"I know, Delores. I wish I could stay," I replied, wiping tears from my face. "But it's just hard when I miss my family, when I feel like I don't really have a purpose for being here, and when I worry all the time about money. I don't know if I can do it. My mom's been looking at flights and I think I'm going to book one soon."
"I know, I already talked to her about it. She called me about an hour ago, but I didn't give her the answer she was looking for. I told her what I'm telling you now, and that is you need to stay, Caroline. Think about all the people you've met and still will meet. Think about all of the things you've gotten to see already. I know it can get lonely sometimes, but you'll learn so much from being on your own. When will you ever have a chance to live in New York again?"
I promised to think about all she had said but ultimately ended our hour long phone call with the mindset that I would, indeed, be returning home from my New York summer before most people's summers had even begun. I started thinking about what I would tell people and what steps I would take when I got back home to South Carolina. As I let the reality settle, I began to think about Delores. Delores, who had raised me and my sisters from little Buckeyes to sweet, Southern girls. Delores, who I had told to "get a life" at the ripe age of eighteen months. Delores, from whom I had inherited the vey love of adventure and travel that got me to New York in the first place. Delores, who had anxiously planned out her visit to see me in New York, around the middle of June. Delores, who became too weak to visit me in New York as planned. Delores, who was too sick to even travel from the hospital to her home in Bellbrook.
When I had finished berating myself for the selfishness and self-pity I had succumbed to, for complaining about being lonely in New York City, for having thought for a second that I deserved any sympathy, I turned my thought process quickly around and called my mom before she could book a return flight. I was determined to finish out my summer, to make the most of every day in New York, for Delores. I set out to live with intention, and I began each morning with a pen and a French Press in my second story walk up in Queens, reminding myself of this truth. No, things did not necessarily get easier. I did not magically miss my family, friends, the beach and Chick-fil-a any less because I had decided to stay in New York. But when sadness, doubt and anxiety would overcome me, I instead thanked God for the opportunity He had given me, for the health He had blessed me with, and for the strong support of family and friends that would always be a phone call away.
From Delores, I learned to live with intention. To make the most of every day, rain or shine, whether I had made $4 in tips, or $140. Whether I passed by a thousand others and talked to none of them, or whether I had met a new best friend. I learned to wake up and embrace that New York contagiousness that is intention, self-improvement, and ambition. I learned to do what I love while I still have the time.
And on my very last night in New York, Delores called and left a voicemail. It is still on my phone and will be for awhile. Though she had little more than a month of life left in her, with the strongest voice she could muster, Delores said to me, "Carolina! Tomorrow you're on your way. I'm so proud of you for making it through this. And what a good time you had, what a good decision, Caroline. I know you're busy with all your friends so I'll talk to you in a few days when you are home." What a good decision it was, indeed. And what a bad decision it would have been had it not been for my Delores. She's through speaking her mind to me now, but she will always be speaking her heart.
It's unbelievably hard when you lose your biggest fan in life, but I have decided that living with intention, and living to the fullest while you still can is the only way to go forth in a way that makes any sense at all.
"Trust in the Lord and do good. Commit your way to the Lord; trust Him and He will do this: He will make your righteous reward shine like the dawn, your vindication shine like the noonday sun." Psalm 37: 3, 5-6
"Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18
I love this blog entry....it hurts my heart but makes me happy at the same time. I have read it now several times, and each time it makes me cry a little. Mom was proud of you for making a go of it in NYC for the summer, she really thought you were brave for overcoming your hesitation. And, you are correct, she was a big fan of yours Caroline. XOXOXO from Ohio :-)
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