Ars Longa, Vita Brevis

Dear Mark,

In a few days another year will have passed without you here. The lead up to this day takes an emotional and physical toll on me that is difficult to describe other than I feel like I’ve been run over by one of those trucks that flatten new blacktop and need somebody to unpeel me from the road. In a perfect world I think there should be some kind of Mourner’s Park, a dark, quiet cave with a turnstyle at the entrance for the comings and goings of those who need to escape life for a few days. A place where you don’t have to be strong, where the Positivity Police aren’t posted at every entrance encouraging the brokenhearted to, for the love of God, just move on already. A place where staying present with loss and sadness is encouraged for its sheer bravery instead of slipping into some kind of addiction from what cannot be outrun.

As signs from the universe go, I got a letter last week from a student you mentored who said she has sat with the news of your death for three years and could not articulate her thoughts. She wrote many things about your encouragement of her work and career path, but it was the last paragraph that stood out to me. She said that you were so supportive of her as a single mother, that she lived on a street you cycled on the way home from work and that if she were out with her young son that you would always stop and chat with both of them. Then I thought of all the times I’d say to you, “Mark, could you at least aim to get home by 7:00 so we’re not eating so late?” All those pissy back-and-forth conversations we had and now I find out you probably did leave work in enough time to get home earlier, but then saw a young mom and her kid outside and needed to give her a shove up the biochemistry ladder. Since you steadfastly believed there weren’t enough women in science I’m sure you weren’t going to allow one to fall off the radar on your watch.

In the last year, Maggie got her masters in library science, Will is crushing it in the interior design world, and Mallory just got accepted into a masters program for clinical psychology. I remember when we had a conversation about the kids a few years ago and you were lamenting the fact that none of them followed in your footsteps. At first I was speechless. You spent your entire career beating every bush for funds to keep your lab afloat and fought layers of administrative micromanaging for what was right. Why would you want that for your kids? I thought about that for a bit and then said to you, “Mark, we raised three kids who are passionate and curious about their interests not ours. We have done our job.” You let out a sigh and said, “I’ve never thought about it like that,” and then you explored their interests like the great dad that you were. Nevertheless, you still held all of us hostage at your computer to look at the anthrax pathogen you were working on like it was the last inning of the World Series and if we looked away for a second we’d miss the game winning hit.

As for me, that’s a whole other story. I recently met someone and on the way home from having drinks I had to pull over because I was sobbing so much I couldn’t drive. It was fun and I had a good time, but he wasn’t you and I cannot figure out if I like him or like the idea of a “him.” My therapist need not worry about job security. I work two part-time jobs now because I learned from you that there is salvation in work. Both jobs are fine but I know that neither are what I should be doing with the remainder of my life.

Writing is the only thing I have never given up on, and over and over I have been told I have a gift. I try not to be offended by that because a gift sounds like it was bestowed upon me and not from decades of hard work that nobody sees. You more than anyone understood that. I remember writing one time about a new post-doc of yours that came from India with nothing more than a single suitcase. I didn’t write that you foraged our house for anything extra we could give him, how you paid for his security deposit and first month’s rent from our checking account. I never told you when I posted anything new, I always wanted you to discover it on your own. You sat in front of the computer at the dining room table and looked up with tears in your eyes when I walked in. “It’s beautiful, Kath, really beautiful,” and you loving something I wrote was all I ever needed to keep going.

I recently read that death is like a wrecking ball. People think the actual death is the only swing, but that isn’t the case. The wrecking ball swung so wildly the first year that I constantly cowered in fear. It felt like every time I tried to get to my feet it came for me again. This year I set down the guilt of not being able to prevent what I never saw coming, and the wrecking ball slowed to the sway of a desktop pendulum. Not so in these last few weeks where I’m knocked off my feet again by the steady swing of loss.

Somehow life moves forward without you in it, and on this side of the moon I feel like I need somebody to summon the manager of the death department to explain this bullshit to me. It has been nearly impossible for me to fall in love with anything since you’ve been gone, but I’m amazed at all the monarchs that have showed up in my garden this year, the cicadas that scream all day and then collectively hush themselves as soon as it gets dark, the owls calling to each other outside the bedroom window at night. “Who cooks for you,” you would say in the dark and I never hear them without thinking that.

Only you know how passionate our love was for each other and the life we painstakingly built together. I pray that it’s enough of a foundation for me to build something new, that wherever you are you can figure out a way to give me a shove up the ladder of life so that finding things to love again doesn’t seem so painful and foreign.

Ars longa, vita brevis.

Art is long, life is brief.

And I go on for the both of us.

Love,
k.

***I don’t like to share videos of Mark as I hold on to those dearly for me and the kids. I ran into an old biking friend of Mark’s who didn’t know he had died and he sent me this that he recorded ten years ago. It captures so much of his essence.***

https://carfreeamerican.blogspot.com/2011/06/bike-commuter-profile-mark-fisher.html?m=1&fbclid=IwAR2ew_VcspsbM89xh4LcVx5sV3bs1S0rBRAeCBI08doft8lU–gnbdEpbCk

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13 thoughts on “Ars Longa, Vita Brevis”

  1. Thank you for writing, and for linking to the video. I don’t know why, but your posts often show up as my darkness is increasing, and it is helpful to remind me to hang on.
    And I am in awe of anyone who would bike 6 hours return to a conference, seriously.

  2. The pendulum was an analogy I hadn’t thought of before, but it makes great sense. Another beautiful writing, and I hope with time you can find happiness again.

  3. Lovely, touching post. Pendulum wrecking ball was spot on.

    6 hours round trip! Your words made me get teary, that video made me smile.

    So very sorry for your loss.

  4. , while still holding us all hostage at your computer to look at the anthrax pathogen you were working on like it was the last inning of the World Series and if we looked away for a second we’d miss the game winning hit
    That’s an amazing sentence. I love your writing. And I love that Mark wasn’t going to let a woman fall off the biochemistry ladder. I fell off the microbiology ladder.

    • I was trying to imagine my microbiology professors worried about me falling off the ladder – hahahahahaha! They weren’t worried about that at all. I wonder what it would have been like to have had a supportive professor like Mark. I love your writing.

  5. It’s 4:30 in the morning, and I am up, haunted by a family I spent much time today with in hospice. Just read these words. A more loving tribute on this planet doesn’t exist. You bless each and everyone of us with your “gift”, Kathleen.

  6. Kath, I feel like I just knocked on your door and saw you naked inside your house. I also want to reassure you that when you are told you have a gift for writing, it actually means you have a gift to continue writing. Your hard work is still there, but the gift is delivering the words. You are the UPS of writing. Honk the horn and get to the next address, girl.

  7. A beautiful letter to Mark. A love like yours is intense and very special.
    Nothing can separate your souls even if Life puts you on another path.
    Don’t doubt Mark’s love . He wants the best for you. However it comes.
    Thank you for sharing that video. It brought Mark ‘s essence back for a few moments,
    And made us remember all that he still is.
    Love and Prayers . 🙏🏻❤️🙏🏻

  8. Mark was right what you put into words is nothing short of incredible.
    This piece sounded like such a move towards something more positive for you.
    Remember I am retired and available for a book tour if needed, and wine drinking❤️

  9. Your Mark seems like an incredible man. Like you, my life was enriched by my Mark.
    You have a way of putting my grief into words. Thank you for sharing.
    You have been most helpful to me and many, I am sure.
    I’m sorry that our Mark’s left us too soon, but am so grateful that we had than in our lives.

  10. Your Mark seems like an incredible man. Like you, my life was enriched by my Mark.
    You have a way of putting my grief into words. Thank you for sharing.
    You have been most helpful to me and many, I am sure.
    I’m sorry that our Mark’s left us too soon, but am so grateful that we had than in our lives.

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