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The Kansas City Times
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I used to believe liminal space was something you passed through. A hallway. A staircase. A waiting room with bad coffee and a clock that refused to tick forward. A threshold between what was and what will be. But this morning, on the other side of yesterday, I’m not so sure anymore. What if living is just a liminal space?
IMMORTALITY.
Do not stand
By my grave, and weep.
I am not there,
I do not sleep—
I am the thousand winds that blow,
I am the diamond glints in snow,
I am the sunlight on ripened grain,
I am the gentle, autumn rain,
As you awake with morning's hush,
I am the swift, up-flinging rush
Of quiet birds in circling flight,
I am the day transcending night.
Do not stand
By my grave, and cry—
I am not there,
I did not die.
Clare Harner, December 1934 issue of poetry magazine The Gypsy
Clare Harner’s words have been looping in my head since I woke up. Not in a haunting way. Not in a grieving way, exactly. More like a quiet insistence. A reminder that presence isn’t as fixed as we pretend it is. That people aren’t contained by bodies or rooms or even time in the way we wish they were.
Yesterday stretched and folded in strange ways. My dad called me before surgery and told me not to come to the hospital. I went anyway. Of course I did. But before that, there was that moment the kind that doesn’t feel real until it’s already over when he said, “We’ve had a good run. I love you. I wanted to hear your voice today and remember it.” And then, “bye bye.”
It was meant to feel final, even if it wasn’t. Dad’s words were his fear donning a dramatic coat. Even if it was just him being who he’s always been, a bit theatrical and a little too aware of endings.
Still, there it was: a doorway.
I thought liminal space was supposed to be temporary. You’re not meant to live there. You’re meant to pass through, to arrive somewhere more stable, more certain, more decided. But what if it’s something completely different? What if we’re always in between, between phone calls and goodbyes, between who someone was and who will be, between the version of the future we imagine and the one that actually unfolds?
Yesterday, I sat with my dad for four hours while he lay there post-recovery, not allowed to sit up yet. I fed him Chick-fil-A like a baby bird, perhaps a cannibalistic bird but still. He had never had it before. Now he’s a fan. This is how life works, apparently: you can be on the edge of something enormous and still discover fast food for the first time.
We talked. We laughed. We made plans. And the beauty is that it doesn’t matter whether any of those plans will actually happen. That wasn’t the point. The point was that we were there together.
Harner’s poem doesn’t deny death. It just refuses to let it be a boundary. It stretches presence across everything… light, air, movement, morning.
And sitting there yesterday, it felt like that too: like life isn’t something you either have or lose. It’s something that keeps changing its shape. Something that refuses to stay in one form long enough for us to feel secure. Which is terrifying. And also, a relief. Because if living is the liminal space, then we were never meant to arrive at certainty. We were never meant to lock anything in place and say, this is it, this is safe, this is permanent.
We are meant to notice. To sit in hospital rooms and feed our dads chicken nuggets. To hear the “bye bye” and not know what it means yet. To keep going anyway.
Growing up, my dad used to say, “I hope you live forever and the last face you see is mine.” It always felt funny and ominous. My dad did not die yesterday. It feels almost too simple to write that. Like it should come with more ceremony, more explanation, more meaning attached. But maybe that’s the point. He didn’t die. Not yesterday. And so here we are, still in it. Still in the in-between. Still in the strange, shifting, unfinished middle that we keep trying to call something else.
Maybe there is no “other side” of liminal space. Maybe the other side is just realizing you never left. That this fragile, ordinary, extraordinary moment is it.
The hospital room. The laughter. The “bye bye” that didn’t end anything. The fact that he’s still here. The fact that, for now, so am I.

