It was thirty minutes to midnight when someone suggested we turn on the television, so we did. Because we're American. TV helps us know how to feel and when to feel it.
And there, sandwiched between the improbable eyefulls of the Pussycat Dolls and Fergie, we had Dick Clark. Or what used to be Dick Clark.
"He's had a stroke," someone called out in his defense, as if we didn't already know it, as if putting it in words would somehow lessen its impact. As if it would stop the appalling jokes about to be made. And really, the jokes, when they flew, were almost in self-defense, almost put out there in an attempt to refill the room with the air that Dick Clark's strangely animatronic face had sucked out. It was New Year's Eve, people! There were minutes to go until midnight, and there was our friends' wide-screened TV confronting us with just what the passage of time meant: Old age. Stroke. Death.
Eventually, Dick won and our party was silenced, at least while he was on the screen. The man's face looked like it had been made from two molded plastic masks, hinged together at the jaw. The two pieces didn't fit together correctly, so his words, words that were telling us to celebrate, to rejoice in a new year, were coming out slurred. When he spoke, a few more jokes were floated only to be met with groans and jeers, but mostly we all just sat there in silence, feeling sorry. Sorry for Dick Clark, on whom hardship had fallen, but mostly, if I am to be honest, we felt sorry for ourselves, sorry that at the very apex of our celebration, our TV, which can so often be counted on to bring us only the beautiful, the titillating, the objects of our desires, had brought us something altogether different. Our TV had betrayed us.
It didn't even help when the screen finally cut away to show both Bill and Hillary Clinton pushing their hands down on a big sparkly ball to announce the New Year. Though that did give the comedians in the group significantly better material to work with.
At the stroke of midnight, sloppy toasts and even sloppier kisses rescued us from any lasting damage that may have been made by our uninvited guest, he for whom bells had so visibly rung.
It was when the second round of champagne was being poured that Kathryn came downstairs, her footed pajamas contrasting delightfully with her eight-and-a-half years, and it didn't take more than a glance to see why she had broken away from the kiddie slumber party upstairs. Her mouth was curled down and to the left, stuck and unresponsive, like the top of her face no longer fit correctly with the bottom. She had had a seizure.
"I had a seizure," she told the gathering, her locked jaw making the last word sheeshur.
As if we didn't already know it.
As if putting it in words would somehow lessen its impact.
Such an event was not wholly unexpected. Proper rest, the best deterrent for nighttime seizures, is short in supply over the holidays, and even scarcer on New Year's Eve. We declared it an isolated incident, and slept easily that night, as easily as any of you did. But today is January 4th, and Kathryn has now had more seizures in 2009 than 2009 has had days.
Her brain, which can so often be counted on to bring us only the beautiful, the humorous, the objects of our adoration, is instead bringing us something altogether different. Her brain is betraying us.