老人是孤独的。Tom一个修养这么好的人,是不会轻易把孤独两个字说出口,或是写在脸上的。可你一旦走近他,就能感觉到他的孤独,那种内心深处的孤独。一次聊天,我问他,你想念Alisa吗? Tom回答到" Every day"。随后掏出口袋里的钱包,打开来,给我看太太的照片,讲述他对太太的思念。记得那是一个夏日的傍晚,车道上空空的,就站着我们两个人。夏风吹拂,静静的车道上空漂浮着Tom的声音,那一刻,一种浓浓的孤独之情让我压抑让我伤悲。人的一生有太多孤独的时候,尤其老了,要孤独面对生活,面对死亡,那种的感觉我已经在老人平和的言语中提前体验到了。
下面的英文是一两年前写的,没写完,一起贴在这里了。 Though I am prepared that an old man like Tom may leave us one day, when I heard the news that He wad gone, sadness swelled up to the throat......
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When the garage door was rolled up, I was bending myself in the corner, collecting all the trashes to a big bag for the next day’s pickup. I heard the rumbling noise from a neighbor’s garage door, and from the direction, I know it is Tom’s.
A minute later, Tom called my name from the driveway when I was still crouching over the big trash bag. I stood up and walked out to greet him, and thus started a chat that lasted about an hour, invariably. At the end of the talk, he would never forget to add a very polite remark like “Say hi to A (my husband)”.
Tom is about 85 years old now. He is short, slim and lithe, always in his neatly ironed shirt. He is an Irish descendant, with a fair color complexion and gray hair, of course, at his age. He looks healthy and smart, and is a lawyer, who at this age still reads and has occasional cases to bring himself some extra money.
Thirteen years ago, when six families in the same block bought our homes, we were gathered in a celebratory meeting for acquaintances. That’s how we first got to know Tom and his wife. They live in a bigger home in the corner, while we live in the middle, with a driveway dividing us in between. Tom’s wife Alisa is also a very clean and nice lady, who relished at keeping house tidy and her washing machine busy according to Tom. She passed away two or three years’ later. An ambulance was called one night, without our knowledge, to take Alisa to the hospital, and she was never back. When Tom told me months later in his calm voice, I was shocked and saddened at the loss. I could not tell much from Tom’s facial expression how he felt. But many years later, once I asked Tom if he still missed his wife. “Every day”, he responded, his hand reaching for his pocket the next moment. There right under a thin plastic sheet of his wallet was a picture of Alisa. I gazed at the fading color picture, listening to Tom’s voice echoing in the driveway. A loneliness was floating in the air.
I always ascribed Tom’s talkativeness to his being lonely when a casual conversation easily extended to an hour long. In the conversations, I was mostly a listener, listening to his stories and latest news of the community, as he attended every community association meeting. Most importantly, Tom is very knowledgeable, knowing the rules like his thumbs. Being a lawyer, he knows how to protect his interest by simply indicating his profession when needed. He is a warm-hearted person who likes to share his knowledge and advice on local or global issues, ranging from home warranty, property taxes, geographic development of the cities or counties, books he reads daily, to state or world affairs. His life experience, warmth, and his mild temperament made him a welcoming figure in the neighborhood.
Tom has two sons and one daughter living around in the same county, though I never got a chance to meet them. They both have decent jobs and families and would occasionally take Tom to their homes for dinners at Thanksgiving, Christmas or other holidays. Tom prided himself over the two caring sons, who once brought him along to the European trip for a few weeks.
One day, Tom told me excitedly that he got subsidized for a group trip to China, organized by a local college. At that, I invited him over to our home, giving him two Chinese tour books in English. Like many brain-washed whites, he also looked on China as a strictly dictatorial country, where people cry out for democracy, liberty and peace. When he came back from the trip, he returned the two books to me, though I meant as gifts, along with three stamps, with the word Democracy, Liberty and Peace on them individually. He did not talk much about the political environment he might feel, only a descriptive comment of how he got bruised by a rude passenger bumping into him.
回复 '7grizzly' 的评论 : I shouldn't use the word "lifeless". Immortal or Infinite may be a better word, as I mentioned in a later comment. It's interesting that Greek people think of that way, and it is definitely true that everything s more beautiful because they are doomed. Very philosophical. So the world is not perfect, neither the Heaven:)),so to speak.
Just read again your new post, word by word.:) Thanks again, my friend.
> Why the gods envy us? Is it because they are lifeless and never rest (or couldn't rest)?
I think that's part of it. Here is the exact quote (Achilles to Briseis):
I'll tell you a secret. . .
. . .something they don't teach you in your temple.
The gods envy us.
They envy us because we're mortal.
Because any moment might be our last.
Everything's more beautiful because we're doomed.
回复 '小溪姐姐' 的评论 : Hi,小溪姐。Looking back, I could have done better. HIs absence left me a dull pain. When you think you are a giver, you are also a taker. In talking with Tom, I learnt his attitude, hIs poise, his way of being old without bothering kids...Thank you, 小溪姐, for your kind words. Take care!
回复 '7grizzly' 的评论 : Hi,my friend. Thanks for your quotes. I am still pondering at the first one. Why the gods envy us? Is it because they are lifeless and never rest (or couldn't rest)? Very interesting. I agree with you that compared to death, loneliness is petty. We all have to learn to deal with solitude, and one day, the due death.
I found a very obvious grammatical mistake when I read my English part.
Tom’s wife Alisa is also a very clean and nice lady, who relished at keeping house tidy and her whirling washing machine busy according to Tom, passed away two or three years’ later. =Tom’s wife Alisa is also a very clean and nice lady, who relished at keeping house tidy and her whirling washing machine busy according to Tom, She passed away two or three years’ later.
Thanks for reading and comment, my friend.
Rolfemom 发表评论于
汤姆真是一位好邻居。年纪大了,越需要伴侣和朋友。暖冬的博文令人既伤感又暖心。 愿汤姆一路走好。
7grizzly 发表评论于
These days I often reflect on the stories about death from other cultures of the world, e.g.,
- The Greek: The gods envy us because we may die any moment. -- Achilles in the movie "Troy."
- The Roman: Death smiles at all of us. The only thing one can do is to smile back. -- Marcus Aurelius in the movie "The Gladiator."
- The Norse: Humans help the gods in war against evil and meet destruction. -- Mythology by Edith Hamilton.
...
I personally like the Roman one. If one can smile back at death, 孤独 would look petty.