Home Talk Free Talk My Fleeting Life – A Guitar Long Silent in Its Weeping (0) This topic has [3] replies, 0 voices, and was last updated 5 months ago by Leon. Now Editing “My Fleeting Life – A Guitar Long Silent in Its Weeping (0)” Name * Password * Email Topic Title (Maximum Length 80) In a quiet corner of the storage room—within the first home I’ve owned in the 26 years since immigrating to the U.S.— rests a plain, unremarkable guitar. I once practiced guitar briefly, for about two months at a cousin’s house, long ago. But I had no gift for it, so I let it go—and I’ve never owned one since. The guitar that sits here isn’t mine. It was left behind by my only child, my son, during a visit. He doesn’t come here anymore. We no longer keep in touch - only my wife exchanges a text message with him once or twice a year. Time speeds by like an arrow loosed, and some days I find myself wondering if he’s even alive. And when I discover that he is, I exhale a silent sigh of relief. Every so often, I hold the guitar and try again. But if I couldn’t make it sing in my youth, how could I now? The guitar, untouched and mute, has no reason to weep. It simply waits, a silent witness in the shadows of the room. When one of my neighbors was holding a garage sale not long ago, I briefly considered giving it away. But I couldn’t. That guitar is the only thing my son has ever left behind in this house. Even if I cannot make it weep, I hold onto it with the fragile hope that someday, he’ll return—and coax a song from it again. To throw it away would be to surrender that hope. So I keep the guitar. The one that has not wept for so long. While waiting for the guitar to weep again, I am writing my life story for my son—so that, even after I am gone, traces of my existence will remain in a quiet corner of his memory. With those memories as his foundation, I fervently hope he will live wisely and happily, avoiding the mistakes and misfortunes I endured for most of my life. I agree to the terms of service Update List