Trip 1 – Epilogue and Postscript
Journal Entry – Sunday August 7, 2011
I didn’t anticipate
this part.
I’m just going to
call it the “after.”
I think it’s probably
in some small measure (admittedly a very, very small measure)
similar to what soldiers go through when they return home after a deployment.
You logically know
that your body is back “here,” but your mind is still back “there.” Oddly, you feel a stronger sense of
connection to “there” than “here.” It’s
not that you’re not glad to be home, but at the same time there’s a strange longing
to be back where you’ve just returned from. There’s a bit of a disconnect from your
current surroundings. You don’t quite
feel that you belong here now; you feel like you really belong back
there. It almost feels wrong to
be here when there’s so much need, so much to be done back there.
This morning I ask
Bethany, “So…are you back here yet, or are you still back there?”
I don’t have to
explain. She knows exactly what I mean.
She pauses. “There,” she replies.
“Yeah, I’m about 49% here, 51% there,” I say. This has been helped by the fact that I’ve already spent three hours at the office this morning starting to play catch up on work stuff.
“I’m more like
60-40,” Bethany says.
“It’s a weird feeling,
isn’t it?”
“Yeah, it’s freaking
me out a little.”
“I know.”
She and I have talked
about this. In fact, yesterday was an interesting
transition. I sort of expected that when
we got to Miami, Bethany would probably turn on the cell phone and call her
mom, her sisters, her friends.
She didn’t.
On the plane from
Miami to Atlanta, Bethany says, “Do you think we should call mom when we get to
Atlanta?”
“Yeah, that’d be
good,” I say.
We don’t.
In retrospect, having
a three-hour drive home was a God-send.
I think Bethany and I both found it very therapeutic. We just talked. And talked and talked. Continuing to process the week.
About five minutes
away from the house I realize that during the entire drive, neither one of us
have turned on the radio, and neither one of us have turned on a cell phone.
About two
minutes away from the house Bethany says, “I can’t believe we haven’t called
mom.” I laugh. Neither one of us elaborates, but I think it
was the same for both of us. I think, at
one level of consciousness or another, neither one of us wants to let anything
intrude on this space that we’re in, this space that we’re sharing together
because we’ve experienced something profound together. We don’t want to have to answer any questions
yet, or try to relate to anyone who hasn’t shared in this experience with us.
So now it’s Sunday
morning. We know that at church we’ll
get the endless stream of “how was the trip” questions. And we have no idea how to even begin putting
it into words. We want to, we want to
share, we want to express, we want them to really “get it.”
But how can they?
I think anyone who
goes on a trip like this should, especially the first time, go with somebody
that they’re close to. Bethany and I
have each other, and I think we’re both thankful for that. Otherwise, I think the feeling of alienation
could be overwhelming when you return home.
As much as you try to explain it, as much as others try to understand
it, you know that it’s impossible for anyone to experience in their nervous
system that which is now burned indelibly into your own nervous system.
But we will try. Because we must. Because people need to know. And so…we will share.