Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
we sit in silence for a while
then I say what’s clear to me now
I’m thinking that somehow
I have to help Tohoku from here
and after a moment
she says
really? me, too
let me know if there’s
something I can do
and I realize I’ll need to give her
an assignment
because she has to get her mind off
her own body
I glance around the crowded room
that used to be YiaYia’s sewing room
now cluttered with Mom’s stuff
will we stay here?
at YiaYia’s the whole year?
we won’t move to Vermont?
we’ll stay here
she says
near the hospitals and clinics
well then
I say
if you’ll be an adviser
for my Tohoku project
I’ll cook you Japanese food
deal!
she says
then she whispers
poor YiaYia!
and I laugh and she laughs
until she hurts and grimaces
and I make us both banana yogurt smoothies
with protein powder and
yuzu
preserves
and while we’re sipping the smoothies
even though I feel like
one of those surfers the helicopters
hover over Sagami Bay searching for—
a surfer being sucked out to sea
tumbled and plunged
under typhoon waves higher
than anticipated
we bounce ideas back and forth
for helping people in Tohoku
from here in Massachusetts
after I finish my homework
I sit on my bed with my journal
and fiddle with a list
in a year the snowcap
grows to a full skirt
then recedes
a breast disappears
the cat grows fatter
kanji go fainter
temple bells gong
a father shifts jobs
a boy loses language
a mother stops running
rubble is cleared
a body is found
incense is burned
houses repaired
and a daughter
doesn’t know what to do
I think of Miyagi
and how much is gone
I think of Madoka’s aunt
so long unfound
I think of Samnang’s mother
and all that she endured
I think of my mother
I think of Zena
and I wonder
what to do
Saturday Dad drops me at the Newall Center
while he goes out to find an Asian market
to shop for groceries—
comfort food and ingredients
that he thinks Mom may want
but YiaYia won’t know to buy:
soba noodles, miso, tofu, ginger, nori
first I stop in to see Zena
and find her in her room
working on her new computer
writing with the eye tracker
I ask how it’s going and she looks up
then she starts typing a line to show me
the slow and deliberate process
choosing letters to type
or selecting words
from the prompt list
all with a blink
then she spells
h-o-w r u?
turning the conversation
on me
okay
I say
then she spells for me to turn her wheelchair
and when I do Zena looks right into me
and points with her eyes toward a chair for me
I pull the chair up beside her
and I feel so pathetic sitting there
before a paralyzed woman
who can’t move her arms or legs
who can’t speak
and whose daughter
had to be raised by her sister
but I can’t help it
tears come
I wipe them away
try to calm myself
taking three slow breaths
sorry
I say to Zena
I act all put together for my parents
but I seem to have no control
over anything anymore
Zena points her eyes at the letter board
but first I stand up for a tissue
then sit down again
and to Zena’s questions
I explain Mom’s treatment
our staying for a year
and that though it’s not
what I’d hoped for
I’ll try to make it work