Tuesday, December 27, 2022

The Rhythm of Rest

I’m surprised to realize that I welcomed beauty today.

I didn’t even realize how much I leaned into the refreshing tranquility it offered until I’d drunk it in for a few hours. I’ve heard other bereaved hearts describe the first time after devastation that their blurry eyes recognized an emerging bloom, but it’s been so long since I took peaceful loveliness for granted that I didn’t notice I was breathing it in.

There is both relief and a new sorrow in the mix of my discovery. Such is the symphony of grief.

Arizona’s belated autumns, as they arrive here in the desert in December, have transformed the full, broad arms of the tranquil ash tree beyond my fenced enclosure into a vibrant painting of golden leaves-in-waiting. Tonight, a winter storm arrives and the remaining, shimmering bangles now clattering together on the tree’s lengthy limbs will surely lie wet and downtrodden on tomorrow’s patio, leaving the ash barren and undressed until February’s spring. We march to the beat of a different drummer here. Our version of Americana only confuses Currier & Ives.

The Sonoran Desert doesn’t care anything about acceptable timetables or the approved behaviors set by social mores though. It does what feels right and distrusts anything which challenges its own inner wisdom. “You be you” is the heartcry of our temperate climate.

Maybe that’s why I love the desert so. We have the same maverick soul.

The sun, so far to the south this time of year, spreads softened rays across an overcast sky, making the golden ash appear more brilliant by contrast. Now and then a weary leaf flutters to the earth, its departure serenaded by a gentle melody played on the wind chimes, and the breeze behind it all whispers past my face as I sit inside my house, taking it all in.

It’s an invitation to learn the rhythm of rest. To drink in this morning’s beauty even as, in truth, it represents another kind of death—another passing season before new life emerges again.

I can only hope the same for me and my own bruised heart.

Thursday, December 15, 2022

Parlez-vous Francais?

All my life I’ve wanted to know how to speak French. It’s a beautiful, melodic language, but it’s pretty impractical here in the southwest where even my doctor’s office has only two sets of recordings—one in English and the other in Spanish. It’s beyond me why I wasn’t born in Louisiana or Canada except that I wanted to be close to my mother at birth.

I don’t know where the inspiration to be fluent en francais came from. It’s not like I look good in berets or striped socks. I don’t even like fine wine. Or cheap wine, either. But in high school I found out French was an elective, so I signed up right away. For three years. And never became fluent. Fifteen years ago I went after that dream again at community college and signed up right away. For three semesters. I’m still not fluent.

Unless I decide to go live in France and immerse myself in the language and culture, I will never  become fluent enough to turn down cooked snails in a fancy restaurant.

Immersion is the key to understanding and absorbing a foreign language. You can’t learn it from a book as easily as you can by breathing it and living it day in and day out. Some people are adept at learning other languages. The top student in my college French class was a young woman who came from Taiwan. Mandarin Chinese was her native tongue, and because of that she can read a Chinese newspaper fluently. She also speaks Korean, Italian, German, and English. She was a Mandarin Chinese speaking woman who learned French in America in an English-speaking classroom using a book written with an English alphabet.

She’s brilliant. And I’ve never met anyone else like her. She is fluent in French.

My takeaway from all of this is that there are three ways to make French your second language. You can be born in a Francophile country or state where the language will naturally become your native tongue. You can reside in a Francophile country where no one speaks English and be forced to learn French or starve. Or you can make the rest of us jealous with your rare ability to pick up languages easily.

After my third college semester, I dropped out of French class. I still wanted to converse in French, but I was busy with the rest of my life and thought if I bought enough French instruction books at Barnes and Noble, keeping those volumes on my bookshelf would make me fluent. I’m sorry to say that no one learns French by osmosis.

For nearly two years now, I have been learning another language by immersion. It is the language of grief. I never wanted to become fluent in such a thing, but I was thrown into its culture headlong and forced to live with it day in and day out. At first, I didn’t understand any aspect of how it works. The only person who could translate it for me was the counselor I began meeting with. She told me things like, “There are no shortcuts.” And, “The only way through it is through it.” I wanted the Cliff Notes version so I could get back to my life, but she only smiled and shook her head, knowing I was new at this. “This will be a slog through grief,” she told me.

It was not good news.

So I began writing about it. Processing my thoughts and feelings and experiences with the one friend I’ve been able to count on for most of my life—journaling. I am never judged by the words I put down on paper. My laptop never interrupts me or tries to fix me when I’m trying to sort out my heart’s brokenness. Writing down how I feel when I don’t understand how I feel is as much therapy for me as meeting with my counselor. In fact, I take notes while she and I talk and when we finish, I write down everything she tells me. Because it’s that important. Still, no one knows how to navigate grief and survive a shattered heart unless they’ve lived here themselves, immersed in this culture of pain and confusion. Even my professional counselors, though they can guide me, say they are learning from me, too.

I bought books, of course, at first. I tried to absorb the advice of experts, some of whom had never lost their husband and best friend before. When I bogged down reading them, I put them on my bookshelf and hoped for osmosis again. Eventually, I donated all of them and wrote down my thoughts instead.

Because I live here, in Sadness, as I explained in my very first blog post after Rob died, I know firsthand how it feels to co-exist with deep grief. I’ve learned that I have to make space for the heartache. I can’t ignore it, or it will eat me alive. I can’t postpone it. Or silence it. Or wrap it up in a box and shove it under the bed. Even more than all of that, I’m discovering that grief is important. I cannot, even after these twenty-two months of living without Rob in my world, fully comprehend that he is gone. How could I? He’s been my life for forty-eight years. I still reach for my phone to see if he’s sent me a text. Or for a split second think I should let him know I arrived safely at my destination. And hope this is some elaborate, lengthy bad dream instead of my horrible truth.

There is a protection in the way we are made that will only allow such a devastating truth to be absorbed slowly. I guess it's easier for those on the outside to accept that Rob is gone and not coming back. But his departure isn’t a side issue for me. It has rearranged my entire life, leaving me without direction. The daily grief I experience is one way my mind and soul and even my brain are ever so slowly adapting to the harsh truth of my husband’s loss.

I’ve discovered something else important, too. I’m not a lousy Christian just because this is taking so long. Though Jesus was a man well acquainted with grief, he doesn’t remove the pain for us when we become intimates with it, too. Instead, he stays close by, proving why he is so well acquainted with it. You know what else I’ve noticed about him when I’m overwhelmed with sorrow? He rarely says anything to me. He doesn’t give me advice. He never ever judges me. He just stays with me even if I can’t feel anything but my anguish and even if his presence changes nothing.

I think Jesus is fluent in grief. And though I would give almost anything to cut this whole educational experience short so I will stop hurting so much, he isn’t very concerned about making that happen. He’s not rushing me through this process. He’s not disappointed by how difficult I find it to be. He doesn’t think I’m failing at faith. He just stays with me. He lets me say what I need to say even if it’s not socially acceptable, and never condemns me for any of it. He’s not looking for performance from me. He knows how much this hurts.

To my great surprise, even though I’ve yelled at him for being so silent, begging him to say something, I’m discovering that in his silence there is full acceptance of how I am experiencing this pain. Which makes sense to me when I stop to think about it. His love and acceptance of me has never depended on my performance. It has simply depended on him.

I don’t think I’ll ever go to France to focus my attention on their language and culture. I’d have to stay there permanently so I could find someone to speak French with. I’ve learned enough in foreign language classes to help me understand the course I’m immersed in right now. 

Sometimes we’re just navigating in the dark without a flashlight.

La vie et un voyage au milieu de la nuit.






Merci beaucoup to Terence Faircloth for permission to use his photo seen above. The original can be viewed on his site by following this link: French Woman in Blue Beret | Mural by A-A-Ron aka @ag_pnt se… | Flickr

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Thursday, December 8, 2022

In The Shadows of Courage

There are people who understand how to come alongside someone who is up to their armpits in battle. It’s a rare gift, and I know myself well enough to recognize that I used to be more comfortable supporting people from a distance (which might be a contradiction in terms) than I was standing so near I could see their lips quiver. At that distance, reality is too close for comfort.

Any kind of support helps. There are so many unspoken needs when death comes to call. I finally get why people supply food or gift cards for meals at the first whisper of loss. You have to eat, but when you can barely breathe there’s no energy left for cooking. I’ve learned everyone is different. Some people are comforted by flower arrangements, but I discovered that, for me, they were painful reminders. Live plants were different. Somehow, they brought hope. Against all odds I kept (most of) them alive, almost like their thirst gave me purpose when my world was gone.

All the ways people tried to fill the gaps left in our shattered lives made us feel loved and remembered. We saw the empathy and compassion underlying each thoughtful expression, like the friend whose bagpipe rendition of Amazing Grace suddenly filled the air one afternoon in Katy’s front yard. Dressed in full Scottish regalia, she stood in solidarity with her pipes and with us.

I’ve mentioned this several times before, but it’s worth bringing up again. Sorrow doesn’t lessen when the rush to comfort wanes. I know people must return to their own lives, responsibilities, and personal heartaches once the flowers are thrown out and the shock wears off. It has to be that way. This is a broken world. Death visits all of us, and other crises as well. We each have our own burdens to bear. And even if we love one another deeply, no one can walk through personal grief except the grieving. I alone feel what I feel, as painful and difficult as it is. No one knows what losing Rob has cost me except me. But in the lifelong aftermath, the road feels lonely.

And here is where things get a little tricky. This is where the desire to see someone’s pain end begins. Where we want them to go back to normal, for their sake as well as for ours. It’s hard to watch while someone tries to figure out how to build a new life they didn’t ask for. We want to fix them. And maybe we even want them to stop reminding us that no one is immune to extreme suffering.

So, we might try our hand at cheerleading. Judgment is the next step in that parade. The temptation to stop the tears or change the subject or see someone smile, or dissuade our own anxiety, comes out sounding like this. “Just trust in God and have faith.” “Everything happens for a reason.” “Look on the bright side.” “Things are going to get better.” “At least . . . . .” “Keep a positive attitude.” “This was God’s will.” “God is in control and we have to trust Him.” And then there’s my personal favorite, actually said to me a few weeks after I lost Rob. “Don’t set up a tent in the Valley of the Shadow of Death.”

Yeah. I know. We were lied to as kids. Words hurt a lot worse than sticks and stones.

I have spent enough time now as a widow that I’ve learned to expect criticism. It comes disguised as concern but only underscores how isolated this slog through grief feels. I don’t expect people to understand how I feel or what all the challenges are unless they’ve been here. I was widowed fairly young, so right now I’m surrounded by more spectators than club members. It’s just the way it is. First out of the chute, so to speak.

But there are those rare friends who know how to come alongside.

I just took a trip back to Florida because of a happy event. Rob’s youngest sister got married. I wanted to be there for a lot of good reasons. Still, I knew the experience would challenge me to the max. There are a lot of moving parts to flying across country on your own, for example. Things I didn’t used to think about. Rob was always there to help with the ridiculous amount of luggage I carried. He booked hotel rooms. Rented cars. Did the driving without getting us lost. Slept beside me in the unfamiliar bed. Was my soundboard and dinner companion and favorite comedian when things got crazy. Now all of that fell on me in finite detail, or was absent entirely, and I was afraid.

At this point, twenty-one months after losing him, I’ve put nearly forty thousand miles on my new Tahoe. By comparison, you might think flying sounds easier. But this trip, back to the town where we brought two kids into the world, where he established part of a career that he left behind when we moved to Arizona, and we built our first home—this time I knew I was in for a hurricane of triggers. And some of my friends and family knew it, too. They knew when I visited his grave on my own for the first time that it would be beyond difficult. That every street where I drove would remind me of the beginnings of us at a time when I grapple with the fallout from the end of us. That I would watch my sister-in-law walk an aisle on the arms of a friend instead of her father, supported by her mother and sisters but devoid of all three brothers.

While I stepped out on faith and challenged more fears, in the shadows of my courage stood a couple of friends who have never left my side. Honestly, I didn’t know what they were up to. I was so anxious about what I was dealing with within myself that I didn’t see them there. One by one, as each worrisome need was met and I moved on to the next, they stood silently and held me up. I wasn’t aware of how much they were doing. I thought I was the one doing it all, on my own, checking off each thing as I got through it.

It wasn’t until I added up the sum of their texts and phone calls and follow-up chats that I realized they had both anticipated what I was up against and prayed in detail for my success. They asked for things I hadn’t even thought of but which turned a fearful challenge into an unexpected gift of connection, confidence, and redemption. The details are personal, but these friends who know me well were able to stand alongside and hold me up when my self-assurance was anemic.

They weren't the only ones. Between my children's support and a few others who wrote encouraging words in various ways, I felt the love that reminded me I was on the minds and hearts of others. But every time someone full of their own heartache steps into the shadows of my courage to hold me up, this is what I think about:

I don’t think I’ve ever been a friend like that. 

I am astonished at the devotion of someone who prays again and again the way these women do. It cannot be easy to be a friend of mine right now. It’s not easy to be me right now. Sadness companions me—I’m not exactly the life of the party. Because I’m up to my armpits in a battle of survival and rebuilding and overcoming. Sometimes my arms get weary. My heart is weak. My soul cannot bear the thought of any more tears. I’m.Just.So.Tired.

And that’s the moment when, like Aaron and Hur did for Moses, a friend appears on each side and holds me up.

Slowly, the tide turns. Energy restores. Hope surfaces. And I begin to believe I will survive this. Not because anyone said the right thing. There is no right thing to say. Nor because I rose to the challenge on my own, because I didn't. It's just because someone knew that the best thing they could do, all that I needed, was for them to stand beside me. Even if it means standing in the shadows.

May I be a friend like that someday, too.







With thanks to Ben Seidelman for the lovely photo seen above. The original can be viewed by following this link:

Thursday, December 1, 2022

To B or not To B

We never talked about what I should do if Rob went first. 

We only talked about the smallest details of funerals and burials, and how we didn’t really care much about a lot of hoopla. It was whatever the other wanted and needed to do. Rob wanted his name on a marker in the family plot in Sarasota, even if he was cremated or buried somewhere else. And he wanted a special song that he once played for me which I didn’t write down and needed a miracle to remember later on. Beyond that, I didn’t want to talk about it. I told him not to let some hellfire and brimstone preacher run my funeral. Find someone who understood the fathomless love of God and speak hope and encouragement to the grieving.

That's it. That was our plan. He dies. Or I die. Have this song. Don’t have that preacher. Put his name on a headstone in Sarasota. And I didn’t know where I wanted my remains to remain. There was no Plan B. There wasn’t much of a Plan A.

I'm not sure if we really had a plan.

Because I didn’t want to talk about something that sad. I didn’t want to think that I might lose him someday. Or ever. And I didn’t want to think that my life could be cut short. I told him we were in this together to the end – let’s kick off side by side. I thought we could arrange that without breaking the law or jeopardizing our salvation. Just grow old together and die hand in hand of natural causes.

Too bad life doesn’t include your requests when it hands you over to death. It’s all out of your hands at that point. Control is an illusion anyway. And making plans for a funeral is, by contrast, the easy part. Surviving the rest of your life without your darling is where the hard comes in. Maybe we should have talked a little bit about that. Even if it made me cry. There’s plenty of crying now. I wish I’d figured that out beforehand.

There were a lot of things we should have talked about. After all, forty-four years of marriage is a pretty long run even if you start early like we did. We’d both had scares. Several. We also had some bad information. Like, God always performs miracles. No. He doesn't. He did for all those earlier scares. Just not for this one. This one ended badly.

I wish I’d known more detail about Rob’s feelings regarding life support. I wish he’d used that superior intellect of his to help me figure out where I’d live if the unthinkable happened, no matter where we were living at the time. I wish he’d written down all of his computer passwords. I’ve said this before, but I wish I’d forced him to tell me on camera that he loved me and always would.

I wish I’d scratched his back more. I wish I’d made him gingersnaps and spice cake and snickerdoodles every month. I wish I’d let him take me to Paris. I wish I’d gotten on a plane by myself, flown to a big city, rented a car, and driven to the sticks by myself just so I’d know that I could. He always wanted me to do that.

I did that. This week, I did that. I know he’s proud of me. And also, he knew I could do it all along. He just wanted me to know I could do it.

I can do it.

I’m doing all of it. I had to figure out the Plan B on my own, with the help of my children. I had to make hard calls while he was incapacitated in the hospital. I had to face my fears and walk this grief journey alone. Not that I don’t have support. It’s just that when you grieve, no one else can feel the loss you suffer except you.

Maybe he and I couldn’t have come up with Plan B. We barely came up with Plan A. But sometimes, when the comparison train rolls by and I notice how some couples have months and even years together handling longterm illness before one of them passes on, I feel a little jealous. I know that’s another kind of hard and horrible road to travel, but I can’t help but wish we’d had time to talk before he left. There wasn’t any talking. Now there’s only guessing. And hoping I’m going to keep figuring out Plan B, the plan I never wanted to talk about. How to go on living without Rob beside me.

They say an ostrich sticks its head in the sand so it won’t have to look at what’s going on around it. Pretending that nothing bad is happening even if it is. It turns out that’s just a myth. What they really do is dig a hole in the dirt with their heads so they can make a nest. They prepare for the future. It only looks like they’re ignoring the present.

Maybe if I’d understood what ostriches are really doing, I’d have prepared myself better for what I’m forced to live out today. I’d have understood Rob’s insight when he joked that we’re all terminal. Or possibly I’d have realized that the price of deep love will someday be deep, profound grief.

And then again, maybe not. After all, “life is what happens to you while you’re busy making plans.”

We lived life, he and I. We lived it well and long. And when the end came, we faced it with courage. Together. The same way we did everything. 

Hand in hand, after all. Which was the plan.









With thanks to Sven-Kare Evenseth for the captivating photo seen above. The original can be viewed by following this link: Ostrich | Ostrich at Kristiansand Dyrepark (zoo). | Sven-KÃ¥re Evenseth | Flickr

Friday, November 11, 2022

Lost On The 202

Okay. I’ll admit it. 

I am directionally challenged.

It’s no exaggeration that I can get turned around in a parking lot. Most of the time, it’s such a win to find my car after I step outside that I forget which road brought me to the grocery store. If I exit east instead of south, I could spend twenty minutes traveling the wrong way and wondering why the mountains are missing. Soon I’m driving ever-widening circles, like a Labrador Retriever searching for a stick in a pond.  

Don’t judge me. You’re not perfect either.

The problem, I think, is that I’m a visual learner. I navigate by landmarks. And because I’m visual and the Phoenix area is laid out on a grid that I carry around in my mind, north is always whatever direction I’m facing. Actually, that’s true no matter where I am. Even if Siri says she’s tired of recalculating and that I’m about to cross a state line, I never believe her. She doesn’t know the shortcuts like I do.

I don’t think this is all my fault. Rob was a superior navigator, but he was also a superior elaborator. Once or twice my eyes may have rolled back in my head while he described every billboard and street sign I’d pass between our house and that little café in Taos where we ate breakfast that one time, remember?

All I asked for was directions to Costco.

So, between the immobile, north-facing grid in my brain and the years of training I’ve received in landmark recognition, you can see why I always get lost, especially on the 202. It’s not logical, but it’s predictable. Especially to my daughter.

Katy has been my emergency contact ever since she went to college and learned first-hand how to navigate the freeway systems here. It’s her cross to bear. She once drew a map of every highway crisscrossing the Phoenix Metro area for me on a napkin. It’s like she engineered them herself. And when she was done, I still couldn’t figure out why we need the 202 if we already have the 101. Now they’re talking about finishing the 303.

Mind. Blown.

I can’t keep these freeways all straight in my head, especially when I must use one of them to get to another one. It’s like looking at a bowl of alphabet soup, only with numbers. They float here, they float there, there are numbers everywhere. I’m a word person. If you want me to find my way to you, give that freeway a name I can understand. Something logical, like “Cow Pasture To Saguaro Lake Road.” If that had happened last week when I took Rob’s sister and brother-in-law on a tour of our desert foliage, we’d have never started singing that Kingston Trio song about the guy who spent the rest of his life lost on a subway system.

See? He wasn’t even driving and he couldn’t get off that track. It’s not just me. 

The 202 has been my nemesis ever since they built it and told us to use it. As Katy explained to me with that napkin, the 202 freeway is a loop. One minute you’re driving east and the next you’re circling north. Which means if you stay on this freeway for very long, you’ll have two chances to exit onto the same street. They’ll just be five or ten miles apart. If you ask me, that’s confusing. And stupid.

The other problem is that I think all we ever needed was the 101. The 101 goes north and south. It doesn’t curve. I don’t think. But now that there’s a 202 circling everything like Christmas tree lights, I never know which one of those numbers I should be driving on. So, I just pick one and try to make it work. Which doesn’t work.

And that’s how Risa and Fred and I ended up singing that Kingston Trio song. We were trying not to panic. I’ll admit we could have picked a more cheerful song to bolster our spirits when I couldn’t find our exit. As I mentioned, that guy in the song is still circling Boston on a subway while his wife shows up every afternoon and tosses a sandwich through the window so he won’t starve to death.

But I digress.

I just wanted to show off some beautiful desert landscaping to my out-of-town guests. I also wanted to avoid all the traffic on the one road which would have led us straight there—Ellsworth. Everybody here hates Ellsworth Road. And, thanks to Katy, I knew a shortcut. A shortcut to the 202. The amazing freeway that hates me and will always disgrace me in front of people I want to impress. That shortcut. I wasn’t sure where I would make the transfer to the 101 so I could skip all the delays and rejoin Ellsworth Road later, but I was confident that I’d know it when I saw it.

Risa and Fred and I sailed along the shortcut, joined the 202 without incident, and merged into high-speed traffic, all while I acted like I knew what I was doing. I saw the big green signs telling me I could go east onto the 60 or west onto the 60. The 60 east didn’t feel right. I was pretty sure that one takes you to New Mexico. I remembered driving west on the 60 a few times and taking the 202 north from there. I eased into the lanes that would lead to complete humiliation and pretended nothing was wrong, cheerfully chatting with Risa while I did it.

She’s not falling for that anymore.

I thought if I went west that it would lead to the 202 north which would take me to Ellsworth which was east of us. I realize you probably don’t live here and are getting a brain cramp trying to keep track of the road map I’m drawing. In cooking terms, here’s what happened. I put a bag of flour in a hot oven and ten minutes later I pulled it out, adding two beaten eggs and a bottle of ketchup with the mistaken belief that this would result in a beautiful pork tenderloin.

See? 

We finally found our way after I called Katy in a panic, which is my typical MO. “Mom,” she said in a carefully controlled voice, “you were already on the 202. You didn’t need to exit until you reached University Drive.”

“But I thought the 202 ended at the 60 east and the 60 west,” I said in disbelief. “It split like a wishbone! Do you mean it wasn’t forcing me off the road?” It’s unfortunate for Katy that she’s so much like her dad and inherited both his perfect sense of direction as well as his perfect astonishment over how I’ve survived as a human being. Well, it’s not my fault. As I’ve been telling you, all we ever needed was a 101.

Fred and Risa thought the desert was lovely, especially after we were safely back at my house. And I assured them that the PTSD they suffered while trapped in my truck will recede over time. Probably. They seemed reluctant to ride with me anymore, though, preferring after that to use their rental car. I guess they just don’t like shortcuts.

“Not the 202! Please don’t make us take the 202!” they said in unison when they asked me how to get to a gas station.

Well, that’s just silly. There aren’t any gas stations on the 202. They’re all on the 101. Or Ellsworth. I’d know them if I saw them.

Maybe I should go along for the ride.

 

 

 

And now, with apologies to the Kingston Trio for desecrating their smash hit, M.T.A., this one’s for Fred and Risa. Your bravery knows no bounds.

 

I want to tell you all the story of a gal named Eula
Longing for a desert view
She topped off the gas tank, headed up to Ellsworth
And the onramp for the 202.

 

Well, did she ever return?
No, she never returned and her fate is still unlearned
(What a pity)
She may drive forever searching for that exit
Lost on the 202.

 

She could have called her daughter for a simple explanation
Of the way to get off that loop,
But Eula was a native, so pride became her downfall
Now she’s dizzy on the 202.

 

But did she ever return?
No, she never returned and her fate is still unlearned
(Shame and Scandal)
She may drive forever round that loop of Phoenix
Lost on the 202.

 

It’s a tragic story that could have been avoided
If she’d checked out a map or two
And I’ll bet you that she worries that she’s runnin’ out of gas
Lost on the 202.

 

Well, did she ever return?
No, she never returned and her fate is still unlearned
(It’s getting dicey)
That Tahoe is a gas hog, too bad it’s not a Prius,

Since she’s lost on the 202.







Thanks to VTrans for permission to use the scarified road sign photo seen above. Seemed appropriate. The original can be viewed by following this link: Scarified Road Sign | This is a photograph of a sign that re… | Flickr

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Breezy Thoughts


I’ll have a café-mocha vodka-valium latte to go, please.

The sarcastic quote stares back at me where it sits on the windowsill. It brings a smile every time I read it, especially this morning where I face the back pasture and process my thoughts, scattered as they are. A storm front is blowing through outside, clouds traverse a vivid blue sky, and a symphony orchestrated by the breeze wafts through the screen door as your favorite wind chimes sing in concert with the swaying of the trees and the sound of laughing children next door. And I think of you. How much we loved days like this, especially when they were lucky enough to land on a Sunday so you could chew your fingernails off and watch football while I curled up beside you on the sofa, your free arm wrapped around me, the smell of you filling me with comfort and safety.

All the memories. They’re all I have left of you. The painful, recent ones clammer for my attention and have been the focus of a fair amount of counseling so I can allow them to co-exist in my soul. But I need the happy memories to stand up and be counted more often. Finally they’re doing that. Last night I stood at my granite island in a new kitchen like you always wanted me to have and reminisced with your sister and her husband about the way you and I could laugh together until we couldn’t breathe, Which, of course, made us laugh, too.

Until we turned off the lights and went to our separate rooms where I cried. Memories. They confuse me. They make me miss you. All those years that you and I put our squirreled away resources into vacations with our children, weekend romps in the mountains, camping creekside with friends, I always told our less adventurous acquaintances that we didn’t care about the big houses and late model vehicles we couldn’t afford—we were making memories with our family and they’d be a treasure to me someday. A comfort if ever I was left alone without you. I’d read your cards and poems and feel your love for me again. And I do.

But I didn’t know how much aching, excruciating longing all those memories and mementos would carry with them at the same time. They are no substitute for you, my love.

Recently my counselor said to me that there’s nothing wrong with being sad. As a woman with a melancholy temperament, I know sad but I prefer laughter. I’ve avoided sad like the plague, you could say. You’re not really allowed to be sad in our culture anyway. You can’t go into Hobby Lobby or even Walmart without being bombarded by wall art and t-shirts and jewelry all telling you to be grateful, or thankful, or announcing that you’re blessed. You never see encouragement to be sad.  It wouldn’t sell.

“Being in a valley is an important part of life,” my counselor told me. “It shows the depth of our emotion. We wouldn’t recognize the mountain tops unless we’d been in the valleys.” I guess another thing about being in a valley, for me at least, is that I don’t want to be here despite what a few people think. Remember how I avoid sadness? Sadness hurts. I’ve been criticized for being here, which is unkind and ignorant. Maybe when some people look at me right now, they fear seeing their face in my place. I understand. I used to be that person, too.

That’s what sadness teaches you. Life and death are givens. When sorrow comes to stay, suffering pulls up a chair and the classroom of life has begun. The things I’ve learned since I lost you, the depths of insight that pain has given me, all of it has revealed things about myself that I never knew. They’ve unmasked things about God that I never knew. For years I feared being in this place of grief and did everything I could to learn about God without having to personally discover the intimacy that only arrives disguised in suffering.

I’ve learned I can survive terrible things. I can hear painful words and recognize the ignorance behind them. I can listen to my own wisdom and acknowledge its strength. I can hear the voice of God. I can sit with discomfort and allow things to work out the way they’re going to. I can even let things be. Let things go. I don’t have to be in control. Sometimes.

Still, all of this feels like a basic course in being human. And yet I started out describing the paradox of how painful and helpful the memories are since all the photos and random videos of you that make it so hard to believe you’re gone remind me that you aren’t going to come home again. I guess it all flows together. The very things that bring me comfort arrive packaged in pain. In longing. In a little more acceptance of what is. And a long sigh as I recognize that, while in time I will see you again, be with you again, it’s one more thing I must sit with in expectation and patience and heart aching longing, knowing I have no control over when that will happen.

I guess all of this sounds very sad. “You’ll be companioned by sadness,” my counselor also said. It was validating to hear considering how much toxic positivity flows through our culture. I guess the thing about sadness is that it tells the truth. It doesn’t let me shove difficult feelings out of sight to make others feel more comfortable or to avoid my distress. After all, I’m learning to sit with discomfort until it works itself out.

Still, when the memories roll in like a tsunami and I find myself flat on my back again, I’d rather be anywhere else but here. You know what I think about in hard times like that, though, seeing your beautiful, photographed eyes and that loving expression on your face as you look back at me? I think you know something I’m not allowed to see yet. And it will make up for all of this pain. Someday. Somehow.

Can I still have that vodka-valium latte while I think about that? 

Friday, October 14, 2022

Conspiracy Theory

3:30 a.m.

In the morning.

Asleep. By myself. In the dark. Oblivious to the haunting sound of heavy breathing, I ignored the CPAP machine running at full speed on my nightstand, choosing instead to remain unconscious. Unaware of any movement outside, I was immobilized by melatonin and serenaded by the mechanical droning of my white noise machine and a box fan set to Hurricane in the corner. My plan was obvious. I was determined to shelter in place in a medically induced coma for at least as long as my bladder could hold out.

I’m not afraid to sleep in my house alone. After all, I took karate for three years thirty years ago. Relying on a backward donkey kick would blow out a knee if I tried it now, but if I learned one thing from that scary sensei teaching me to count to ten in Japanese, it was how to yell really loud. Some talents never fade.

I was confident about the layers of protection I had in place, too. All my doors have dead bolts, I live in the country next door to my daughter’s home where nothing bad ever happens, and there are those karate skills I mentioned. There was no reason to behave like the paranoid city girl I’ve been all my life. So, when the neighbors suggested I tone down the LEDs in my front yard so they could enjoy some slumber, too, I was glad to oblige. We all need our sleep. Every night.

At 3:30 a.m.

In the morning.

Most of us.

Just not that guy who tried to pry open my garage door in the dark.

I’m not really a suspicious person except where the government is concerned. In that case, endued with an abundance of caution and some uncommon good sense, it doesn’t hurt my feelings at all when people laugh and call me a conspiracy theorist. That’s what they called Noah, too, right before it started to rain. I think I’m in good company.

Still, when the repairman said the only explanation for why a cable that’s supposed to be on the inside of the garage door now lay on the outside was that I’d been victimized, I thought he was a conspiracy theorist, too. I didn’t mind having something in common with a new friend, but I was shocked to hear that an opportunistic low life had tried to invade my sanctuary. I even tried to pretend it wasn’t true. For a minute.

Then I did the only thing I could think of to protect both my home and my person without blowing out a knee.

I bought a Ring doorbell. And had a second security camera installed high up under the eaves. Finally, I replaced all the outside lightbulbs with motion detectors. So I could sleep peacefully again. Alone. In the dark.

At 3:30 a.m.

Knowing that thieves are camera shy.

That was the theory anyway.

Right up until the alarm on my phone went off and woke me up out of a delicious dream where I was sharing a hot fudge sundae in a canoe with Harrison Ford, trying to locate its missing cherry. I was so startled by the terrifying sound of wind chimes in my ear that I nearly capsized my canoe and landed on the bedroom floor. If not for that CPAP hose keeping me tethered to the bed, I’d have blown out my knee anyway.

Instantly, I was wide awake. On high alert. Ready to dust off those karate skills and yell really loud. Or dial 9-1-1. Just as soon as I identified the intruder in my front yard where the Ring doorbell and security camera and motion detectors had caught the guy in the act and overruled ten milligrams of melatonin just to tell me about it.

Frantically, I scanned the live shot out the front door via Ring’s camera. Nothing. I switched to the security camera near the roof. Zilch. What the heck? There had to have been someone in my yard. I knew that windchimey melody by heart. Every time I walk outside to throw a bag of trash in the dumpster, it plays that theme song for the entire trip because it thinks I don’t know I’m the one who opened the front door.

Then I remembered. When I set the security camera recently to recognize only people (ignoring passing cars and pigeon-stalking cats,) it takes a video every time it spots someone, and this morning it did not disappoint. Sitting in the dark on my bed, my heartbeat set to fight or flight, I squinted at the recording showing a faintly lit driveway at the far end of my camera’s screen where, high in the eaves, the lens was focused.

“What is that?” I muttered, turning the camera sideways to get a larger view. Expecting to see someone with a crowbar jacking up the garage door again, I stared in confusion at the image. The bright outline of a lanky figure, illuminated by the blinding light from the security camera, seemed to move awkwardly across the driveway toward the garage door.

“I knew it!” I whispered, so the prowler wouldn’t hear. I’d been waiting for this to happen. That creep had come back and was going for it again. What nerve! But I was ready this time. After all, I was practically watching him in real time. There were lights above the garage, a spotlight from the camera, and a highly skilled karate expert’s eagle eye trained on his treachery courtesy of a seven second video delay. He didn’t have a chance.

But, his gait was so weird. For a split second I thought he was walking on stilts, right up until he disappeared. Into the dark. Against the house. Near the camera attached to the eaves. Where he was spinning a web.

My high-tech security camera set to capture the movement of “people only” lit up the night sky with a flash, and jingle-jangled me out of a chocolate escapade with Indiana Jones so that I would know that my home was being invaded by the notorious criminal better known as Daddy Longlegs. Unaware of his place in the spotlight, he ambled along in the foreground while his mug shot was overlayed against the lit driveway in the distance.

At 3:30 a.m.

In the morning.

When intelligent people like me should be sleeping instead of hyperventilating over spider invasions and stilt-walking aliens.

I don’t know who to believe anymore. I can’t trust my security camera to sort out fact from fiction. I’d turn off those chimes on my phone so they don’t wake me up, but what if I do need help remembering that I'm the one who opened the front door? I’m not even sure I still need to know how to count to ten in Japanese.

It’s like Indiana Jones told me in that canoe while we tried to locate a missing cherry, “X never ever marks the spot.” 

And if you think it does, you’re probably looking at a spider anyway.








Lots of thanks to Rob Young for permission to use his clever photo seen above. The original can be viewed by following this link: LEGO Indiana Jones in Grass | Indiana Jones gets lost amongs… | Flickr

Friday, September 23, 2022

Scars

It never stops throbbing. Or goes away. It’s always in the background, this jagged scar in my soul. Scars are like that sometimes. Even a gentle touch can make them spasm with pain, a reminder of what caused the injury. I want relief. I ache for relief, if you can believe the irony in that statement. I used to describe intensity like this by saying my circumstances made me feel like I was held in a vice. I craved release so I could breathe freely again. I was practically a relief junky, I joked. The rush I got from a happy ending was nearly worth the anxiety of the problem.

But there is no escaping the vice that holds me now. Not this time. There was no happy ending. There was an unhappy beginning with no turning back. No “Get Out Of Jail Free” cards have been dealt to me or my family. Sometimes you win it all. Sometimes you go bankrupt. It all depends on a roll of the dice.

My counselor explained things to me this way. “Sadness is going to be a companion to you.” I already knew that, but it was validating to hear it from a professional who specializes in grief. The first time I wrote about losing Rob, the opening line read, “This is where I live now. In sadness.”

I guess it’s strange to think of sadness being a companion. Who wants a buddy like that? It flies in the face of our most cherished and unalienable right—the pursuit of life, liberty, and happiness. I think it’s fair to say that happiness and sadness seem mutually exclusive. Combining the two sounds like we’re either not good at picking a partner or somebody doesn’t know their rights.

I’ve discovered two things in the aftermath of injury:  I don’t have rights and I don’t have control. Instead, I am learning to live with loss. It’s not exactly the American Dream.

This is what is so difficult to explain. I didn’t understand it myself until I landed here. No one wants to live in this space or be companioned by sadness. We try to avoid it the way you’d step around a mud puddle or a pile of poo. We don’t want it on us. Or near us. A fragrance like that repels, it doesn’t invite. Being happy is the goal. Feeling joy is the expectation. Best to look on the bright side, be grateful, thankful, feel blessed, and decorate our walls with reminders to keep up the good work. No one buys plaques that say, “Life is Hard,” even though it often is. We must keep our heads up. Our spirits high. No negativity allowed. Positive energy is the god of the age.

But there was this man. He wasn’t famous for his good looks. His honesty offended the religious. He saw through the masks worn by everyone. And though love does conquer all, it was the way he identified with the broken of the world that stood out most. He was known as a man of sorrows. Well acquainted with grief. I have to assume grief and sorrow and suffering were his companions, too. One of the last things he told his devoted friends was, “In this world you will have trouble.” Not exactly a motivational speech, I’d say, even though he followed up with, “But be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world.”

You don’t overcome without facing something that requires it. And whatever it is won’t be easy.

So, I was thinking about trees. Rob and I always planted trees at every home we ever made. My family and I planted one in his honor right outside the window of my new place. It’s young and healthy and will someday be a magnificent oak. But when it is, it will bear scars. Trees can’t dodge trouble because they’re rooted in place. They lose branches in storms. Are targeted by insects and birds. Star-crossed lovers carve their initials into them. The list of damage is endless. I read that by the time a healthy forest tree reaches maturity it could easily have had a thousand wounds, each with the potential to leave the inside of the tree exposed to disease and the risk of death. If they’re going to survive, they have to overcome their injuries. But the way it’s done is surprising.

The trick is in sealing, not healing.

We’re tempted when we see a cut on a tree from, say, a careless lawnmower incident, to slather on tar and conceal the wound. Hide the damage and hope that covering it up will allow it to heal from the inside out. That’s what we do when we’re careless while chopping onions. Band-Aids to the rescue until all is good as new. Not so with mighty oaks.

New wood grows around the wound. It forms a protective barrier that prevents the infection or decay from spreading. This kind of sealing compartmentalizes the injury with the gradual growth of new, healthy tissue. The damage is isolated, not covered up, and the tree grows beyond it. But the original wound is always there. The resulting protective tissue is called “callus.” Wounds remain incased and trees simply grow around them.*

Seems even trees can’t escape the vice.

As I said, I’d give almost anything for permanent relief. Covering up the injury doesn’t help even though doing so might make the view less uncomfortable for everyone. Or, if I was merely taken captive by a temporary inconvenience, relief would be swift once the pressure was off. There’s no escaping this one, and no rushing the progress either. “This is going to take a long time,” my counselor told me early on. “There are no shortcuts. The only way through it is through it.” A callous will form, but the wound will always remain. A reminder of loss and life, courage and endurance.

There’s no healing for trees. There’s no healing for me either. For the rest of my life, I will live without Rob. You can’t heal that fact. Instead, over time, I will learn to navigate a world without him the way a tree grows new tissue around an injury—not ignoring it, but allowing its truth while, at the same time, continuing to live. And maybe, in time, the imperfection of a once unmarred life will exhibit its own kind of beauty.

I guess I’d better teach Sadness how to play some cards. It looks like we’re going to be together for a while.

 

 

*Woods Whys: How Do Trees Heal Wounds on Trunks… | Winter 2015 | Articles | W (northernwoodlands.org)



Many thanks to Tony Alter for permission to use his photo, "Nature's Heart", in this piece. Tony's original photo can be viewed by following this link: Nature's Heart | Nice heart shape formed in the scar of an o… | Flickr

Friday, September 9, 2022

Looking Back, Facing Forward

Sometimes I think about what I would change knowing what I know now. The pastime is tempting but leads to regret. I’m not who I was. I can’t go back, though God knows how much I want to. What if we hadn’t sold our home on Del Rio? If we’d stayed there, we’d have never moved to the mountains where covid tracked us down. But if we’d locked ourselves inside our house, we’d have betrayed our own hearts.

We rejected that. Both of us did. No one brought us a contract to sign, promising that if we avoided humanity, we would never catch a man-made virus. No one can guarantee that. More accidents occur in the home than anywhere else which makes me wonder just how safe it is to shelter there.

We don’t have control. I don’t have control. I could write that a thousand times and still something inside me wants to scream, “No!” The same guttural cry I screamed after Rob died when no one was around to hear me. And now, just as then, I have limited influence. I resent it. I resist it. Dozens of times a day we’re reminded that somewhere outside our view lies the remote control we’re missing. 

When the power goes off in the middle of a storm. 

When the baby gets sick and you have to cancel dinner plans. 

When the airline changes your reservations without asking and doesn’t care if it makes your life harder. 

When the temp outside exceeds your A/C’s ability to keep up.

When you go the doctor’s office with a fever and shortness of breath, and still they send you home.

We have no control.

Control freaks get a bad rap. The term sounds unhinged and selfish, but there’s usually a reason why people fight for the keys to their private world. Devoid of control, it seems I pay the price for the randomness that rules my existence like a roulette wheel. No wonder I hold on for dear life to everything that is dear in my life, until the wheel’s centrifugal force throws me to the side and whatever will be, finally is. Reminding me once again,

Control is an illusion.

I don’t know what the rest of my life is going to look like from here. I don’t know who I am anymore. I’m living a life I never asked for. I loved the life I had for as long as I had it. When it was taken away from me, it vanished without a trace. I want it back. I can’t have it back. I’m stranded here in the middle of nowhere, a woman without the relationship she enjoyed with the man she loved all her life.

I’m living in the in-between. The space between what I had and what I don’t yet see. There’s a word for this—liminal. It means a threshold, a doorway, a transitional space between places. I see it as a wavering place where the longing to go back pulls my heart, but my logical mind keeps telling the truth—I can’t.

Three months after Rob died, weary of wandering along the arrow-pocked floors of IKEA one afternoon, I stopped cold in front of a large photo on the wall, unable to take my eyes off it. A wide rope bridge spread out over a river-carved chasm drew me in, its far-off, narrowed length exiting into the foggy green hillside where an enormous tree spread its arms in welcome. The photo is mesmerizing and peaceful, but the bridge leads into the unknown, inviting the observer to trust its swaying fibers, cross it single file, and discover what lies on the other side. There are no promises. There are no certainties. No companions. Not even any hints as to what awaits. It simply beckons.

It's mysterious and terrifying. And now it hangs on my wall because it looks the way my life feels. I didn’t ask to be here. I can’t find my way back. I don’t know what lies ahead. I’m frozen, even paralyzed at times, not knowing how to take the next step because I can’t see a next step. I only see a questionable bridge that ends in a forest shrouded by fog.

I’m frustrated. Deeply sad. Often angry. Impatient with my lack of motivation, yet aware of the energy absorbed by the necessity of grief, I exist here at a shadowy gateway without the benefit of a roadmap, wondering what will become of me and if I will remain here forever. Knowing I must be kind to myself in the interim while I wait and see. Just,

Standing.

Listening.

Weeping.

Swaying.

Sighing.

Remembering to be gentle with my liminal self in this place where I am neither this nor that. Caught by my circumstances, companion of grief. Giving myself permission to be, knowing this is all the control I have, I live in limbo. Here. 

In the in-between.