I go to the gym every morning before work. I pack my bag the night before. I grab my outfit and shoes and toss them in the bag, not paying too much attention. This morning when I got dressed at the gym I realized I brought the shoes that I wore for Ariella’s funeral. Shoes I haven’t worn since then. Shoes that still have the mud on them from the cemetery. Mud I could not bring myself to clean off this morning. I don’t know why, I have parted with many of Ariella’s belongings, but I could not part with the mud. When I wasn’t working I visited Ariella at the cemetery quite a bit. I don’t have as much opportunity to get there now. Even though it’s just her body there, not her spirit, I feel the most connected to her when I talk to her at her grave site. I have to drag myself away after my visits. I never want to leave her. The mud on my shoes today was that connection. I didn’t think a pair of shoes could bring me to my knees.
But that’s not necessarily true. As mentioned, I have parted with most of Ariella’s belongings. We kept special objects but clothes and things of little importance were donated. But two pairs of her shoes. Ariella did not care much about fashion. She was happiest in sweats and an oversized hoodie. Shoes weren’t a priority for her at all, but she had to have Ugg boots and black Chuck Taylors. The Chucks were actually to wear with a party dress. When I was going through Ariella’s things, I pulled those shoes out as well, but ended up putting them back because they belong in her closet. I often will go in her room and just sit for a minute or two. Not long but seeing her shoes in the closet for some reason gives me some comfort. But it has to be those shoes, because those were actually important to her (as important as shoes can be). They exude her personality and I like having them around. But it is also gut-wrenching to see those shoes there. Just waiting for her feet, never to be worn again. Desolate, and lonely. Without a purpose. Like me.
There is one other pair of shoes that I wish I had, but they are in their right place, buried with Ariella. That pair of shoes is her custom tap shoes. A special gift from her dance studio when Ariella started dancing in earnest again. She loved those shoes so much and practiced tapping all the time, just so she could wear them. As much as the constant tapping drove me crazy, I miss it so much. Would give anything to have Ariella tapping all over the house again. She was so proud when she began tapping again. She couldn’t wait to perform. She dazzled on stage and had the shoes to match. Ariella worked hard for those shoes and she earned them. She deserved to have them with her.
I still have her littlest shoes; her first pair, her first ballet slippers, and her first tap shoes. So tiny, filled with the feet of someone with so much promise and potential. Potential we could never imagine would go unfulfilled. When you look at shoes so small, and you look at the child wearing them, you envision the future. You wonder if they will continue dancing or if they will trade those dancing shoes for soccer cleats, or running shoes. You never think that one day the feet will stop growing, not because of age, but because of death. You never think that this tiny person’s life will be cut short. In fact you often lament them growing up so fast. They outgrew another pair of shoes, another pair of pants. Stop growing up you want to say. You want to hold on to them when they are little, keep them young forever. Until they actually are forever young.
When Ariella was in the ICU and we had no idea how bad it would get, I had asked her what she would want, or what we would do to celebrate when she finally got out of there. And with all the hell she had been through and was still going through, all she said she wanted was a pair of shoes. A pair of slides. I want to keep buying shoes. I want to buy her all the shoes. I want to be sad because she is growing up, increasing her independence, not because she never gets to grow up. I hate this life so much. I want her and all her glorious mess back. I want the pile of shoes littering her closet floor, not just the pairs I kept. I just don’t want to do this anymore.