How
does the sun rise so slowly?
It’s
just on the other side of the horizon.
When
it breaks that frontier, it’ll rise like nothing can ever stop it.
It’s
the sun.
But
until then, I wait, and the sunrise finds itself
Only
very slowly.
Some
movie somewhere once told me that sunrises are magical. The first
sunrise of the year especially is supposed to be filled with
supernatural promise. Easter also holds some sort of miracle in the
light that comes up over the horizon. It doesn’t matter whether the
sun comes up over the mountains, forests, fields, or city skylines.
Somehow the magic that no matter how dark it was, eventually there
will be light again is sweetly encouraging, even though sunlight is
just long-distance solar radiation from a dying fire off in space
very far away.
Maybe
that’s why I prefer to talk to the moon.
It’s
remarkable that we tend to sleep all night and thus attribute happy
times to daylight. Obviously it’s more dangerous to run around at
night, and we can’t see as much at night, so daylight would have
advantages over the dark when it comes to making visual memories.
Sunlight is warm. If warmth is happiness, then loneliness is cold.
The
moon is cold, isn’t it? I’ve always thought it was beautiful, but
it must also be cold. I don’t remember many nights waiting for
the moonrise that were unreasonably hot. I guess there must
have been some, but I don’t remember them. The moon rises much more
gently than the sun.
I
remember the neon orange moon in a rich purple sky. I remember a pale
moon surrounded by glowing ribbons of cloud in turquoise and magenta.
I remember a shy moon hiding in turbulent clouds, no doubt scattered
by the dome lightning and the restless wind. I remember a silent moon
gently kissing my eyes after peeking in my window, creeping across
the floor and reaching down to my sleeping face. I remember a billion
tiny moons twinkling back up from the thick layer of snow in January,
so bright it was almost like daylight. I’ve seen the moon hide so
well from the reflection of the sun that it snuffed right out and had
to be born again as a new moon.
On
those nights, when the moon is tucked into shadow and the stars
glimmer not brightly enough, it somehow feels cold even if the sun
left a ridiculous amount of heat radiation behind before it slipped
beneath the other horizon. A lake of darkness creeps up slowly,
thrashing against its banks, calling, beckoning. It repeats that the
darkness might as well last forever, because 8 hours until sunrise is
sometimes too long.
I
don’t think it’s the hope of a sunrise that keeps us alive until
morning. Life doesn’t seem quite so hard after dawn, but I don’t
think it’s because of the sun.
Shizuku
told Haru that when people are anxious, they crave physical touch.
Sometimes they crave it so much that it hurts. There’s a deep empty
cavity somewhere between the heart and the stomach. Human contact
isn’t always physical though. Sometimes the sense that other people
are awake is enough of a human touch to alleviate a bit of that
emptiness. Sometimes the most intimate of physical contact isn’t
enough to siphon off any of that anguish. Sometimes there is no
acceptable way to escape from whatever it is that consumes us.
It’s
no good asking the sun why it didn’t get here sooner.
It’s
no good asking humans why they didn’t get here sooner.
The
truth of it is, there’s a void that can only be made less bitter by
human care. But don’t make them responsible for fixing your
emptiness. You can’t handle your emptiness; neither can they. They
have their own emptiness. But they can help.
Is
there a solution to this even? Here I’ve spent over 600 words
describing an awful empty feeling that you’ve most likely
experienced or will experience or are experiencing, and there should
follow some sort of hopeful sunshine-filled message that tells you
that the sunrise is coming so don’t give up and all that.
I
thought I had found one.
But
the truth is, that day as the sun crested the horizon, blinding me as
it glared across the lake, I realized that I could have lost. I could
have just slipped beneath the cold waves, thrashing as my lungs
protested, until my limbs succumbed to the cold and I couldn’t
fight anymore. Suddenly all the cute hopeful messages in the world
seemed like the tossed toilet paper when it rains after Halloween.
Dying
wasn’t a beautiful thing. Neither was living. It just was.
But
somehow the knowledge that I might have never seen it again made the
world something more intense than my empty stomach could stand.
Suddenly the world was full of unconsidered things. Suddenly I had
all the time in the world to consider them, because all the
expectations I’d been crushed under didn’t matter anymore.
Suddenly I existed, and I could feel the sun.
So, I
guess I lied. The sunrise does matter. It’s not exactly magical or
anything, but somehow the words, “I’m waiting for the sunrise”
remind me that I can’t stay cold, dark, and alone forever. So, you
know, stop asking me why I spend all night rhythmically chanting
under my breath. Honestly.
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