Sunday, December 20, 2020

2020 - Christmas has been Hijacked! Along with pretty much everything else

In church this morning the preacher was talking about what an awful year this has been for everyone and how this Christmas is going to be the worst Christmas he personally has ever known and he assumed most people felt the same.  

We are in a second wave and huge surge in the first worldwide pandemic that has been seen since 1918.  At best it has hijacked our peace, our family time, our vacation plans, our holidays, our weddings, our honeymoons, our graduations, and birthday celebrations, our educations and the education of our children and grandchildren.  And at worst it has hijacked our health, our businesses our jobs and the ability to support our families, our sanity, our mental and emotional health and the ultimate -- precious members of our families and then the funerals to honor and pay respects to those precious members, 

We have seen our fair and equitable election process be made a total sham of leaving the country in a horribly divided embarrassing mess and the highest office in our once great land has been made a mockery of. The election process and in turn the presidency of the United States have literally been hijacked.

The president elect apparently has dementia and cannot even complete an intelligent  sentence.  And I'm not making fun.  It is sad that he has been put on display in this kind of condition for people to attack him for something he cannot help.  It is disgusting to see and I feel terribly sorry for him but all sympathy aside he is not fit for the office of President and it is my sincere believe that he will never be allowed to serve that in that capacity and I do not believe that it was ever intended that he would. Human decency, it seems, has been hijacked as well. 

Real Journalism has certainly been hijacked taken over by social media and tech moguls. We are now being spoon-fed political propaganda and everything that does not agree with their agenda - censored. The first amendment to our bill of rights - our Freedom of Speech - has been hijacked.

Truth has certainly been hijacked.  There is no truth not even in the face of a worldwide pandemic - we can't even trust what we are told about the health crisis affecting the entire world because the truth has become relative depending on which political party you hear it from.

We have racial unrest and violence in almost every major city that has been bought and paid for and carefully choreographed. They have killed, maimed and destroyed and it has all been sanctioned by the local Governments. 

Cities have been taken over.  Our Historical Statues and Monuments, pieces of our history, beautiful expressions of art, owned and paid for by the American Tax Payer have been destroyed; again fully sanctioned by the local Governments. 

Police have lost all power and are not allowed to even defend themselves from violent protesters.  Again sanctioned by the local Governments. Law and order and democracy gone.  Yep. Hijacked.

All culminating to be "globally" yes, the worst year I've ever known in my 67 years but "personally" well that's a different story.  2014 still has that prize and so far though this has been no picnic, Christmas 2014 still holds the record at my house.. 

The thing about this Christmas vs. 2014 Christmas is that 2014 kind of ruined every Christmas from now on.  Hoping to God that 2020 will not have that same power and effect.  

The world has looked upside down and wrong to all of us for six years and it just kind of feels like to me like the rest of world has just now caught up.


Monday, November 16, 2020

Strange


I had the weirdest exchange take place between me and a "friend" from church the other day. I mistakenly assumed a church friend might be one to call when you needed a little support.  So I texted and told her I almost called her the day before because I was so down and really needed someone to talk to. Her answer left me feeling far worse than before I contacted her.

This was how she responded:

I don't mind listening "but" I hesitate to give suggestions.  I have found that when someone talks, their perception is what is told.  Facts can only be learned by carefully worded questions.  I'm not smart enough for that besides, I'm too empathetic."

Huh?  

She offered no further explanation.  I concluded that she assumed I was going to talk about the kids.  She "supposedly" does not know what happened just that I lost them tragically.  I have never told her -  I'd also bet many thousands of dollars that she actually does know.

So what exactly do you say to this?  I assumed, A. She DID NOT want to talk to me about any problem, either physical, spiritual, emotional or otherwise.

So to just back out of any plea for help, and let her gracefully off the hook I said "Not that I really expected anyone could actually help.  I just needed a friend I guess."  

She said: "I understand." 
 
THAT ended the text exchange.

Not another word; not - Hey, I'm your friend.  I may not have all the answers and I may not can help at all but I can listen and be there for you.  

Nope.  Just "I understand."  No. It is I that understands.  Completely.

It absolutely devastated me.  I felt like she had just slapped me cold in the face.  I really did.  I cried and  have been upset by it for days.  And my first instinct was to quit the church as crazy as that sounds.   

Six years later - Really?  Again, I might as well have called the suicide prevention hotline and been put on hold!

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Still

 

I was just telling my sister that grief just keeps coming at you because if you loved someone you will never stop missing them.  It takes turns.  Some days I think about my Mama all day long and it has been over twenty one years since I lost her and some days it still seems so fresh it is impossible to believe it has been so long. I still relive that evening on the hospital helipad helpless and alone as I watched from the ground and an overwhelming sadness overtook me - as they lifted off and she flew away in the helicopter as they “life-flighted” her to Emory – She may as well have been carried off by a band of Angels because I knew in my heart she was flying away for the very last time.

Some days I just think about Shirley and how after Mama and Daddy divorced she literally moved in and rescued all of us.  She gave us the only real stability we had ever known.  I think about how selfless she was giving her all to be there for all of us.  We were strangers to her.  She had never been around kids and she gave up her quiet, peaceful life of never having to struggle to rescue a bunch of needy “strays” and stayed loyal to us for over 20 years until she died.

Some days I think about my brother in law Keith Day, lost way too young to a heart attack at 50 years old.  I think about how funny he was and about how he went against everyone’s advice to start that street ministry that has now morphed into the “Blessings Bus Ministry” that feeds and clothes the homeless on the streets of Atlanta for over 15 years!  I think about how proud I was of him then and how thankful I am to get to be even a tiny part of it now.  

Some days I go way back, and I miss my uncle - Bobby Holland killed in a tragic car accident at 26 years old.  He left a young wife and 8-month-old child that never knew her daddy.  I think about what he was to me.  I think about what a good daddy he would have been to her.  He was the first man that I ever really trusted.  He was kind and gentle and so different from all the men in my life that either, grabbed at me and made me feel gross, or beat the hell out of me for little or no reason.  I had a pretty dim view of men in general most of my life.  He was the exception.  He was also the first person in my life that I loved and lost; at 10 years old he was my introduction to grief. I cried over him for a solid year.

There are days when I think about my aunts and uncles that I’ve loved and lost; my grandparents and as of two years ago, my dear friend Durinda – the first of my childhood friends to die.  My friend and neighbor most recently - Linda Sayre a testament to the way a Christian both lives and dies.  She lived loving the Lord and she died trusting Him.

And of course, leading the pack are the days that I think of Brian and Paxton and Kara.  Those days are still after 6 years - devastating and still that grief surrounds and nearly consumes me almost daily.  I don’t cry everyday anymore but I do still cry.  And while it seems good that I no longer cry everyday I’m really not sure it is because I think holding it in could make you explode.  Because replacing that is a deep, aching sadness that permeates my entire being.  I can laugh but not without guilt.  I have small joys, but they are colored by a layer of sadness and intense sense of loss.  Each takes their turn at me.  Each has their day and of course there are still the ever-lingering peripheral losses that continue to pile up --six long years of losses.  Like after all this time I still do not know what happened.  Not a day so far goes by that I do not think of that.  After six years I still cannot talk openly about them.  I still cannot acknowledge that I ever had them, loved them or lost them because of the questions sure to follow that I still do not know how to answer.  I feel cheated and that feels like a loss unto itself.  I still feel judged, and I still feel guilt where Kara’s family is concerned.  My faith has suffered immensely.  I fight it – daily - with everything I have but there’s no use lying – it is not the same and it has suffered irreparable damage as has my relationship with literally every other person in my life.  Some lost never to return; some have returned but what we have left is so different the relationship is virtually unrecognizable.  I’d venture to say not one part of my entire life has not been seriously affected.  I still don’t sleep well waking up most mornings before 4:00.  I still cringe and get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach on the 23rd of the month – not just August but every month – for six years.  I do not seem to be getting “better” as I’d hoped and prayed and each successive year, I find myself getting closer to "bitter” than I’ve been for six years. 

Some days I can see their pictures and feel love and warmth and remember sweet memories.  Other days I can see their picture and it is like a knife to my heart.  Three knives actually.   

Still surprisingly, Paxton has been the hardest.  Maybe because he was totally innocent and maybe just because he was a baby and there is something so awful and so tragic about the loss of a child.  And most especially under such traumatic and horrific circumstances.  That said, they have all been hard.  Very hard.

Still, I feel guilty because I never saw any of them and that feels so wrong and yet I know if I had it to do over, I would choose to do the exact same thing again.  I am a coward.  I could not see them and live and the survivor in me always, always knew that.  I am an incredibly strong person, but strength only goes so far, and I simply could not face that.

The conclusion I’ve come to is if people have had a place in your life; have impacted your life, you have loved them, or they have loved you –you will always miss them.  Always think of them from time to time and yes, even always grieve the loss of them – still - and always.

Saturday, August 22, 2020

Six Years Ago...

I find it so hard to believe that exactly six years ago I spoke to my son for the very last time.  Hard to believe all of those words.  Six years. My son. Last time.  Still today those words defy reality.

I have of course played back in my head that conversation hundreds of times over the past six years.  Looking for clues.  Looking for evidence that proves my cause for disputing these findings.  Treasuring the normalcy and lightness of it.  Replaying his voice; the tone, his inflections, his laugh, his concern. Clinging to every word.  Hanging onto to every memory of it.  Today six years later when I can barely remember what I did an hour ago - I can recite that conversation almost word for word.

As I write this one hour and a half ago I stopped what I was doing and looked at the clock at the exact time I made that final call.  Like some force pulling me.  Just like still waking in the middle of the night like I did at exactly 4:00 A.M. Saturday morning the 23rd of August 2014 in a fit of tears without knowing why.  To this day I still periodically wake at precisely 4:00 A.M. sometimes I just look at the clock and realize why I awoke I make a mental note of it and go right back to sleep.  Other times I lay awake with them on my heart and do not - can not go back to sleep.  It isn't everyday anymore but it is still more often than not.  

Still six years later they all have their days with me.  Some days I will just sit and look at pictures of Paxton all day and cry on and off.  Think of the funny little things he did or said and laugh as if he were in the other room.  Other days are Kara's days.  I think about her all day long.  I spend time appreciating what she was to me.  How because of her I was able to have the relationship I did with him.  She was so unselfish with him.  She allowed me to have the sweetest relationship and the gift of loving him.  I think of what a great mom she was and how calm and easy she taught him.  I watch videos to hear her voice.  Then there are "Brian days" and if I'm honest there are more of them.  He was after all my child and I had a 41 year history with him.  I find that on his days I pick certain era's in his life and just relive those days.  Like thinking about different things he did or said say when he was three.  On another such day I will have a reminder of something he did at maybe 14 and then I will start thinking of all the things I can remember about the time he was 14. His first school dance with his first real crush.  He was dressed in a black suit, white shirt, red tie.  I remember thinking what a grown up outfit for such a little boy.  A very small 14 year old that looked all of 10.   

Ahh Celeste. His crush.  How he carried a torch for that little girl.  He was like that though.  Very like me in that.  He too, was one to hang on to those that mattered to him.  He was very sentimental and did not easily let go of a relationship. And he was about 13 when he met Celeste and was still secretly in love with her until the day he married though he never saw her but once after we moved.  

But once he married all of his love and attention went to his wife and children.  Though he was way too young he handled it like a trooper.  He loved being married and loved being a dad better than anything in the world.  Even when she was clearly running around on him, he never mentioned it to any of us.  I knew he was upset about something but his loyalty to her would never let him say a word against her.

He spent a lot of time with us and I was shocked when after she was openly seeing someone else, had filed for divorce and asked him to leave - he finally told us all she had been doing for over a year.  How she had been leaving every night when he came home from work and not returning until 4 or 5 in the morning --totally wasted.  How he had been working all day to come in to a filthy house, no dinner and out the door she would go leaving him to bathe the kids and get them to bed and then sit all night and wonder where his wife was.  How their four year old son told him about her friend "D" that had come to spend the night every night while he was away on a business trip to N.J. for a week.  

She had actually once left two years before, we learned later she was having an affair with her boss.  She came back claiming she wanted to work things out.  She insisted he buy her a new car and put it in her name.  She put in to buy a new house and then she turned up pregnant with their daughter all within a few months of agreeing to come back.  Their daughter was just nine months old when he found out about "D".  Shortly thereafter he found out she was pregnant again but this time he knew the baby was not his.  He was hurt.  Devastated.  I begged him to get a lawyer and fight for custody of his children.  He absolutely refused.  Saying "Mom, how could I do that to my wife! I cannot take her children away from her and I cannot take them away from their mother."  He loved her still.  He wanted her back regardless and he fell into a deep depression for over two years.  

She married D. just a few weeks after their divorce was final and she and D. spent the next several years until they divorced - tormenting his life away.  Controlling him with threats to keep his children from him or saying she'd turn them against him.  On his weekend to have them she called constantly and tried to control every moment of his visitation.  She bossed him and told him what he could and could not do with his children with threats that it would be the last time he saw them if he didn't comply.  She extorted about $80,000 from him on top of his already generous child support by beating him down and telling him what a horrible father he was because he wouldn't pay for them all to take trips to Disney or California or help pay for them a new van.  He ended up in bankruptcy, he couldn't even live on what she left him.  He never got a vacation.  He never got to take his kids anywhere but he faithfully paid for "their" trips all over.  He financed hers, D's and five children's vacations for several years.  He found out years later he'd been financing their drug habit as well.  They were both heavily on drugs and D. had even sent his 11 year old son into a crack-house to buy drugs for them. She gave her 16 year old son Xanax and then when he got caught with it at school she acted as if she was mother of the year and sent him to a drug rehab.  

After the kids got old enough to tell him some of what had gone on he lived consumed with guilt for not trying to take custody of the kids and sparing them the hell they lived in that set the tone for the near ruination of their lives when they hit their teen years.  They had been exposed to everything.

She left D. but not before she gave birth to two more children - one mixed race - after her husband had had a vasectomy claiming at five months pregnant that she'd been raped in the parking lot of a Publix by a black man. And when she left she was pregnant again with husband number three's baby.  He came from a well off family and she took them for all she could before she left him.  And shortly thereafter came baby number seven and husband number four and as I understand it - she now has husband number five.  

She is a textbook psychopath and the nicest person you'd ever meet.

And no one was happier than I was when Brian married Kara because I knew Kara was not the kind of person to sit back and let her run their life or allow her to continue to extort money from them.  And she did exactly as I expected.  She put a stop to it first thing.  For the first time in over twelve years he was somewhat free from that psychopath.  The only thing that scared me was that Kara believed that she was her friend. And she is the most manipulative person I've ever known and I was so afraid of what trouble she might cause her because Kara had stopped her gravy train. 

And weirdly after all the years of torment and bad blood between them and after being divorced for eighteen years, she was johnny on the spot at the scene of the crime from her home over 60 miles away just a short time after the kids were notified.  Chatting up the police; there for the TV cameras; there to talk with the neighbors.  She would not miss an opportunity to be in the middle of the drama.  weeks later I was told by the investigating officers that she had been calling their office regularly asking for updates about the investigation.  He asked me who she was.  I was livid.  Then she was the first one at the Memorial Service and the last one to leave.  They couldn't even close the church long after the service was over because she would not leave.

Afterward I remember the most intense anger I've ever known.  Screaming to the top of my lungs and throwing things and being in an uncontrollable rage --at her.  All the years of her torment of him culminated in the worst rage I've ever experienced.  I wasn't mad at God.  I wasn't mad at him even though they claimed he was responsible.  I was mad at his biological father and her --for all the hurt they had caused him in his life.

I have no anger now I will wait on the Lord and let Him sort out the truth and get justice for us.  I hold no grudges. 

And all of this makes the scenario the police built even more ridiculous.  After all she put him through for all those years and growing to hate her as he did - he didn't kill her.  So why on earth would he have killed the beautiful wife that he loved and the child he adored?

I'm better but there is still a hole in my heart the size of Texas that will never ever fill.  I miss them all every single day but I find peace in the fact that the days of seeing them again are getting close.  Very close. And I rest in that knowledge.


 



Thursday, January 2, 2020

The Fallout

Until you have been here there is no way to ever believe what a determination of murder/suicide can do to a family.

Like with any tragedy of course - it sends you reeling.  I had not even absorbed the fact that my child was gone when I was hit like lightening with my grand baby is also gone. Then there is yet more --my daughter-in-law is also gone.  Three members of my family at one time in one split second - my life has been decimated.  Then before I could even wrap my head around this god-awful truth someone somewhere tells me they think it looks like suicide.  Suicide? That doesn't make sense.  I don't remember much from that day.  Bits and pieces really.  But I clearly remember my first thoughts when I hear the word "suicide" I thought "well that doesn't make sense there were three of them and then --and I may even have said it out loud -  what difference does that make anyway? They are gone"

Then as if that freight train was hit by a blinding violent tornado they quietly add --murder --suicide.  I could not comprehend in the least the meaning of that phrase.  And let me tell you had I been able to fully comprehend the meaning I could have never been prepared for the implications of that phrase.

It is sooo much to take in; so many questions left forever unanswered.

One day we were a normal family happily attending the church we'd been in for over twenty years.  We went out to lunch afterward for a burger with friends from church and before that normal afternoon lunch was over --life as we knew it - was also over.  Every part of it.

We were not perfect but we were an average, somewhat good family.  We had normal jobs. I'd worked in the insurance industry for thirty years.  I did nothing beyond go to my job, sit in traffic, keep up our home, go to church and spend time with family. We had been in our home for over twenty years.  My husband had been on his job 34 years.

We didn't "winter" in Aspen or vacation in the South of France.  We spent every holiday at home with family.  We played cards with our kids occasionally on Friday nights.  We went out to lunch with friends from church about every other Sunday.  I kept my two-year old grand baby every other weekend.  We didn't drink.  We didn't smoke.  I liked to cook so we seldom ever even ate out.  We weren't even adventurous enough to go to a larger church even ten miles away.  Instead we attended the tiny 100-year old Baptist church at the end of our street.  With so few people, everyone had several jobs so out of necessity I was on the building and grounds committee, the Communion Service committee and the church bulletin committee.

We were stable, predictable and painfully average.

My daughter, was a stay at home mother of three.  She volunteered at church; lead a crafting class in Bible School and she and my son in law had once been youth ministers and my son-in- law taught Sunday School and filled in as interim pastor at times.

My oldest son lived in NC.  He's married with two grown daughters.  He owns his own business, lives in a small house they had built on their land in rural northern NC.  He raises German Shepherds and she is a postal worker and has been on her job over twenty five years.

My youngest son had been a single dad of two children for twelve years after his wife left him for another man.  He worked hard on his job. He worked in his yard. He attended church although not regularly.  He didn't go out much and I used to tell him he would never find a girlfriend if the only place he ever went was work and to his mom's house.  He loved woodworking and built the beautiful five foot tall polished cross that hangs over the pulpit of our church.  Finally after twelve years single he met the girl of his dreams and married her after just four months.  They had the baby she had been told she could never have.  They had a new house that would have been totally paid for in five years.  They had just celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary.  And they had almost completed the total renovation of their new home after almost three years and they were now almost debt-free.

We were average, okay people --all of us.  Until we weren't.

In the span of an hour and a half we were a shell of family decimated by multiple loss.  All of us destroyed.  Tossed into a media circus and suddenly we went from being a boring, average, normal family to being "those people".  The determination made by the police in a very short few minutes altered our lives forever.  Not only did we all lose three members of our family but we went from having friends that loved us --to abandoned and avoided.  We went from being pillars of the community to --being stared at and pointed at when we went out anywhere in our quiet, familiar town where we had lived for over twenty years.  Family members did not know what to say to us so they avoided us altogether. We went from boring and average to being the subjects of a media circus that was literally worldwide.

We had to strategically postpone the publishing of the obituary until after the service.  We had to keep the service secret and by invitation only and we had to have the police in attendance to keep the angry crowds, media and TV cameras out.

We were disregarded, disrespected and talked down to and lied to by the investigators, the Sergeant in charge, the police Major and the coroner.  We had done nothing wrong.  We had had an unbelievable triple tragedy hit our family.  And instead of sympathy, support and understanding we were ostracized and treated like we were public enemy number one.

I was a mother that had lost my son and my grandchild and yet when I asked what the autopsy had revealed.  The coroner barked back at me "He died of a gunshot wound to the head but I expect you already knew that!"

The sergeant in charge of the investigation openly lied to us on multiple occasions and when I asked for --begged for proof, for a fair, full and complete investigation to at least prove what they were condemning my son for - I was told: "Giving you closure is not my job.  Finding the cause and manner of death is my job and I have that.  The investigation is closed."

This part was just the first year yet there is so much more that is not over and will never be over.

The general public acted like we somehow "deserved" this.  And certainly like they were glad that Brian was dead.  According to them he deserved to die and was a monster and we by association must also be monsters and it was unfathomable that we would love and miss our child.  He did not deserve the fairness of proving that determination and we did not deserve the truth or even what they would give to anyone - absolutely anyone else - a full and thorough investigation. Their minds were made up and they were so prejudiced against him until they had immediately been his accuser, his judge and his jury - Guilty was their verdict and since he was already executed their work was done.

Their verdict did not condemn him. Their verdict condemned all of us. His family.

We were shunned by many in our community.  My grandchildren were tormented on social media as if they had not had a huge and horrific loss.  They acted as if they deserved this.  We had no choice but to leave the home we had loved for so many years and move 100 miles away where we could be anonymous just so we could attempt to survive this.

In moving, I left my daughter --my only local child.  We had lived 4 miles apart for the past 20 years.  My three grandsons also lived within 10 miles of us and now I never see them.  My church that had been my solace and my comfort and my home for over twenty years - now gone.  I left my close knit community the people that had been my friends, my church family and my neighbors for twenty three years.

It was Home.  Home where all the memories of life with my family were.  That is where we had watched our grandchildren grow up, where I had taken thousands of family photos - birthday parties, prom pictures, wedding pictures; where we'd had twenty years of holidays and Sunday dinners, and family cookouts.  That was where all of my grandchildren learned to swim and canoe and ride four wheelers.    It was where we had buried twenty years of family pets.  It was where me and my three grandsons camped out in the backyard (for about an hour) when they were six and seven years old.  It was where my husband and my two sons spent four months building my mother an apartment over our detached garage and where she lived happily until she died.  It was where my husband, myself, and my sons hand built a two story barn from lumber cut from a 100-year old oak tree that fell on our property. It was where I watched over 100 young couples begin their life together as husband and wife including my brother, my sister, my son and my grandson.  It was where our church held 12 old fashioned baptisms in our lake with the entire church standing on the banks with tears in their eyes singing "Shall We Gather At The River" to the top of their lungs as another child was baptized into the family of God.

It was not just a house.  It was the best part of our lives - all of our lives for twenty three years.  It was heart-wrenching to leave my children, my church, my memories and my home.  It was another huge loss when I'd already lost so much.

It has been proven that secrets psychologically destroy people.  And yet we have no choice but to keep this god-awful secret.  The biggest and most devastating thing that has ever happened in our lives and we can't even acknowledge it.  It is like living in the Twilight Zone.  And keeping this secret is destroying all of us.  And still five years later we cannot openly grieve our children.  We can't talk about our loss or even acknowledge our grief for fear it will bring up questions we still do not know how to answer.

And now we live in the secret world of that anonymity.  I have neighbors I cannot tell.  I make friends that I cannot tell.  I go to church with a church family that I love and I live in guilt because I cannot be honest and I have to hide the biggest part of myself from them and feel like I am living a lie.

I know my child.  A mother knows what her child is and is not capable of.  He did not do what he was accused of.

I have researched personality traits of people that commit murder/suicide where an entire family has died.  And there are 10 common traits:

It is most always a man
There is always isolation - They isolate the family from other family and friends
They are consumed with hatred
They are extremely violent people
They block all escape routes
They all have previous and multiple occurrences of domestic violence
They are intolerant of retaliation (leaving, calling the police, filing for divorce etc.)
They try to prepare a history of their own that leaves them in a favorable light

The only one of these traits that apply here was that he was a man.

Supposedly the first thing the police look at is prior record for violence or previous reports of domestic violence.  There were none.  He had never been in any kind of trouble even as a teen.  He had never laid a hand on any woman ever including the ex-wife that left him pregnant with another man's child. He even in later years when they would allow it, brought that child to his house for a weekend visit with his own two children because she cried and felt left out and his daughter wanted her sister to come.  

Vengeful and violent - he was not.

There was no record ever of a domestic call to his home and he had lived in that same county for eighteen years.  Even the police admitted to me that that was unusual.

I truly believe that the police should be better trained to fully investigate a situation before they make a determination that is going to totally decimate every life connected with it.  There is no getting over such a mistake.



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