Accident
I don’t understand the emotions I traveled on
the day of the accident, let alone what I’m feeling
right now. But I needed someone to know.
I was in an accident the Saturday before last. And it was bad.
A flash of water over the road, and we were spinning backwards and sideways. Crossed two lanes of traffic. Jumped the ditch. Plowed up a steep bank of grass, gravel, and dirt. The back end caught, whipping us back toward the interstate, where we flattened two aluminum reflectors before slowly settling to a rest on the road’s shoulder.
My sister and I – both wearing seatbelts – were rattled but healthy and whole. Her Kindle was under my feet. My camera was in her lap.
She let go of the door, handed me my camera and took back the proffered e-reader.
“Mom would have been mad if you’d let anything happen to me.”
I laughed. I couldn’t help feeling elated.
The engine was still running. The gauges looked good. I jumped out and checked the tires. A family in a Ford Explorer had stopped on the side of the road up ahead. A man ran toward us. Wanted to know if we were OK. Seemed surprised. No blood. No bruises. No broken glass. I shook his hand. Thanked him for his concern. Promised to stop at the next exit and take a look underneath. Then I climbed back in the car.
And I wanted to shout, “We’re alive!” But I used my inside voice.
We both could have died. But we didn’t. And I was overcome with gratitude. With relief. With adrenaline. With joy. We survived!
Then, almost two hours later, after dropping off my sister, I realized that I’d been going through all the what-ifs and that I couldn’t remember exactly how long I’d been stuck in that loop. Or when I’d started crying.
I was sad. Ashamed. Afraid. Angry. Exhausted. Tense. And I still wasn’t home because I was driving so slow.
On Monday. Roughly 48 hours after the accident. Some high school kids gathered at my house to read a chapter in Psalms and to pray for each other. I had lunch over at Friendsview with Charles and Jean Hanson, and Jean’s brother, Clynton. That night, Geraldine Willcuts invited me to speak to Friends Women about our upcoming mission to Mexico. And I wrote this essay.
I don’t understand the emotions I traveled on the day of the accident, let alone what I’m feeling right now. But I needed someone to know. And I trust you. And I hope – more than anything – that we can figure out each day how to face whatever happens together. Because it’s just too much for anyone to go through alone.
A flash of water over the road, and we were spinning backwards and sideways. Crossed two lanes of traffic. Jumped the ditch. Plowed up a steep bank of grass, gravel, and dirt. The back end caught, whipping us back toward the interstate, where we flattened two aluminum reflectors before slowly settling to a rest on the road’s shoulder.
My sister and I – both wearing seatbelts – were rattled but healthy and whole. Her Kindle was under my feet. My camera was in her lap.
She let go of the door, handed me my camera and took back the proffered e-reader.
“Mom would have been mad if you’d let anything happen to me.”
I laughed. I couldn’t help feeling elated.
The engine was still running. The gauges looked good. I jumped out and checked the tires. A family in a Ford Explorer had stopped on the side of the road up ahead. A man ran toward us. Wanted to know if we were OK. Seemed surprised. No blood. No bruises. No broken glass. I shook his hand. Thanked him for his concern. Promised to stop at the next exit and take a look underneath. Then I climbed back in the car.
And I wanted to shout, “We’re alive!” But I used my inside voice.
We both could have died. But we didn’t. And I was overcome with gratitude. With relief. With adrenaline. With joy. We survived!
Then, almost two hours later, after dropping off my sister, I realized that I’d been going through all the what-ifs and that I couldn’t remember exactly how long I’d been stuck in that loop. Or when I’d started crying.
I was sad. Ashamed. Afraid. Angry. Exhausted. Tense. And I still wasn’t home because I was driving so slow.
On Monday. Roughly 48 hours after the accident. Some high school kids gathered at my house to read a chapter in Psalms and to pray for each other. I had lunch over at Friendsview with Charles and Jean Hanson, and Jean’s brother, Clynton. That night, Geraldine Willcuts invited me to speak to Friends Women about our upcoming mission to Mexico. And I wrote this essay.
I don’t understand the emotions I traveled on the day of the accident, let alone what I’m feeling right now. But I needed someone to know. And I trust you. And I hope – more than anything – that we can figure out each day how to face whatever happens together. Because it’s just too much for anyone to go through alone.
4 comments:
I don't even know what to say. The rawness of what you felt, what you're feeling is palpable.
"Thank God" is the very best I've got.
And that's a good reflection of how I've felt since the accident. So. Incredibly. Thankful.
Ah, yes. My heart is nodding. All of life's near misses feel this way... physical, emotional, spiritual, relational. The whiplash moments of elation and desolation. Beautifully written. And so very glad you're both safe.
This might seem ironic, Beth, but I'm awfully pleased to have you telling me that my writing is beautiful. I'm also thankful for that phrase: "whiplash moments of elation and desolation." Thank you.
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