Jane Ann McLachlan
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Year Four - On Sleep and Death (Memoir)

10/3/2012

10 Comments

 
I lie in bed, struggling to breathe. My chest has closed. I pull and pull, but the air will not come. I am dizzy, terrified. I can't breathe!

"Mommy!" I cry, expending what little breath I can suck into my lungs. I hear her running down the hall. "I can't breathe," I gasp, desperate for air. She sits me up, removing my pajamas. My urgent attempts to draw in air sound like croaks. I am four years old and terrified. "I'm too young to die!" I cry.

"Don't be silly. You're not dying!" The strain in her voice frightens me further. I weep bitterly. I am dying. I suck at the air, fighting to draw it into my lungs as she carries me quickly into the bathroom and runs hot water into the tub. I dislike baths, dirt being my natural environment, but I breathe in the steam, feeling the tightness in my chest ease. The croaking turns to wheezing as my lungs open a little.

"Take this," she says, handing me one of the pills the doctor left with her after my last asthma attack. I hate pills. They always get stuck in my throat, and then they start to melt and the taste is worse than anything. I wish she would call the doctor and make him come and give me a needle instead.

"I like needles better," I say, sniffling, but the terror hasn't left yet, though I'm breathing a little better, so I take the pill and the glass of water. The pill gets stuck in my throat, which is not even big enough for air right now. I gag. Mom brings me more water. I gulp it down. The pill loosens and slides down my throat, leaving a horrible taste all the way down.

"That pill will let you sleep," Mom says, toweling me off and putting my pajamas back on me, even though I'm old enough to dress myself. I don't say anything, still wheezing as I think about her words.

My Daddy went to sleep and never woke up. That's what somebody told me. Not my mom, who never talks about him. She tucks me into bed and kisses me.

"Don't turn the light off!" I croak.

"I'll leave the hall light on and the door open."

I lie in bed, looking at the lighted hallway and thinking of what happened to Daddy, believing the pill will at any minute force me into sleep—and what will wake me? I  think of the moment of falling asleep—one second I'm here, laboring to breath, and the next I’ll fall into a blackness, into an absence from which I might never emerge, especially if I'm sick. That's the most dangerous time to sleep. Daddy was sick when he fell asleep and couldn't wake up.

The thought of that moment, of that sudden fall into the dark oblivion of sleep, terrifies me. Where do you go when you sleep? What if you can't get back? I sit up in my bed, resisting that terrifying moment of falling into sleep. I sit up until the sky lightens and the sun rises, and I can rest in the safety of daylight. Surely my father didn’t fall asleep in the daytime. Grown-ups don’t nap.

I blink at the pale dawn lighting my window, and lie down in my bed, and finally sleep.
10 Comments
Todd Moody link
10/4/2012 01:58:17 pm

That was vivid for me and took me back to being 4. I can remember throwing tantrums because I wanted to eat a snack or watch a show and being put to bed screaming and crying and crying myself to sleep.

Great stuff, Jane!

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Jessica Becker link
10/4/2012 02:28:35 pm

This a great! My daughter is 4 now and I can completely relate to the mother.

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Joy Weese Moll link
10/4/2012 04:54:26 pm

Such a powerful piece. I can feel the little girl's terror and confusion.

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Talynn Lynn link
10/4/2012 06:24:15 pm

How utterly terrifying I can feel her fear:(

My posts are finally up!!
Thanks for hosting!!

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kim van sickler link
10/5/2012 03:40:47 am

This post reminds me of the nights I lay in bed terrified of death. It freaked me out knowing that I'd die one day, and not having religious parents, picturing nothingness. For some reason I used to imagine myself as a barge floating in a vast ocean.

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Gerry Wilson link
10/5/2012 07:48:16 am

Jane Ann, this piece is so vivid! I was sick a lot when I was little, so I can relate to the situation. Your story brings back strong memories, especially one of sleeping on the living room couch when I had a high fever. A lamp burned all night, and my dad sat with me. It's always been interesting to me that he was the one to do that. I feel another post coming on! Thanks for this one. It's beautifully told.

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Jessica Lerma link
10/5/2012 04:36:15 pm

We have such an innocent way of thinking at this age and you really captured it in this post. I really liked it.

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Susan Hawthorne link
10/6/2012 01:39:48 am

Ohhh how I can relate to this! I didn't have asthma but I had a big fear of dying while asleep! Great post, I could feel it!

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Charli Armstrong link
10/6/2012 05:06:48 pm

I have a brother and a friend, both with asthma. For some reason, I have never been able to ask them what an attack feels like. (I don't think it would bother them to tell me.) Now I know. That was so vivid it frightened me.

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Kay link
10/28/2012 08:20:15 am

This was very powerful! I've always hoped I would die in my sleep so that I wouldn't have to suffer, but I never thought of it like this before, even though my mom died in her sleep after an illness. My dad was asleep when he died, too, but it was less sleep, I think, and more unconsciousness.

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