Friday, December 23, 2016

Not So Merry Christmas

I can almost smell her breakfast casserole now
My body still sleeping, but my senses fully awake
The delightful scents coming from the kitchen are my alarm clock for today

She is already up, frolicking about our home, preparing for this glorious day ahead
Oh, Christmas. One of my mother's most favorite holidays

My mom was never one to plan ahead, but when it came to Christmas decorations, preparation started as soon as holiday items hit the shelves
She spent weeks transforming our home into a winter wonderland
Whimsical elves hanging from every nook and cranny, 4 foot tall Santa greeting you when you walked in the door, the Christmas Village consuming every ounce of space left on the kitchen bar

There was no such thing as "too extravagant" when it came to Christmas in her book

I loved how much time and effort she poured into every Christmas to always kept the spirit of the season alive
She continued to address our presents "From Santa", hide the pickle in the tree on the eve, and truly out-do herself with an abundance of food and surprises

In the years since her passing, I have boycotted my once favorite holiday
The wound of her absence growing more raw as the days before Christmas dwindle away

The thought of celebrating such a joyous holiday without her carries an overwhelming abundance of sadness and guilt

The last two years of Christmas, I have spent them surrounded by other's traditions, trying my best to fight the emerging waterfall of hysteria looming behind my eyes

My once "whole" family was broken and divided by the tragedy and grief
The holiday season ensued more pain than joy and the thought of doing it without the person who made it the most celebrated time of the year was almost more than we could bare

Three Christmases later, and this is the first year I have willingly uncovered some of the decorations she once used from their cardboard homes in the basement
I have placed them around our house in her honor
Though it sends a painful twinge to the root of my gut, like alcohol poured over my open wound, I know it would make her proud

The important parts of my family have mended themselves and this year, we will be celebrating together, just as I know my mom would have wanted

When my mother died, the joy I found in Christmas went right along with her.
Christmas has never and will never be the same without her and slowly, I am learning to accept that

There is joy in the love that surrounds me and I feel blessed to be surrounded by so much of it.
I am grateful for the traditions and memories created with my mother that I am able to carry with me always and share with my own family one day

Christmas was our favorite because it was hers, and though grief through the holidays is inevitable, we will find joy in the day knowing she isn't so far away
                                                                 . . . . . . . .
"Grief, I've learned, is really just love. It's all the love you want to give but cannot. All of that unspent love gathers up in the corners of your eyes, the lump in your throat, and in that hollow part of your chest. Grief is just love with no place to go."












Monday, June 20, 2016

The Day That Wasn't Like Every Other

Eyelids closed, tear stained cheeks
Face burning with emotion, disbelief, and rage
My heart beating but my brain has shut down

I can't believe you're gone

Set free from the pain
Eternally healed from the invasive disease that destroyed you
I am both relieved and shocked
My mind not allowing myself to catch up with the reality that was unfolding before my eyes

June twentieth. Staring me down from the looming calendar tacked to the wall next to me
I remember three years ago just as it would have happened yesterday
You can't erase memories like that

June 20, 2013
On one of the rainiest summers I have in my memory, this day was the most beautiful of them all
Scorching heat with equal parts humidity, not a cloud in the sky
This day, it did not rain
Instead, the sun shined, flowers stretched their petals towards the beaming light
People, emerging from their Netflix binges, enjoyed a day outdoors

Our days started early and were filled with watching, waiting, and routine
Your Hospice nurse arrived right on time
She listened to your beating heart, vital signs showing no indication of the events that would unfold later that day
She gave you a good report. Considered you "stable",even,
and went on her way

Everyone that had been lingering for weeks, watching your every breath, standing over you like a hawk
On this particular day, all of those people left
With errands to be done, and people to be seen
A strange sense of stability was in the air.
We were told you wouldn't survive your first night spent in the hospital nearly 3 years prior, but here you were
Tough as nails, still holding on with all you had left
Why would today be any different than the rest?

A fresh college graduate with no "real" job, most of my days were spent with you
Tending to your every need alongside family members and friends
Your life was my life

With little time for anything else, I found my release in an afternoon's run
...sometimes two, depending on the day

Running from my anxiety, stress, and fears
I ran from the cancer taking over your body, taking over our lives
I ran from reality, as far as I could
Pumping my arms through the pain of the inevitable
A run cleansed my soul, renewing my strength for the day ahead
With sweat running down my face and legs shaking in exhaustion,
I could finally breathe

On this day, with the sun shining high, I yearned for a mid-day run
In the dead of the South's afternoon heat, I needed a few stifling moments to myself
Your condition became a roller coaster
Becoming more and more unpredictable in each passing day
Up and down, round and round
Thrusting us forward, then throwing us back
It sat heavy on our minds
We held our breath and released days later

My oldest sister was on watch for the day
We alternated shifts sitting in the recliner next to your make-shift hospital room in our home
Today was going to be like the one before
Unpredictable, oppressive
The only thing was, that day was not like any other
As I walked into your room to give you a quick kiss before my run,
Tennis shoes laced, hair pulled back tight
Everything quickly became far from any other day
The rise and fall of your pulsing chest was thrown off
A breath, followed a long pause, then another breath
Setting off an alarm in my brain, allowing reality to sink in for only a moment

It sent me whirling into a panic, pointing it out to my sister who had been sitting by her side
She jumped to her feet, seeing what I was seeing, she told me to call everyone back home
This was it

It was as though you had been planning it all this time
Waiting for the house to still, for the most beautiful day
Waiting for the perfect time to just let go

I wasn't ready, though I know you were

I get this question all the time and the answer is always no; her death amongst a lingering illness did not prepare me any more or less to an untimely or "unexpected" death
Because you are never ready to lose the ones you love, no matter how prevalent the end of their life may be
You are never prepared, never expecting
Never waiting for their time to be up
For the memories to stop, for their last breath to be breathed
No matter how young, how old, how sick, or how well
No amount of time or space could ever prepare you for that moment

And as I sit here three years later and reflect on the day that the earth stood still
The day the clocks stopped ticking,
The day that stopped us dead in our tracks, the day that changed our lives forever
I look back with only happy memories of you
I know we are both in a better place now

I am gracious to the earth for sending us a true angel. One that we were able to call "Mom"
One that undoubtedly made the world a better place
One that did not pay mind to race or religion,
Rich or poor, gay or straight
One that taught us everyone on this planet with a beating heart mattered
One that spread joy and kindness, despite the pain she may have felt
She left a mark on this world and all of the people that she came in contact with

Her time spent here was not enough, but no amount of time would have been
Like a firework, she radiated light and showered the earth with her outpouring spirit
Providing a brief moment of happiness and awe that ended all too soon

Three years without you and you are still never far from my mind
A prayer away; a tear when it becomes too much
Forever our mother, forever our angel

Today is not like every other, and tomorrow will not be either
Because the day you left changed ours forever
And though things will never be the same, I will always look forward to the day ahead
Believing and knowing you made it a little brighter, a whole lot better
Carrying you with me through each phase of my life
Carrying out the life you taught us to live

Today may be a day like every other for you, but for myself and for everyone who had the blessing of knowing her,
It will be a day we will never forget

Love you forever



































Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Baby Steps

Have you ever experienced loss?
Maybe it was your first beloved goldfish
Or your last basketball game of the season
Maybe it was your grandmother, she was 95 after all
Loss is a part of living
We lose teeth, boyfriends
We lose games, homework, even our minds at times
Let’s be honest, no matter the loss, it downright sucks.
Most losses we never even see coming. You’re never ready to lose
At age 22, I was never ready to lose my mom. Not even close.
But then again, if I was 60 years old I would still be saying the same thing
Losing what you love hurts across the spectrum
Some impact your life more than others, but they hurt all the same, if even for a moment

How do you move forward after a loss?
Well the good news is, your teeth do grow back, so there’s that
And you will find a new boyfriend who you love more than the last
There will be plenty of games to win, so do not fret
Losing people is when it gets tricky;
Your life will be turned upside down, for a long time probably
Days will overflow and sometimes you may beg them to stop all together
You’ll lose your appetite while at the same time wanting to eat all the feelings you’ve acquired
You will fake laugh and eventually cry your eyes out to the brink of dehydration
But you WILL move forward
You will because those people you lost would want you to
And if that’s not a good enough reason, maybe it’s because you have a family that depends on you
Or just a dog, even
Maybe it’s your job
You have to move forward after loss because you just have to and that’s that


Losing hurts and it always will
But look down at your feet, and move them
Slowly at first
Eventually picking up the pace
Find something that pushes you into orbit again
You will be sad, yes,
But you are alive and life is meant to be lived while we have it
Through losses, through wins, life does begin again





Monday, January 11, 2016

Fight or Flight

It's crazy how the human senses work
One whiff of a perfume,
One taste of a treat,
The sound of a voice
Can send your brain sailing back to a precise moment in time
The images of your past, for a brief moment, flashing across your brain like a projector screen
It's like you could close your eyes and go back
Touch the person, relive that memory just one more time

The human body, made up of millions of cells and complex systems
All working together in perfect synchrony to keep your heart pumping, your brain functioning
The human body is constantly working in our favor, fighting to keep things in working order
A fever: your body's way of heating up to fight against infection
A shiver: an autonomic reaction created to help generate and preserve heat

Our bodies also protect us from grief and psychological pain
Though not caused by a burn or a sting, the same areas of the brain are activated to protect us from deep emotional pain
Traumatic memories are suppressed, extended periods of time are erased
Your body does what it has to do to get you through the toughest of times

I think back and attempt to recall the year after my mother's death, yet there are few memories I can retrieve
What did I do that year? Where did I go?
I was with people, I was going places that my brain will never admit
Disconnecting me from all of those around me, it stayed deep within the soul of the one I lost
My feet moved, my heart beat, but without me ever really knowing why

Our grief is real, it aches worse than any other physical pain ever experienced
But the sun still rises and the sun still falls
And our bodies are here to make sure we keep up with it

To say I haven't been happy since her passing would be a lie
Though at that time, I never thought I would be again
I've made great memories, smiled because I meant it
To be honest, some days I even forget it ever happened at all

But, today is a Tuesday, two and some odd years after the passing of my mother
and for no apparent memory or reason, my heart aches
Grief has crept in and resided deep within the core of my being
A flash of her smile, the pitch of her voice
It's like she just left this world a few days ago and my body is weighed down with her loss

I live in the constant yo-yo of grief
Riding its high's and rolling with the low's
I imagine this is how the rest of my life will be, and I am okay with that
The grief means she was there. That it did happen after all
That my pain in her death exists because she was so alive

A flash of blonde hair
The tune of a song
I'll keep her in my memories for as long as she belongs