I often felt that my physician-husband wasn’t with us, that he never fully came home from the hospital.
I had the sense, though couldn’t name it then, that he’d brought others home with him; other families’ grief, fear, dysfunction and love.
It was as though their stories clung to his clothes like the perfume of another woman or a crying child hanging onto his leg.
He dragged or carried them home. It it felt like there was a crowd with us, clambering for his attention.
When I asked him, “How was your day?” it wasn’t meant to elicit a reflexive answer like “Fine” or “Okay.”
I really meant, “Please introduce me to these people you brought home with you.”