As far back as I can remember I had dreams of elevators. The scene would start out pretty benign and then slowly change. I walk into an elevator and then the elevator cab would start to sway from side to side. As a kid I wouldn’t remember that I had this dream repeatedly so each night it played out as if was the first time. Each time the shock and fear was brand new. That is, until I got wise. And then the problems really began. Depending on the day it would go from knocking my body on either wall as I scrambled to get better footing to doing full circles where my body would be airborne for a moment and then hit the ceiling and then the floor as it revolved. I was traumatized each time it went upside down.
Even though little by little I would remember what was going to happen when I walked into the elevator and pushed the button, I could not control how I went about saving myself. It was like I forgot how I got out of it the last time. This went on for years and years. As I got older I began bracing myself by placing each foot at a corner and positioning my hands on the corners of the ceiling so that I would be stationary while the cab made full circles. I spiraled like this for another couple years feeling disconnected to everything but this menacing force set out to scare the living lights out of me.
Once I reached the point where I quickly got into place and then laughed as we looped around and around, it stopped. It was like I conquered the instability of my life and put the fear in check. I felt this sense of relief waking up without the torment.
Then a few days ago my sister called and told me she was having a heart attack. This was the call I dreaded since she turned 42, the age my father’s sister died of a massive heart attack. Only eight years shy of the age my father passed away of the same add a stroke. Same story as my grandmother and my uncle. A kind of genetic assault that leaves our family asking not if, but when and where a heart attack will happen next. My sister is 44.
Upon hearing the news I scrambled to prepare myself for the 6 hour drive south. Not her. I pleaded with the powers that be. Not my life line. Not her. Not now. Was anyone listening? I felt hopeful for a moment and then memories flooded into my sight line.
My father saying goodbye to me while he held his arm near the elbow. His lips moving though I can’t seem to hear the words. Flashing lights from the fire trucks and ambulances as we pulled up to our house. Hearing the screaming before I recognized it as my own. Running into the doorway and seeing him lying on the living room floor there while people hovered over him. People touching him, poking him and looking at me.
I stayed outside on the porch but ran to the picture window just left of the doorway to escape what I saw. Was it real? Screams flickered from the top of the stairs. My sister’s desperate wailing made me inch closer to the doorway. Too frozen to ever take a step, I stood there and just watched.
Who knows how much time I spent just staring at my nearly packed bag as I recalled the single most painful day of my life. I knew I had to still pick up my mother in one state and then drive like the wind to reach my sister in another. I knew that I would need to be the strong one for my mother. Be the one who calms and quiets, the keeper of hope and logic. My sister takes good care of herself. She is strong. She knows more than they did. She has better care than they did. She… she… she is my best friend and she’s not dying today. That’s it.
That night when I laid my head down on my niece’s pillow I thanked the heavens. Life didn’t repeat itself. She made it through. I think I was still counting my blessings as I slipped unsteadily into a brief, but deep sleep.
Doors opened and there I was back in an elevator. This time it was a glass number that slid along a skyscraper. Okay. Let’s do this. My eyes scanned the smooth top of the elevator looking for a familiar resting place for each hand when suddenly we lounged forward away from the building and my cheek hit the cold glass. Nothing was underneath us. Nothing. We just sped horizontally toward some structure in the distance. It got me again.
Now I wonder how long I will have to relive this dream night after night until I find a way to champion the fear?