not yet done here.”
When
you spoke of not wanting to have simply visited this world, my own
world turned upside down. I began to think about how horrible it would
be to have only been a visitor, in the way that you said: to not have
made my mark on the world, to have only passed through with no real
substance. I thought of a life lived entirely in absence of beauty and
amazement, a life barren of love or excitement or laughter. I began to
realize that that was what suicide would do to me. I saw that life was
fast becoming my own. I saw that killing myself would take me away
before I even had the chance to make something of my life. Suicide would
eliminate my pain, yes, but it would also close any doors of
possibility that I might have still open to me, doors that may lead to
happiness in my future.
I
never would have imagined, Mary, that not killing myself would be one
of the hardest decisions that I would ever have to make. But in the end,
I made the choice, and I am still alive today. My life has not been
full of joy; in fact, it has been dark, and hard, and at times I have
even slipped back into death’s unrelenting grasp. But at those times, I
have reminded myself of what I thought then — that I want to make
something of my life, and that ending it would mean turning my back on
all future possibilities, as well as the few pieces of happiness that I
have managed to find in the present. At those dark times, Mary, I often
also read your poem to myself — the poem that catalyzed my grand
suicidal epiphany. I still struggle with this menace, but now I have one
thing that I did not have before: I have hope.
“When
Death Comes,” Mary — and it will — I want to face it as an equal, and
shake its hand as a friend, and accept it as an eventuality. You taught
me that that is the only proper way to die. With your words you taught
me that life cannot be lived in the shadow of death — that life must be a
thing separate from death. And you taught me that when death comes, I
should embrace it, but also that I should not welcome it before its
time. You taught me, Mary, that there was nothing to be feared in death
so long as my life was one well lived.
“I don’t want to end up simply having visited this world,” you wrote.
And
“When Death Comes,” Mary, I will tell it that you were my friend.
Because you were. I will tell it that I am armed with your words, and it
will bow its dark face in respect, and then, it will offer me its hand
and lead me into whatever may or may not lay behind it. I will feel no
fear, Mary — I no longer fear death and all its ways. I will know that I
have beaten death down with your words and the inspiration that they
gave me. I will know that I did not let it take me in any way but the
one I wanted. And I will know that my life, no matter how twisted,
corrupt, and fearful, was worth living.
So
thank you, Mary. Thank you for wrenching death’s grip from my wrist.
Thank you for showing me that the burden of my soul was not so dark.
That there was still hope left in me.
Aidan Kingwell
From
JOURNEYS: YOUNG READERS' LETTERS TO AUTHORS WHO CHANGED THEIR LIVES.
Copyright © 2017 by the Library of Congress. Reproduced by permission of
the publisher, Candlewick Press.
9 comments:
Great stuff Ed. Love Borgas and the Joe Cottonwood poem. Ciao, Joe
Hi Ed,
It’s been a while, hope you are well. Thanks for sharing the beautiful poem When Death Comes. I just recently re read it when a good friend of mine passed away.
Dear Ed:
Just want to let you know that letter sure did make me want to read Mary Oliver's poem!
(But of course I already love her poems, but I feel now the need to read this one. And I shall.
P.S. But I also found Sondheim's profound observations on the nature of poetry welcome: enlightening.
So, Thank you!
Thank you, Ed, for a truly spiffy issue!
Ever onward,
Marvin
Outstanding!!!
I love you.
Norm
Thanks for sharing this informative post. It's very helpful. Keep it up!
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