It is so hard for me to believe that in so many ways the second year really is more difficult than the first. I know I've read that for some it could be. I just could not see how that was possible. And it isn't in all ways but in many ways, it definitely is and I'd like to talk about that.
While the crying and the melt downs in public places is better; the grim realization has set in that this is forever and in many ways this year is actually worse. I am much more depressed. The shock has worn off now completely and I now see that long after I'd thought it was gone, it had still been lingering, protecting, pushing me forward. Long after I thought I was facing this full on and that I was at least in "mid-recovery", I was steeped in deep denial; glossing over it, covering it up with "busy" and pretending. Busy has come to a screeching halt and now I can't muster enough strength or energy or wherewithal to be busy no matter how hard I try - which by the way is not very hard. I just don't care anymore. If I could just sit and eat dinner on a TV tray in front of the television, read an hour, sit in a tub of hot water and then lay in bed and play solitaire on my Kindle till I get sleepy - I'd be good. That would be my perfect evening. Oh wait, that is my every evening. But sooooooo not like my evenings "before". Never been a big TV fan. Maybe an hour in the evening to wind down was about my max. It just always seemed like a major time suck and I always had far too much to do to justify very much TV for all of the housework, cooking, laundry, family time, pets, church, writing and I could never find time to stay ahead of it all. And all of those still exist but suddenly they are all so terribly unimportant. I can sit for hours and binge-watch ten year old episodes of Alias without feeling a twinge of guilt at the pile of laundry I tripped over to get to the television. Dishes in the sink - fine. Bathrooms need cleaning - so what. Floors looking like you need to run the mower and grass catcher - I'm good. Nothing seems important me anymore. Everything except family seems like petty annoyances. I have zero desire to actually "do" anything. I can barely find enough energy to function on a low level and get by from day to day.
In the beginning I couldn't think about these things and I was in the middle of caretaking and doing what I could for the living - postponing grief as it turns out . Just getting from one day to the next the best I could. This year that is no longer the case but you still have to have a reason to get up and I have no reason. No hope. No purpose. I don't want to "do" anything anymore. I think I need that puppy now or a donkey or something. (Latest book - Flash) Whatever - but I need a reason to go on.
The second year is harder too simply because it is the second year and I thought if I could make it through the horror of the first - I would have "made it." I would be better. I would want life again. I would be able to see good in things again. I would have energy and hope and faith again. I would be out of the danger zone.
Not so much.
Last year when I first started this blog it had been "Four Weeks" - the blog was a life vest to a drowning man. Now...well I am floating adrift. I don't need a life vest but I'm still in the water. I'm not drowning but this is not living either.
Last year I had "coping skills" - this year now I'm contemplating drugs in order to make it. What a hypocrite. I thought if you just kept pushing on and forcing yourself to function, ignored the pain, pretended the holidays were not holidays, kept the kids alive and with me through happy stories, funny memories, pictures and videos. If I read all the books, attended the right meetings, listened to the preaching, listened to the right music, talked to a counselor, wrote out my feelings and managed to cling to life by tooth and toenail and just make it past that magic one year mark - I would be "out of the woods". The reality has hit me like a brick that not only is it not true that I will be okay after the first year but in fact that I will never be okay again.
Losing them did not change the number of chairs at my Thanksgiving dinner table or how many gifts I would buy at Christmas or how I spent my Sunday afternoons. Losing them --changed everything. Absolutely everything. Not everything for a year or two years or five years but forever.
I don't even recognize this life. I had goals, hopes, dreams and a strong abiding faith. My whole life, those were the things that kept me going. I truly do not understand how this can make me no longer be me? I am not me. God is not God. Everything is just wrong. And these are the things that I did not know last year. I guess I couldn't face it or didn't realize it or God knew I couldn't withstand the full impact of all of that yet. I guess it was all I could do to put one foot in front of the other and remember to breath. And yeah the first year was horrific and yet in many ways the second is still kind of worse as you come to the cold realization that the horror is never going to end.
Friday, January 15, 2016
The Second Year
Labels:
anti-depressants,
Cancer,
caring,
changes,
coping with loss,
depression,
expressions of grief,
family loss,
first holiday after loss,
God,
Grief,
Loss of a child,
loss of a grandchild
Monday, January 11, 2016
Not The Same...
Well it was a good thing I had that
experience with my co-worker about the loss of her dog last week as I had time
to think of a calmer and more appropriate response because believe it or not,
within four days a second co-worker actually finished that sentence to
me...
Believe me, I understand completely
that people love their dogs. I love my dog. I love all dogs.
All animals period. I cried for days over a little wild bird
that drowned in our lake as well as a possum that was hit on the road. I
have dragged home and/or rescued more animals than most people would ever have
in a lifetime and not just your run of the mill stray dog either.
Pregnant cats --and I spent weeks taming the wild kittens, had the
females spayed, found homes for all but one (and I still have her!) And I
have had ferrets, skunks, raccoons, birds, rabbits, rats, mice, guinea pigs,
chickens, ducks, geese, hamsters, turtles, frogs and even snakes and I will
patiently chase a lizard for an hour that has gotten trapped on my screened
porch just so I can free him and also do the same for a cricket lost in my
house. Suffice it to say I love animals.
And I know people have a tendency to
make that comparison and say that losing their dog is as bad as losing a child
- and apparently they say it a lot more than I ever realized. And don't
get me wrong, love your dog. Please love your dog. I love my dog
but make no mistake that losing a dog is absolutely NOT the same as losing a
child! It is NOT "just as bad". It is NOT in any
way to be compared. Trust me you do not have any idea what you are saying
or how you are rubbing salt into a horrific wound that already will never heal
when you say that to someone that has lost a child and for the record, you do
not have any idea who that may be.
I have learned since losing my
children - that there were a lot of people that I thought I knew fairly well
that I never knew had lost a child. Friends, in-laws, neighbors,
co-workers and business acquaintances - people that you come into contact with
every single day in all walks of life. It might be that when you say
losing your dog is the same as losing a child in casual conversation to the
realtor that is helping you find a house - that she watched her 12-year old
daughter suffer and then lose her horrific battle with cancer. Or that
when you say it to the counselor in the student center of your college - that
she lost her handsome and talented 21-year old son to a drug overdose. Or to the person that delivers your mail as she still struggles with guilt and still blames
herself over her 16-year old son's suicide. Or that your librarian lost
her beautiful brown-eyed four-year old daughter to a freak accident in her own
front yard. Or that the sweet lady that takes care of your child in the
daycare everyday lost her beautiful daughter and her only grandchild to
murder... Not the same. I promise you. It is so not.
And this time I did respond. I did not run away in tears or get mad and lash out. I simply looked
her straight in the eyes and quietly said, "It's really not. It
really is not the same."
Labels:
Cancer,
compassion,
coping with loss,
expressions of grief,
Loss of a child,
loss of a grandchild,
loss of baby,
loss of pet
Thursday, January 7, 2016
A stubbed toe - an amputated foot - same thing right?
Well I broke down and ate in the break room today with all of
the co-worker friends I used to eat with; something I had really not done in a year and a
half.
It was a colossal mistake.
I only sat there long enough to eat a bowl of soup and was
back at my desk in less than twenty minutes.
It was long enough however, to wreck the rest of my day.
The table conversation was about one of the girls’12-year
old dogs. She had four when we used to
eat together. A few years ago we both had a Chihuahua and I made the mistake of
asking about hers. She told me that he had died around this time last year. I told her how sorry I was to hear that at
which she replied “I know. It was awful.
Losing him was just as bad as…” and she stopped dead in her tracks
leaving the unsaid words hanging in mid-air.
Both of us sat in awkward silence knowing what she was about to say. I was sitting desperately trying to think
of what I was going to do if she had actually said it. I probably
would have stuffed it down, pretended I had to run back to work and brushed it
off to keep from making a scene and making her feel bad. But I was sitting there looking down at my
phone staring at the wallpaper into those beautiful smiling brown eyes and
what I wanted to do was shove that picture at her and say: “Really?
Really losing your dog is exactly like losing him? I beg to differ with
you. I’ve had dogs. I’ve had dogs I really, really loved but at
no point would I compare the loss to losing my child.”
I remember sitting and watching the videos in GriefShare and hearing the story from a mother that had lost her two-year old to a drowning, tell about being somewhere in a social situation and having someone come up to her in a gesture of “comfort” and tell her to “Look at the bright-side, at least you won’t have to potty-train him.” What is wrong with people?
I remember sitting and watching the videos in GriefShare and hearing the story from a mother that had lost her two-year old to a drowning, tell about being somewhere in a social situation and having someone come up to her in a gesture of “comfort” and tell her to “Look at the bright-side, at least you won’t have to potty-train him.” What is wrong with people?
A few weeks back I ran into a friend. She was visibly upset and when I stopped and
asked her if she was okay the dam broke and she burst into uncontrollable tears. I grabbed her and said, “Hey what is
wrong? What can I do? Are you okay?” Instantly I felt the pain of her grief because judging from her reaction clearly someone important to her --had died.
Nope. Turns out she
had a fight with her best friend and she had not called her in four days…
I seem to compare every loss against "this" and everything seems small in comparison. However, in all fairness I have sat and thought about what was earth-shattering drama to me just weeks before this happened. I've thought many times about what I worried about, lost sleep over and even obsessed over. How I would love to go back to a time of innocence where my biggest worry was getting in the long check out line at Publix or how aggravating it was to get cut off in traffic. Oh to go back to when I was blissfully unaware about how terribly cruel life could really be.
I could sit down at any given time and cry and scream solid until this time
next year and not even put a dent in all I have to cry about. We could start with how the pain of losing my
child, my daughter-in -law and my baby just goes on and on and how still seventeen
months later I keep reliving that horrific day or waking up in a panic as I realize it is, in fact, really “real”
over and over again. Or I could cry about
my sister and all that she is having to go through as I worry over her every
single day as she fights the effects of not only the leukemia but worse still
the treatment; overcoming one trial just in time for the next one to hit and sometimes they are overlapping. Not to
mention the frustration of going from doctor to doctor to doctor and the
multitude of medication she has to take and all of the diagnostic procedures
she is still having to suffer through not to mention the financial devastation
of millions upon millions of dollars in medical bills that she will never be able to pay. Or maybe on a slow day I could cry for the
way that Brian’s existing two children are running off the rails trying to deal
with all of this and the feeling of despair that I feel as I watch helplessly
as their lives slowly deteriorate as this cancer slowly eats away at my family. Or when
I have nothing else to cry about – I could cry about the fact that after a year
and a half I still do not even know what happened to my children or why and worse still is the fact that I
may never know that. Or I could cry over
the fact that my other son has not spoken to me in almost a year because he has
so much anger and nowhere to constructively place it so it landed on me. So instead of losing one son, a daughter-in-law, the baby I adored – I can, for no real reason
that I can understand, lose two.
My entire family is in shambles and if that is not enough
and friends are the subject of the day if I have any tears left I could cry about the friends I have lost
as a result of this – not just one but several in all areas of my life. Church friends, neighbor friends, work
friends as well as the one friend that has shared every aspect of my life for
the previous 37 years. And I don’t even
have tears enough left over to cry for my loss of her. Sadly she is way down the list. I’m sure I will get to it eventually – maybe in
eight or ten years I can find time and tears to grieve the loss of that
relationship. And then as icing on the proverbial cake there is the loss of my faith as I knew it and the loss of the
relationship I have always had with my God and my comforter and really --what
can compare with that?
I have so much to grieve over that I don’t even know where
to begin. It will literally take years to
even get through the list and so far I’m not having much luck getting past
number one.
Labels:
Baby,
Cancer,
caring,
compassion,
concern,
coping with loss,
depression,
expressions of grief,
faith,
family loss,
God
Wednesday, December 30, 2015
Christmas...yet again.
As hard as it is to believe here we are back in December and chose again not to celebrate Christmas and again this year two days from Christmas Day --sitting at a funeral. Last year it was two days before Christmas - funeral. My aunt passed away. This year - two days after Christmas - funeral. Another aunt passed away. Last year right after my aunt passed away my youngest sister lost her brother in law unexpectedly. This year right before my aunt passed away my other sister lost a sister in law unexpectedly. Both were in their mid 50's. Last year we had Christmas dinner in the Waffle House and I thought that was bad. This year we were in the middle of nowhere in South Georgia and there wasn't even a Waffle House. We ate day-old fried chicken from a gas station!
Seriously, this has got to stop. That is about more weird than I can handle.
Tomorrow is New Year's eve. And keeping with tradition, we are heading to my best friend's house to spend the night. Again, glad to see the year come to a close but not nearly as glad as last year and I'm not sure why because it did not change a thing.
Christmas came and went. We ran away from home as usual. We went down to South Georgia to see Brian's oldest son. I didn't want him to be alone on Christmas and it brought me closer to his dad to be with him. Then we left there and went straight to where the funeral would be held. Maybe this is God's way of getting me to gather with family for Christmas? Last year it was my mother's family. This year it was my father's. Scares me a little wondering what's coming next Christmas.
On a different subject - I've been thinking about something lately. Since I remember very little about Brian's Memorial Service and everything about not being at Kara and Paxton's service seemed so wrong. The three of them separated and even in separate states just seemed so terrible to me. I've been considering having another private Memorial Service for the three of them - maybe on the second anniversary.
I want both families to come together and have a service for them as a family. It is asking and expecting a lot I know and it may not be received very well but I'm just considering it - for closure - for comfort - for having them and us together - for letting go? It's still in the thinking stages. And it may not work out any better than the birthday dinner we planned last year for Brian's birthday - who knows? But that is just a thought that has been steeping lately.
December was a rough month as bad as I hate to admit it - we kind of went backward a bit. It was an entire setback month. Today I talked to my cousin that I'm very close to. She lost her youngest daughter at four years old. That was in 1977. We've almost never spoken of it because it very nearly destroyed her. But today we did. And I asked her "How long? How long before you actually wanted to live again?" I know everyone is different and I know everyone grieves at a different pace but no one will even give me an idea of what to expect and I really, really need to know. "Three years." She said, "Maybe three years or maybe a little longer." That gave me a measure of hope ---for about two minutes right before she added: "But I'm better now." Now! Now? Dear God. Did you get that part about it being thirty nine years ago?
We are in serious trouble.
Seriously, this has got to stop. That is about more weird than I can handle.
Tomorrow is New Year's eve. And keeping with tradition, we are heading to my best friend's house to spend the night. Again, glad to see the year come to a close but not nearly as glad as last year and I'm not sure why because it did not change a thing.
Christmas came and went. We ran away from home as usual. We went down to South Georgia to see Brian's oldest son. I didn't want him to be alone on Christmas and it brought me closer to his dad to be with him. Then we left there and went straight to where the funeral would be held. Maybe this is God's way of getting me to gather with family for Christmas? Last year it was my mother's family. This year it was my father's. Scares me a little wondering what's coming next Christmas.
On a different subject - I've been thinking about something lately. Since I remember very little about Brian's Memorial Service and everything about not being at Kara and Paxton's service seemed so wrong. The three of them separated and even in separate states just seemed so terrible to me. I've been considering having another private Memorial Service for the three of them - maybe on the second anniversary.
I want both families to come together and have a service for them as a family. It is asking and expecting a lot I know and it may not be received very well but I'm just considering it - for closure - for comfort - for having them and us together - for letting go? It's still in the thinking stages. And it may not work out any better than the birthday dinner we planned last year for Brian's birthday - who knows? But that is just a thought that has been steeping lately.
December was a rough month as bad as I hate to admit it - we kind of went backward a bit. It was an entire setback month. Today I talked to my cousin that I'm very close to. She lost her youngest daughter at four years old. That was in 1977. We've almost never spoken of it because it very nearly destroyed her. But today we did. And I asked her "How long? How long before you actually wanted to live again?" I know everyone is different and I know everyone grieves at a different pace but no one will even give me an idea of what to expect and I really, really need to know. "Three years." She said, "Maybe three years or maybe a little longer." That gave me a measure of hope ---for about two minutes right before she added: "But I'm better now." Now! Now? Dear God. Did you get that part about it being thirty nine years ago?
We are in serious trouble.
Labels:
Celebration,
changes,
Christmas,
coping with loss,
depression,
God,
grandchild,
Grief,
Holidays,
Loss of a child
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Two Moms
We first met over a dish of lasagna and I remember thinking as she told a funny story of something that happened to her in Home Depot that she was one of the funniest people I'd ever met and someone I could really enjoy spending time with. She had me laughing until the tears rolled. I have always enjoyed a good sense of humor and I imagined what good friends we would be. Somehow though that never happened the way I had hoped. As our lives intertwined over the next few years things instead seemed formal, polite and well...even kind of weird.
We shared a lot in common but never did I dream that six years later we would again share a meal as well as one of the worst tragedies imaginable.
This past weekend I had dinner with Kara's mom.
This was actually our second such meeting in the past few months. The first was five hours of an emotional roller coaster as we discussed the events of the past year. Unlike that, this meeting was a Christmas celebration with family.
Ours is a weird relationship that according to her, a lot of her friends and family do not understand. Quite honestly, I'm not real sure I do either. It has been a relationship that by all normal standards probably should never have happened, but I, for one, am so thankful that it did.
We had the worst imaginable common bond. One that would have driven most people to opposite ends of the spectrum. My son. Her daughter. Our baby. She had anger. I had guilt. Neither of us chose those emotions. Neither of us chose our roles in this odd family dynamic. But here we are --clinging to each other to get through this however possible. And as hard as it is to believe, we seem to find comfort in each other. And though we completely understand how hard this has been for our entire family we also know that no one else understands the devastation we live with like the only other mother and grandmother involved in this.
Still, the extraordinary graciousness she has shown towards my family has been unbelievable to me. It has gone a long way to provide me peace from the horrific guilt that I have suffered over this. As I've mentioned before although "we" do not in any way believe Brian could have been capable of this - we are acutely aware that the rest of the world certainly does and just as it causes me discomfort with people in my neighborhood and my small town, it has also bombarded me in heaps of guilt where Kara's family is concerned. I have enough empathy to walk in their shoes and in doing so I can't help but wonder how she is able to extend the grace towards us that she does. Only one way that I can see.
What a true example of God's grace and His forgiving love.
We shared a lot in common but never did I dream that six years later we would again share a meal as well as one of the worst tragedies imaginable.
This past weekend I had dinner with Kara's mom.
This was actually our second such meeting in the past few months. The first was five hours of an emotional roller coaster as we discussed the events of the past year. Unlike that, this meeting was a Christmas celebration with family.
Ours is a weird relationship that according to her, a lot of her friends and family do not understand. Quite honestly, I'm not real sure I do either. It has been a relationship that by all normal standards probably should never have happened, but I, for one, am so thankful that it did.
We had the worst imaginable common bond. One that would have driven most people to opposite ends of the spectrum. My son. Her daughter. Our baby. She had anger. I had guilt. Neither of us chose those emotions. Neither of us chose our roles in this odd family dynamic. But here we are --clinging to each other to get through this however possible. And as hard as it is to believe, we seem to find comfort in each other. And though we completely understand how hard this has been for our entire family we also know that no one else understands the devastation we live with like the only other mother and grandmother involved in this.
Still, the extraordinary graciousness she has shown towards my family has been unbelievable to me. It has gone a long way to provide me peace from the horrific guilt that I have suffered over this. As I've mentioned before although "we" do not in any way believe Brian could have been capable of this - we are acutely aware that the rest of the world certainly does and just as it causes me discomfort with people in my neighborhood and my small town, it has also bombarded me in heaps of guilt where Kara's family is concerned. I have enough empathy to walk in their shoes and in doing so I can't help but wonder how she is able to extend the grace towards us that she does. Only one way that I can see.
What a true example of God's grace and His forgiving love.
Labels:
caring,
Christianity,
Christmas,
compassion,
coping with loss,
family loss,
Loss of a child,
loss of a grandchild
Friday, December 11, 2015
Techno Grief
Grief, like everything has also changed with technology. Technology
issues were things that were never considered just a few years ago and not
something I have heard anything about in all my reading and research – how technology
makes it difficult to accept a loss because your loved one keeps turning up in texts,
emails, voice mails, phone contact lists, Instagram photos, Youtube videos
and worse still --old news feeds.
We really don’t realize on a surface level how deeply
ingrained we are in the technology that permeates our lives today. So much so until it, at times, seems to override
reality. It never occurred to me how much our subconscious minds automatically
believe what they see through our daily blasts of technology because we are so
conditioned to it. One instance was when
Siri asked me if I want to call Brian.
Now on a logical level I knew that wasn’t possible but for just a split
second my conscious mind wanted so badly to believe she/it could until I found myself desperately wanting
to try. And like sometimes I find myself
just looking up their phone numbers on my contact list as if seeing it there
makes this somehow less true or not real even if it is just for a moment. Or looking up old texts where even seeing
their words typed on a screen makes me hear their voices because I was so used
to being able to actually “hear” through their typed words, their inflections
and their tone – like finding the silly comments Brian had left on my
Shutterfly page and as I read them I could actually “hear” the mood he was in;
the lightness, humor and sarcasm in his voice --making it feel like
they are actually there on the other end of my computer, email or phone. And for just a minute – it feels so good, so
right and so normal. It is a break from
the sadness and a moment of “before”. I even find that I look on other emails I’ve
sent and I note the date as being before the loss and I grasp for the lightness
that was in my own voice and hang on to that free easy innocence that I will never know again. The voice I had and the person I was “before”
when the most asinine things took priority in my life and I spent my days
worrying over the lifelong battle with my weight, getting my hair to behave
or the fact that my phone wouldn’t hold a charge; when the little petty annoyances
of an everyday life were the things that dominated my thoughts. Or things like fretting over who was and who was not going
to come to Christmas or being aggravated at the fact that I had changed the day
and time four times to try and fit everyone else’s schedule. I look at those emails and mentally take
myself back to that life before I knew catastrophic multiple loss when I
believed God watched over all of my children, when I thought things that
horrific only happened to other people.
And I can remember and take myself back to feel the very atmosphere of
the "before".
It seems my entire world is divided into two parts. There was me before August 23, 2014 and there
is me after August 23, 2014. August 22,
2014 – hair mattered. August 24, 2014 - life
did not matter. June 3, 2014 - I was
emailing an editor to see if they had accepted a story I had written. September 23, 2014 – I am trying to survive
one day at a time by writing out my pain, my frustration, my love, my grief and
Brian’s story on this blog unconcerned with whether anyone else will ever even
read it or not. March 31, 2014 I was
setting up a closing with a real estate attorney to close out the sale and put
Brian and Kara’s house in their name.
February 12, 2015 I am emailing a foreclosure attorney setting up a date
for the sale of that same house on the courthouse steps.
There are other things too like the notification not long
ago that was on my phone when someone had hacked an old email account and I got
an email in my inbox that said it was from Kara – for just one moment I was so
happy and just because it sat there in real
time saying that it was from her, I had a moment of relief even joy and
excitement although on a conscious level I knew better. And strangely
enough, it doesn’t even feel crazy to me???
Sounds crazy. But it doesn't feel crazy. Not because nothing is crazy now but instead because everything is, if that
makes any sense. My life, my actions, my thought processes, my
logic and my reality –everything seems so skewed until even the craziest stuff
seems…well… normal.
Labels:
coping with loss,
God,
great loss,
Grief,
Loss of a child,
loss of a grandchild,
missing my son,
Technology
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Home is where the heart is...or at least where it used to be.
We are coming up on Paxton’s fourth birthday and with
Christmas but two weeks later I have decided to get an early start on the crying. I’ve done a little better lately but am having
a rough time getting through December. I had hoped that after the first year of
holidays that Christmas could return.
And maybe it will some time but clearly this is not the year. This year, we are just going to let it slide
again. I don’t “think” I am being
rebellious about it. I hope I’m
not. But I am just not up to it. Especially since the last Christmas we had
together, was the one where Paxton cried out “Nana, I missed you!” when he saw
me and brought both me and his Mama to a puddle of tears. He had just turned two and I had hardly heard
him say a single word you could understand and suddenly he throws out an entire
sentence. That is all I have been able
to think about for a week. So when and
if Christmas comes back – it is going to have to look a whole lot different.
Thanksgiving however, was actually good --better than I
could have hoped. We had fourteen which
is way above our normal Thanksgiving crowd.
I had a long-time friend and her daughter come that I had not seen in
twelve years. That was a pleasant
surprise and she and I had a really nice catch up visit for the entire
weekend.
Brian’s only daughter and first grandchild came – a bitter
sweet time for both of us. This was the
first time she had been back to our house since the Memorial Service the week after
they all died. It was difficult for her
I know but I am hoping that now that that hurdle has been scaled, it will get
easier for her and we will begin to see more of her and the baby. All in
all, it was an enjoyable family gathering.
Speaking of family gatherings, this house has always been the
family gathering spot. We have a lot of
space and it has been great for entertaining.
Problem is that is what all of us see here now. Every family thing we have ever had included
Brian and for many years – just Brian.
We have had Sunday Dinners, cookouts and egg hunts, fishing and
canoeing, swimming and hiking. We have held
every Christmas, Easter, Thanksgiving, Memorial Day, July 4 and Labor Day celebration that was held
--here. All of the grandchildren learned to swim here, caught their first fish
here, climbed their first tree here. This is where three little boys and me camped
out in the back yard - for about two hours before they said, “Nana, camping was
FUN!! Now let’s go inside.”
There are so many memories here both good and bad. We’ve been snowed in together without power for
a week here during the only blizzard I have ever experienced in over 60 years. This is where Brian’s oldest son got snake
bit on my birthday the year he was two. The
boys worked side by side with Donald and I as we built our very rustic barn
from a hundred year old oak tree that fell on the property. And the boys and Donald spent weeks building an
apartment for my mother in the bonus room over a detached garage and that was
where she moved into and spent the last four years of her life.
We have taken 20 plus years of family milestone photographs here including
prom pictures, graduation pictures, first car pictures, first fish pictures, wedding pictures and baby pictures.
This has been the home that has always drawn a crowd and
over the years we have hosted well over seven thousand people here for various
functions. Think about that just a minute....
For the last three years of
my mother’s life I hosted a party for all of her retiree friends that she
worked with for over thirty years. I have
had cookouts and picnics for forty plus friends and co-workers at the last three
places I worked at. We have held over 100 weddings here and at
least half-dozen baptisms and of course every single family holiday was here.
For the past twenty three years this is where we have called
home and it has truly been the first place that I ever really felt “at home” safe and like I belonged. The roots we planted ran deep. Since living here we
have loved and then buried twenty years of family pets and here we have experienced
every stage of our family’s life – watching as our family has grown
exponentially from a family of five to a family of twenty one.
But this is also where we were when the world came crashing
down on us. This is where I collapsed
in a puddle in my bedroom floor surrounded by a steady flow of tears and
prayers as together both immediate family and church family learned the details
about the loss of my son, my daughter in law and the baby I adored.
This is where I became intimately familiar
with the fuzz in the dark corners of my closet floor as I reeled in shock
and tried to absorb all that had happened.
This is where hundreds of friends and family flowed in and out for the
following week bringing food, words of comfort, prayers, cards, and support however
we needed it. This is also where I was
stared at everywhere we went for the months that followed. This is where we felt deserted and
disillusioned as most of the same friends that had been here that first week seemed to drop off the radar and have never set foot here again. This is where total strangers and casual business
acquaintance asked questions and pressed for details prying open the gaping gashes torn in my heart.
This is where the guy that was so enthusiastic about getting to cut
our grass and do some landscaping for us asked around and found out we were “those people” and suddenly
refused to show up or take my calls anymore. This
is where for fifteen months my granddaughter and my oldest son have refused to
come back to because of the sad reminders that will always connect them to the
worst day of their lives leaving me feeling lost and abandoned and not knowing
what to do because though that is true for all of us --this was my home.
It once seemed like home to our entire family.
It once seemed like home to our entire family.
It's sad that it doesn't feel like home here anymore.
Labels:
Birthday,
Celebration,
Christmas,
family loss,
grandchild,
great grand child,
memories,
thanksgiving,
Tragedy
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)