The Language Inside

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The Language Inside Page 15

by Holly Thompson


  then she spells for me to turn her wheelchair

  and when I do Zena looks right into me

  and points with her eyes toward a chair for me

  I pull the chair up beside her

  and I feel so pathetic sitting there

  before a paralyzed woman

  who can’t move her arms or legs

  who can’t speak

  and whose daughter

  had to be raised by her sister

  but I can’t help it

  tears come

  I wipe them away

  try to calm myself

  taking three slow breaths

  sorry I say to Zena

  I act all put together for my parents

  but I seem to have no control

  over anything anymore

  Zena points her eyes at the letter board

  but first I stand up for a tissue

  then sit down again

  and to Zena’s questions

  I explain Mom’s treatment

  our staying for a year

  and that though it’s not

  what I’d hoped for

  I’ll try to make it work

  I run my finger over the letter board

  which can still be faster than her computer

  Zena spells

  t-a-k-e c-o-n-t-r-o-l o-f w-h-a-t u c-a-n

  l-i-k-e m-e

  I thank her

  tell her I’ll try

  then pull Mom’s computer

  from my bag

  I open Mom’s laptop to my slide show

  tell Zena I brought something to share

  with Samnang’s Cambodian patient

  but I can give her a quick viewing

  there’s not much time

  Dad will be back soon

  but her eyes go bright

  as I click through

  when I have to leave

  she spells n-e-x-t t-i-m-e m-o-r-e

  and I promise her of course

  Leap Sok’s dozing

  but he wakes, and while aides

  get him dressed in fresh clothes

  I step out into the hall

  when I go back in I do sompeas

  even try chum reap sour

  then use simple English and gestures

  give him slices of YiaYia’s pumpkin bread

  feed him bites I tear off

  bring water to his lips

  and tell him I brought some pictures

  I open Mom’s laptop

  set it on the overbed table

  and click the right arrow

  to view the slide show

  I show him

  photos of Kamakura

  the main shrine

  the lotus ponds

  the hills

  the big Buddha

  temple gardens

  samurai tombs

  the beach

  our house

  Madoka

  my middle school

  my little room

                 that overlooks a neighbor’s loquat tree

  and Shoga

                 curled up on my bed

  he says good, good

  so nice, yes, nice

  but then he says

  something

  I don’t understand

  until he repeats—

  tsunami?

  photos of the tsunami areas? I ask

  and he nods

  so I take a deep breath

  go to the photo files

  and pull up pictures

  from the cleanup

  but flipping through

  seeing those bashed

  and shredded neighborhoods

  brings back all that pain

  and I think

                 what

                 am I doing?

  I return to my original plan

  and play a video Dad took last fall

  from the ridge by our house

  of the sun going down

  behind mountains opposite

                 and the surfers at the beach

                 and Mount Fuji’s new snowcap

                 and the chimes playing

                 the sunset song

  when it’s time to leave

  I give Leap Sok

  a postcard of the Kamakura Buddha

  set it on his dresser

  near the Angkor Wat painting

  and with my hands

  do sompeas

  he nods

  eyes the Buddha

  says thank you

  Dad picks me up

  and we run errands

  for practically the rest

  of the day

  and finally

  on the way back to YiaYia’s house

  I say to him I’m going to try

  to raise money for Tohoku

  I think long term they’ll need help

  PTSD and all

  definitely he says

  and funds for repairs

  and programs

  and revitalization . . .

  so what’s your plan?

  I tell him maybe

  something with dance

  but whatever it is

  I’ll give Mom a role

  and he likes that

  after dinner I scribble some ideas

  to share with the school dance club

  and some to share with Samnang

  then I start hearing a poem

  finally I take out my journal

  and focus

      Kamakura Buddha with Leap Sok

      I’m seeing the Buddha I’ve been photographed with

      every year since the year after I was born

      the Buddha whose bronze knees I’ve sat beneath

      the Buddha whose cast insides I’ve touched

      the Buddha exposed in 1498 by a tsunami

      the Buddha that sits century after century

      the very Buddha that I will not be photographed with

      on my birthday this coming January

      he’s seeing that Buddha

      a Buddha he’s never known

      seated before hills he’s never seen

      blossom or go green

      but in his eyes

      I see he’s seeing the Buddha

      and recognizing the Buddha

      he knows

  that night I text Samnang—

  I need to talk to you about dance

  and

  know any good Cam poems in English? for Zena?

  because I’m thinking that I’d like to read some

  and she might, too

  and he replies

  okay to dance talk

  no to poems, but can check

  and I text back

  I saw Leap Sok today

  then my phone rings

  you saw him? he says

  and I can’t help but laugh

  that he so did not think I’d do that

  how did you talk?

  I explain that

  I know how to speak

  in simple English

  and I showed photos of Japan

  and even places in Tohoku

  after the tsunami

  and he’s all quiet

  just listening

  that’s amazing

  he finally says

  but I don’t think it’s really amazing

  I ask if he thinks it was a mistake

  to show Leap Sok the photos from

  tsunami-hit towns, PTSD and all

  nah, tsunami trauma is different

  from
war trauma

  then I say

  it looks like we’re not moving back to Japan this year

  not till summer

  Samnang is quiet for a moment

  is your mom sicker?

  no, no, just radiation therapy

  for seven weeks

  then hormone treatment

  things that take time

  oh, well, good he says

  yeah, mostly

  I mean, I thought you meant

  they found more cancer

  or she needed more surgery he says

  no I say

  nothing like that

  well, I’m sorry Samnang says

  I mean, that you can’t go back to help and stuff

  ’cause I know that’s what you want

  but in one way it’s great

  what way? I say

  Zena he says

  which, it’s true

  is great

  but isn’t quite

  what I was hoping

  he might say

  I should have anticipated this one

  since it hits post-stress

  like clockwork

  Sunday

  two days after the path report

  I’m brushing my hair

  when I note a finger of my hand

                 missing

  then from my face in the mirror my left eye

                 missing

  and from the window in my room an entire pane

                 missing

  I haven’t even had breakfast

  I have tons of homework

  I’ve already had a full night’s sleep

  I don’t want to sleep more

  but there’s nothing I can do

  except go back to bed

  I put on my pajamas again

  swallow my pills

  yank the curtains closed

  crawl under the quilt

  and cover my face with a T-shirt

  for dark

  now and then I open my eyes

  check the migraine progress—

  first the spreading blindness

  then a flickering crescent

  overlaying the blindness

  then I don’t need sight

  to note the progress

  as I feel numbness

  seep into my arm

  advance along my jaw

  and slip into my throat

  YiaYia comes in and starts telling me

  that it’s nearly 9:30

  she already woke me once

  and got me out of bed

  but I press my hands

  over my eyes

  whimper

  and she says oh!

  tiptoes out

  then tiptoes back

  with a bottle of water

  later Dad comes in

  and sits on the edge of my bed

  this is his day to leave for New York

  but now that it’s time to say good-bye

  I can’t make sense of his words

  can’t form sentences

  language jumbles

  I hear

                            mother

                           radiation

                 walk              Toby

                           Yia in the

  support

                 school

                           you run

                                           love you

  and only with effort

  can I mutter

  two words together

                 thank you

  I feel him kiss my pounding head

  tears dribble from my eyes

  squeezed shut

  against any hint of light

  and then in the darkness

  behind my closed eyes and amid

  the flickering lights and my aphasia

  there is playing out in my head . . .

  music

  and I see with such clarity

  hip-hop moves

  and the soran bushi dance

  and the tanko bushi dance

  and flowing circles

  of people all ages

  dancing

  raising money

  for Tohoku

  it’s early afternoon when I rise

  in the foggy afterwards

  and slowly pad downstairs

  sit at the kitchen table

  and drink some tea

  that YiaYia sets before me

  Mom sits down opposite

  oh, sweetie she says

  I’m so sorry if my situation

  is too much for you

  I manage a smile, say

  it’s okay

  even though I feel

  like a train wreck

  I feel empty of all that energy

  I had before the migraine

  during the migraine

  I chew the chicken salad sandwich YiaYia makes for me

  but it tastes like bland mashed baby food

  what I’d love is an onigiri with salmon or ume

  what I want is a hot bowl of soba noodles

  topped with sesame and kizami nori

  what I want is a cup of green tea, not Lipton

  what I want is to go home

  suddenly I’m not so sure I can handle

  my big dance-club fund-raising idea

  I put my head down on my arms

  by my plate

  on the kitchen table

  but then the doorbell rings

  it’s Samnang

  and I’m in my pajama sweats

  plus a fleece top and slippers

  and my hair’s all over the place

  and YiaYia walks him right

  into the kitchen

  hey he says to me

  and when YiaYia gestures

  he sits down at the table

  between me and Mom

  and YiaYia pours him

  a cup of tea

  I want to crawl away

  and brush my hair

  and clean my teeth

  but Samnang doesn’t seem to care

  just talks to YiaYia

  and my mom

  like it’s an everyday occurrence

  to drop in

  they leave us alone

  and I explain about the migraine

  and in his eyes

  I read concern

  Samnang speaks softly

  like he knows sound hurts me

  says he brought me a book

  sets it on the table

  the cover has a grim painting

  but a subtitle says it’s poetry

  of Cambodian refugee experiences

  he flips through and says

  they’re long

  but maybe you can read some of these poems

  to Zena

  then he has to leave for dance

  feel better he says

  I go to the porch with him

  and wave when he drives off

  and I realize in the surprise of his visit

  my head full of the murky afterwards

  and refugee poetry

  I forgot to mention dance

  and then it comes back to me

  the whole program

  that I saw so clearly in my migraine—

                 hip-hop to kick things off

                 soran bushi by dance club members

              �
��  more hip-hop

                 another folk dance

                 then the audience

                 in expanding rings

                 of tanko bushi

                 to finish up

  but now in real time

  post creative migraine burst

  the program seems too short

  I shower

  and while I’m under the hot water

  I think about staying the full year

                 I can go to Vermont in winter

                 I can do Model UN in Boston

                 I can work with Zena for longer

                 I can create a Dance for Tohoku project

                 and maybe learn Cambodian dance

                 and at least be friends with Samnang

  and I realize I’m starting to feel positive

  and even when I think of Madoka, and her family

  the guilt that runs through me is diluted

  knowing I’m going to help from here

  I do homework for the rest of the day

  counting the hours till tomorrow

  when I can find Samnang at school

  to ask him, what if

 

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