Liebe ForumlerInnen,
bevor ich bei der TrauerHilfe hier hängengeblieben bin, stand zur Diskussion für das Rote Kreuz ein Projekt in Sri Lanka zu leiten, welches aber dann - auch aufgrund der unruhigen Situation im Land - nicht gestartet wurde. Mehrere Monate in Sri Lanka und mir war klar, ich würde meine Hündin mitnehmen - so lernte ich auf verschlungenen Pfaden Padma kennen, die in Sri Lanka lebt, im Tierschutz tätig ist und mir viele Informationen bezüglich der Mitnahme von Tieren nach SL gegeben hat.
Und Ihr fragt Euch - wieso erzählt er das im TrauerForum? Nun, Padma hat Ihren Mann Murugesh viel zu jung verloren, sie hat deutsche Wurzeln und eine sehr eigene - aber meiner Ansicht sehr wertvolle Weltanschauung. Gestern ist ein Brief von ihr gekommen - sie war in Deutschland zu Besuch und ist jetzt wieder in Sri Lanka - und genau diesen Brief möchte ich Euch gerne posten, weil ich ihn so schön finde. Vorallem die Quintessenz der letzten Zeilen des vorletzten Absatzes sprechen mich sehr an - ich poste mit der Erlaubnis von Padma, die vielleicht dieser Tage auch mal ins Forum fällt und dann auch mehr dazu erzählen kann.
Padma schreibt:
I would prefer to write to each one
individually, but time does not permit... just returned home from
Germany this afternoon and tomorrow the usual busy schedule will start
again, will have to call my vets and start organizing the next clinic.
During the flight it struck me today
for the first time, how long I took it for granted: boarding a plane, taking
off, looking down on beautiful white clouds, reflecting the sunshine or on
deserts, mountains, beaches, the ocean... and just ten hours later landing in a
totally different place. Months or years I would have walked to reach Sri Lanka
if I had only my own two feet to travel. And never ever did I pay my respects
to the scientists and engineeres, who made it possible for me, to come to live
in Sri Lanka like a bird without having any wings, and to visit my parents and
friends in Europe once in a while as if they were just round the corner.
However this year it was not only
the genius, who invented the plane, who made it possible for me to see my parents
and friends, it was a 22-year old student called Beate, who had the courage to
come and look after my cats and dogs (not just a few ...as you all
know) for almost one month. She did not know me, she has never been in Sri
Lanka, but she read my plea and she came... isn't that amazing? And today,
after I returned, before she left she said something, that made me very happy:
next time you want to go somewhere, let me know. Somehow I have been always
blessed with angels in my life, but it surprises me again and again.
During the past month I have met
many of my angels: my father and mother, who have given me this wonderful life
and still sustain it, Mr. and Mrs. Spieldiener, who are funding
our animal-shelter and many of the sterilization-clinics we do for
Kandy's cats and dogs, Willi and Christa, who always have their doors open when
I come to Darmstadt, Marianne and Josef, who first invited me to Darmstadt 24
years ago, Mr.and Mrs.Heisel, who have been wonderful friends during the most
diifcult time of my life: after Murugesh's death they helped me in every
possible way, Mrs.Heisel with her great wisdom and her great heart and
Mr.Heisel with his hard-working hands, and last not least Britta, Murugesh's
neighbour, who has been such a good friend when he was alive, and when I was
heart-broken after he died. This time it was after visiting her that I had a
very deep experience I would like to share with you: I stood in front of the
door of the flat where Murugesh had lived for the last three years of his life
and where he died all alone. Britta left me alone, she always knew when someone
needs to be alone. At first I remembered the terrible moment when I entered
this door after his death and all the unbearable pain of that time, but then
slowly all the other pictures appeared, the happy moments, when he entered this
door after returning from the university in the evenings, and after his
jogging-round Sunday mornings, the embraces when I returned from Sri Lanka
every summer (at the airport he felt shy... only after we came home he used to
take me into his arms), ongoing pictures were floating by in front of my
inner eye... the sunsets, we watched on the balcony, the meals we shared in the
kitchen, the look in his eyes when we shared our thoughts and
feelings, and the look in his eyes when the time came for me to leave in
October or November... then again the memory of his two brothers arriving after
his death, my brother arriving to help me cleaning up the kitchen, the
leftovers of Murugesh's last supper, the dried-up vomit and a bit of blood on
the floor, my resistance to pack up his things because somewhere deep down I
still thought he would come back... and suddenly it became so clear:: I had
come to Darmstadt to see how I would cope with the pain when I am right on the
spot where it happened, but now I could actually see both: the pain of the
final separation and the joy of the years of togetherness, not only the joys,
our problems too. The one cannot be without the other: It sounds so simple and
yet after these few minutes in front of this door I had to spend a day quiet
and alone to really let this sink deep into my heart.
Then the last day had arrived:
meeting Mrs.Heisel, whom I call the sunshine of Traisa, saying good bye to
Josef and Marianne, talking to those, I could not meet this time, on the phone,
giving a last hug to Christa, who dropped me at the station, and finally
boarding the big iron-bird, which is not only an amazing means of transport,
but also gives me a few hours between the two worlds of my life, a
time-span, not here - not there, above both, a different perspective. During
this transition only it transpired that for the last three years my mind was
focusing on the loss, on his death, during these moments in front of this door
there was no focus at all, whatever appeared has been seen and felt, the pain
as well as everything else, there was no intention to hold on to anything, no
fear of the pain either, no need to interupt the flow. And when the iron-bird
crossed over the ocean between India and Sri Lanka it was impossible not to
remember, that in these waters we have distributed his ashes three years ago
and just like these ahes have disolved in the water, now for me too the time
has come to let everything disolve in ocean of life. With this wish, not
to get stuck anywhere again, I will remember him with gratitude on the third of
September, which would have been his 54th birthday.