# There Is a Door **by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg** “At the end of my suffering, there was a door.” ~ Louise Gluck Always. Across the once-green expanse hilling the horizon edged with cedars leaning into each other in the sun right before the wind returns to clear us of all this humidity, the righteous angst of being human, which is not to say it was easy: we were lost here, like hurricanes stationed in place against their will to dissolve into oceans. We were afraid often of it never ending, pain so fluent in speaking the language of forever. We were separate from each other below the cusp of so much sadness that even the dragonflies avoided us or we were trapped in the timbers of pain, piercing our temples or aching in our calves, keeping us awake no matter how hard we kicked. It didn’t, doesn’t matter if we cried out or tightened the long vertical muscles in our necks to hold in our curses or screams or especially if we felt nothing but the bank of fog become an ocean so deep and tilted away from the light that we thought we lived here. Somehow—a miracle, a piece of luck, a strange happening—there was a door, and then, on the other side, we found each other.