Voice Mails from the Great Beyond

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On the morning my friend Kristina died, I listened and re-listened to the last voice mail she left me. I needed to hear her voice, and the mundaneness of her 35 second message was comforting. She was sorry she’d missed my call. She’d been out for a walk. She was planning a bike ride tomorrow but would call me again before that. She really wanted to connect.

I am notoriously terrible about clearing out my voice mails. I can’t bear to erase them. I have a habit of keeping at least one at all times from the people I love most. The content of the message isn’t important. It’s that I can hear their voice, catch them in the midst of ordinary life, before they are dead. I’ve learned that you never know when someone will be dead.

I once heard a story about a phone booth in Japan where people who lost friends and family in the 2011 tsunami and earthquake go to talk to their lost loved ones. I would use a phone booth like that.

I still occasionally listen to the voice mail I saved from my friend Mona before she died several years ago. I have heard her say that she’s just returned from Tai Chi class dozens of times. In the months after she died, I also texted her more than once. Sometimes I would forget, if only for a split second, that she was dead and feel compelled to follow through on my impulse to tell her something on my mind. Other times, I just needed to pretend for a moment that she wasn’t really gone. 

When I got the news that Kristina had died, I had just placed a letter to her in my mailbox. A few days earlier, a loved one had sent a message out saying that Kristina was turning inward and it was now best to send wishes and love by mail rather than text or phone. This was my second note to her in the previous two weeks, and I’m not sure if she ever read the first. After I received the news that she had passed, I stood on the front porch and stared at the little red flag raised on my mailbox at the end of the driveway. I could not make myself go retrieve the letter. 


Photo: Pxhere

2 thoughts on “Voice Mails from the Great Beyond

  1. In the last 2 yrs I have lost 7 friends I had had for over 30 years. All from cancer, one car accident.
    Death is so final. I learned since they died to tell those I care for that each time instead of goodbye that I love them.
    We never know. Never.
    I LOVE you my dear niece. Always have, always will.

  2. Today is my brother’s birthday. He died on a jetway at JFK about 10 years ago. When I woke, there was a picture from his wife of him sitting on a swing at their home reading the Sunday comics to their children.

    Then, I went downstairs and there were slow moving police cars with their lights flashing as far as I could see. It was a procession moving the body of the policeman shot at the Boulder supermarket last week.

    Facebook then, shocked me with the death of a colleague who died “suddenly.”

    Your beautiful piece was a comforting end to the day.

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