(Reblogging from 2012. Today would be Alice’s 61st birthday, but she will be forever 20 years old.)
Blue eyes. That was one thing that made her unique among 4 sisters. She had our father’s eyes. She was the shortest among us; I believe I grew to have at least a half an inch over her. But that took a while. Since she was 3 years older, I trailed behind her most of my life. I definitely didn’t mind following in her footsteps. I adored her. She was the sweet sister, the kind one, the one who loved children and animals and had friends. She somehow spanned the gap between being a nerd and being popular. Not that she wasn’t picked on early in grade school. We all were, and she was very sensitive to it. When she was 10, she ran away from a boy who was chasing her down the sidewalk. He caught up to her and managed to grab the back of her coat hood. He yanked her down hard, and she fell backwards onto the sidewalk, hitting her head and fracturing her skull. The boy was sent to military school, and Alice recovered amid cards and gifts and angels surrounding her bed.
She started dating first among us, though she wasn’t the oldest. I wanted to learn how this “boyfriend” business worked, so I watched her very closely, sometimes through the living room drapery while she was on the porch kissing her date goodnight. She modeled how to be affectionate in the midst of a distinctly cerebral family, shy about demonstrating emotion. She gave me my first pet name: Golden Girl or Goldie, and then the one that stuck in my family, PG or sometimes Peej. By the time I was 16, we were very close friends as well as sisters. She invited me to spend Spring Break with her at college, and enjoyed “showing me off”. She told me that the boys were noticing me and that she’d need to protect me. I was thrilled!
We spent that summer at home together in California. I introduced her to my new boyfriend, who eventually became my husband. She begged our parents to allow me to be her passenger on a road trip back to campus at the end of the summer. She had just bought a car, and although I couldn’t drive, I could keep her company, sing with her along the way, and be her companion. The road trip was a travel adventure flavored with freedom, sisterly love, and the sense of confidence and brand new responsibility. We flopped the first night in a fleabag motel in the same bed. She woke earlier than I and told me as I roused and stretched how sweet I looked cuddling the stuffed bunny my boyfriend had bought me. Then we stayed with her friends in Colorado. Our next day’s journey was to go through the heartland of the country and hopefully, if we made good time, get to Chicago for the night. We never made it.
Nebraska is flat and boring. We’d been driving for 6 hours. I was reclined and dozing when we began to drift off the fast lane, going 80 mph. Alice over-corrected, and we flipped. She had disconnected her shoulder strap, and flopped around, hitting her head on pavement through the open window. Her fragile, gentle head, with two blue eyes. She was dead by the time we came to rest in the ditch.
Life is an experience, a journey of unexpected and unimagined happening, a verb in motion, not a noun. Alice was in motion, at 20, and may be even now…somewhere, in some form. I still taste her sweetness floating near me from time to time.
How can I click “Like” for such a tragic story, but I do appreciate the testament of love.
Thank you for listening to my story. I appreciate having a place to tell it.
Time does not really diminish our losses. Lovely and painful reminiscence. Thank you.
Thanks, Michael, for making a place for it in your awareness.
It never gets easier. I lost my sister to suicide in 1964. A few sweet memories and a sad devastating end. I feel for you, Priscilla. It’s so hard. Sometimes I think, well at least we’re capable of love. Sigh! Beautifully written. / Love, Jamie
Thanks, dear Jamie. Better to have loved and lost, for sure – and learned about loss. ❤
Oh my. The first time I read of her, the sweet sister. ❤ Just hugs.
❤ Thank you!
beautifully written…your words are as vibrations of love that flows…forever
Thank you, Brenda. I certainly believe in that flow of love and feel it.
Dearest Priscilla, I remember reading this when you first posted it. My heart ached for you then and aches for you and your family .For your Mom and Dad to lose one of their children, especially without warning, must have been the most unimaginable horror. There must have been so many “what ifs” afterwards for all the family; a natural part of the grieving process but no less difficult.
Yes, all of that. And now it is the fabric of my story tapestry. For all it taught me and the ways it helped me grow up, I am grateful.
Priscilla, I sent you a private message on FB about memories of Alice from back then.
Thank you for letting me know! I’m not that savvy about how FB works and didn’t see that message. I’m glad you found me, Gary! ❤
Thanks for your reply and FB message! From what you said I wasn’t sure if you would see a reply to you FB message so I’ll put it here. The pictures that you posted of Alice from many years ago are exactly as I remember her. I was re-reading some of the saved letters that I exchanged with her and reliving old memories.
How nice of you to have saved them all these years!