W

eather

It is strange to visit a place full of dead 

bodies that have decomposed, or are in the 

process of decomposing, and think about your loved ones 
in this way — no longer breathing the fresh air above the 
ground they now lie beneath.

When I kneel down in front of her, my eyes fill with 

thunderstorms and my body shakes like a hurricane. 
My mind is spinning like a tornado, but the world that 
surrounds me would appear cheerful to any other per-
son; the sun bright and beating down on the green grass 
below, complimented by the blue sky that is so clear — it 
almost seems ironic.

The Kiss
Her favorite painting was Gustav Klimt’s The Kiss.
A few days after her funeral, my mom and I went to 

her house to start going through her things. We didn’t 
know how to start; when we walked into her bedroom, 
her closet, her office, it was as though she had just left it 
for a few minutes and was going to be back any second.

We touched her clothes, clothes she had just worn the 

week before, clothes she had just bought the week before 
with intentions of wearing. We touched her makeup, her 
millions of shades of lipstick, so numerous that, if she 
were there, we would have made fun of her for owning 
three of the exact same color.

When we walked into her office I saw a planner for 

2014 on the front of her desk with a picture of The Kiss 
on the cover. I opened it up to find it blank, which wasn’t 
a surprise considering she passed during the first week 
of January.

It broke my heart to see that she had bought a planner 

for the new year because it made the fact that she had 
had no idea she was going to die so clear, and I thought 
about how she should have had this year and next year 
and the year after that to fill out her days in a little book 
that had her favorite piece of art on it.

Mom
I have always been close with my mom. She is my 

best friend, my rock, my heart. With a street education 
straight out of Queens, N.Y., and a formal education from 
Cornell University, she’s the strongest, toughest and 
smartest woman I know.

When Grandma died, it was the first time in my life 

I saw her weak. I had never heard her cry so hard and I 
had never seen her emptier than when we were in the car 
on the way to the funeral. She looked over to the driver’s 

seat where my dad was sitting and I heard her say she 
thought she was going to be sick.

When we got to the funeral home, a man who worked 

there asked us if we would like to see her body and I 
declined because I refused to have my last sight of her 
be lifeless and pale. I watched my mom follow the man, 
and over the loudspeaker that bled into the waiting room 
I could hear her scream “Mom” as she sobbed into my 
father’s shoulder.

After that day, I never took a second with her or any 

member of my family for granted because that sound 
of her screaming echoes in my mind, and that memory 
makes me sick and I realized that I really do not think my 
soul would be able to handle it if anyone else who I loved 
died. I know this is completely unreasonable, and I know 
that everybody dies, but the mere idea of losing someone 
else makes me feel crippled and shaky and paralyzed.

Birthdays
No one ever tells you how strange holidays and birth-

days will be without someone who has been at every cel-
ebration for as long as you can remember.

When my 17th birthday came — four months after 

my grandma passed away — I did not realize how much 
I would miss her presence on my birthday until I got a 
card five days late with my name on it that was sent from 
her address — but inside was a plain check for $50 sent 
from the man she was married to instead of a day spent 
making memories together like we used to do, every sin-
gle year.

Polaroids
For my 15th birthday I asked for a Polaroid camera. 

She got it for me, of course — she loved to spoil her 
grandchildren and I was no exception.

I asked my dad to do the honor of taking the first pic-

ture — a picture of me and my mom; I told him to look 
through the little viewfinder eyepiece and to be careful 
because he only had one shot at taking the picture. He 
pressed down the little button on the top and the camera 
flashed and as he handed it back to me with the small 
picture that had instantaneously printed out, I set both 
the camera and the picture down on the kitchen counter 
to wait for the picture to develop. I cannot recall where 
I went or what I was doing but 10 minutes later when I 
came back the camera was gone.

I stormed into my then 9-year-old brother’s bedroom, 

(somehow I knew he was guilty), to find him with my 
camera in his hand and I saw that he had just taken a 
picture.

I yelled at him for taking what was mine and I asked 

him if he knew how much the film cost and I asked him 
what exactly I was going to do with a picture of Grandma 
just sitting on his bed, a picture that I wasn’t even in.

I misplaced the picture of my grandma.
I wish, I wish, I wish I could have saved that picture 

because God, I remember now that my grandma really 
looked so pretty simply sitting there, flashing her gor-
geous smile, and having that tiny picture would now 
mean so much more to me than any of the other pictures 
I took with those girls who I am not even friends with 
anymore, or with the stupid boy that cheated on me, or of 
the ice cream cones from that place down the street that 
I now realize are upsettingly replaceable.

Shoes
Shoes are so personal. Someone puts their whole body, 

their whole being, their whole weight into two pieces of 
wardrobe that they take with them everywhere they go. 
Traveling, to the supermarket, shopping, exercising.

She always had the best shoes.
One of my favorite parts about myself has always been 

that I fit into her shoes. After her death, I inherited all of 
them. There must have been 50 pairs.

It is always a weird feeling when I buy a new pair of 

shoes and when I wear shoes that weren’t hers. God, I 
wish they were.

Flowers
As a little girl, I would have dance recitals that my 

mom would always invite my grandma to come see and 
when I got on stage in my little black tap shoes to per-
form my routine, my eyes would search the audience, 
until I found her and the signature bouquet of roses in 
her hands that she always brought for me.

They were the prettiest flowers.
My mom would put them in a vase next to my bed and 

they would last about a week before they began to wilt, 
until one day I would walk into my room and they would 
no longer be there.

My mom loved to clean up.
I now think about the flowers that are brought to my 

grandmother’s grave and I think about how one day it 
was her that was no longer there, and when everything 
comes rushing back I think about how comforted I felt 
when I would look out into the audience and see her face 
and her lipstick-painted smile beaming at me. I remem-
ber how she looked at me and I remember how she loved 
me and it makes everything worse and everything better 

Wednesday, January 25 2017 // The Statement 
7B

by Allison Taylor, Daily Arts Writer
Personal Statement: Seasons’ Feelings

ILLUSTRATIONS BY CLAIRE ABDO

