In the path of it


Over the years, our friend develops a certain expression of public intimacy for her husband: whenever they’re standing together, she absentmindedly puts a finger through his belt loop. He dies, our friend remarries, and we see her enacting the same move on her new boyfriend. Who would judge this? Well, everyone. We want to believe that love is singular and exclusive, and it unnerves us to think that it might actually be renewable and somewhat repetitive in its habits. Would your current partner ever call his or her new partner by the same pet name he/she uses for you, once you are dead and buried? Well, why not? There are only so many pet names. Why should that bother you? Well, because you believe it is you, in particular, who is loved (that is why dear Ed calls you “honey-bunny”), but no: love just is, and you happened to be in the path of it. When, dead and hovering above Ed, you hear him call that rat Beth, your former friend, “honey-bunny,” as she absentmindedly puts her traitorous finger into his belt loop, you, in spirit form, are going to think somewhat less of Ed, and of Beth, and maybe of love itself. Or will you?


Maybe you won’t.

Because don’t we all do some version of this, when in love? When your lover dies or leaves you, there you are, still yourself, with your particular way of loving. And there is the world, still full of people to love.

---George Saunders, A Swim in the Pond in the Rain

Comments

  1. এটার কমেন্টে কোটেশন দেওয়াই সবচেয়ে শ্রেয় মনে করে অনেক্ষন কোটেশন ভাবলাম। কিন্তু শেষে উপযুক্ত কোটেশন না পেয়ে হাল ছেড়ে দিতে হলো।

    ভালো আর ইন্টারেস্টিং লাগলো। ওনার লেখা অবশ্য পড়া নেই আমার।

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    1. ধন্যবাদ রাজর্ষি।

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