Do you think there’s a difference between these two types of never seeing someone again—via death or via an utterly complete separation with a person who is still alive?
Yes and no. Sometimes it’s hard to make a distinction between a death and some kind of falling out with someone, because even though you know the person is still alive, it does feel like you’re mourning a death – because you are, in a way. Things become different. The heaviness of the finality of the relationship looms over you. But in this case, sometimes it can be worse than a death, because the fact that they remain alive often gives people a kind of sustained hope. ”Maybe, somehow, we’ll talk again.” In death, on the other hand, you know it’s over and there’s no chance for things to go back to before – so you either deal with it the best you can, or you fuck your life up, or you believe that you will, in one way or another, see the person again.
Do you always hope, in the back of your mind, for some reconciliation with a living person?
If you’re anything like me emotionally, and from observing you here for a while, I think we are somewhat similar… Yes. It feels wrong, sometimes, because in my case, I’m part of the reason I will never get the chance to do that. Feeling like I want to be given some kind of chance to explain – to make clear as much as possible the circumstances – makes me feel horribly guilty, though. As it should. I hurt the person, badly, and I don’t deserve it, as much as I want it. I have to believe that the other person was able to become a stronger person because of my fuck-up, and that they don’t dwell on what was lost like I do. And that’s just it – I dwell so much because I know the power of what was there. I know how much it had to hurt them. It’s hard for me to get over, and I don’t think I ever will – even when (hopefully) the person has moved completely beyond what happened and becomes a happy person.
Do you hope for some kind of reunification with someone who is dead? If so, is that a reflection of a wish, against impossible odds, to see this person again, or do you really expect to see them?
Heh. This part of the question is hard for me to answer. When Tigh died, I talked to him all the time, as if he could hear me. I wrote letters to him, as if I had somewhere to send them and as if he could read them. I still do. In those moments, it feels good to pretend that he knows… But it’s when I’m done, when I stop writing or directing my thoughts “to” him, that reality hits me in the face like a fucking brick wall. And it’s really weird, because I’ve had what I’ve considered “ghostly” experiences at different times in my life – powerful ones. Whatever they were, they genuinely made me wonder about what else might be out there. After Tigh was gone, though, I stepped back and stopped wondering so much, started thinking that my experiences, despite how crazy they were, must have been something else. “Because if ghosts are real”, I thought, “Tigh would have been here already.” Somewhere in the back of my mind, I hope that I can see him again someday. I know that it probably won’t happen, but I can’t stop hoping that me and a lot of other people are wrong. He was my best friend, we were so extremely close, I don’t wanna let that go completely. This is why it’s so hard for me – I have not and never will convince myself that I’ll see him again. But at the same time, I can’t say for sure, because I just don’t know. An agnostics dilemma, sitting on the fence, waiting in agony for proof either way.
What do you do? What if you are cut off from mourning, say because your relationship was secret. What can you do?
You mourn anyway. Not a lot of people knew how close me and Tigh were, and that was extremely painful for me. The agony I felt, I didn’t feel that I could show openly, if only because people would wonder why I was feeling it. Nothing about our friendship was a secret – it was simply that neither one of us ever detailed to others exactly how close we were. It was the kind of closeness that is beyond words, and only the two people involved will truly understand. So when I didn’t feel that I could mourn around others – and I don’t like to anyway – I did it alone. I would walk somewhere, or seclude myself away from people, and wail like I myself was dying.
If this is what you need to do, do it. Do not hold it in, because your pain will increase tremendously – and you will damage yourself for later on in life. Realize that no matter what, nothing will ever go back to how it was before, you will never see them again… And cry about it. Mourn it, as long as you have to – even if it’s for the rest of your life – because it’s horrifyingly sad realizing that love that powerful does end. It does end, and that’s exactly why it’s so sad. It’s just a fact about this fucked up little thing we call life. The more passionate you are about life, the harder it will be when something like this happens. I know what it’s like, I feel for you, and I’m very sorry. It might not ever get completely better – but that’s okay. You’re mourning something beautiful and wonderful that disappeared from life – whether through death or distance, or both.
I’m not sure it ever gets completely better, friend. And in my own way, I don’t know if I want it to for me. A lifetime of mourning seems about right for the amount of love that I’m too aware went missing.