I'd been avoiding it for a while. I knew Lars von Trier's Melancholia (2011) would get under my skin. When it popped up on tv as my mom and I were sifting through on the search for something to watch, she insisted we see it (for her, for the third time), and I obeyed. I was right - it shook me. This was April 13th, 2013.
Two days later, on April 15th, two homemade bombs ravaged the finish line of the Boston Marathon, tearing limbs and lives away from innocent supporters of my hometown's most heroic race. I had left a spot two miles away from the explosion an hour earlier. Needless to say, this got under my skin and shook me harder.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiHBIlzuqxkWJvey695i4cCyqAd_caumb_gTBz-YINwpuMZ5NjPyH3kQUQ1PY3PBT-rDuGXTJk1GzkzmrG0ZHPZfdOq_G14ds0WHyZEcZ4GBinabE3ZAel0KoRQuF3e5RIPMIX8lpLyiS6w/s320/melancholia.jpg)
As I vacillate between logical detective work, trying, along with the news, to figure out how and why a person would commit such a terrible act, and sadness for the casualties and amputees and their families, I can't help but remember hearing how some marathoners ran 28.2 miles instead of 26.2 as they kept running down the road to the nearest hospital to donate blood. And I then think of Justine, Melancholia's late hero, who builds a fort to give her nephew some solace before impact.
We don't know why this happened or if we can make it better, but we try.