And You Will Still Cry Sometimes

Like I did this morning. I was getting dressed for a day that is going to be mostly at home plodding through a number of tasks — I had only three before I went to a meeting last night. Today includes another meeting, and my list will grow again. Today’s meeting isĀ  with some of “my old AF buddies” down at Castle Rock. A good many of them knew Bill, and a couple of them were pretty close to his heart.

As I looked for a shirt to go with the heavy black jeans I put on, because it is springtime in the Rockies, I spotted a black, collared polo-style shirt that belonged to Bill.

I kept a few things, you know. I am not ready to be done with the man I shared a bed with for 28 years.

As I pulled on the shirt, I let my head and my heart go to that place where I could imagine the shirt — its crest representing the unit he flew with in Viet Nam — holding me in his arms. I knew where this was going to end up, and it didn’t take long to get there with tears sliding down my cheeks and me making fish faces.

It was a sweet moment, just before the tears, and totally worth it. I enjoyed that hug, and I honor the tears that followed it.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

When Mourning Ends

This morning, I guess. At least that’s when I noticed it. Yesterday was a tough day for me. It was the anniversary of my mom and dad’s death. They didn’t die together in the literal sense, but they did die on the same day within the same hour, within the same quarter hour…only it was 15 years apart.

I wasn’t at my father’s bedside. There were legitimate reasons. But I had always regretted it, although I am quite sure my father knew I was there for him when I could be, whatever it took to get there. Once, the last time I was with him, that meant 48 straight hours on military hops (and to be totally transparent, six of those hours were in a truly sleazy motel outside Scott AFB in Illinois, where I dozed on top of a bed stripped to the top sheet with the lights and TV on because I was so totally creeped out by the place) between Andrews AFB in Maryland and Norton AFB in Riverside CA, not far from my parents home in Hemet.

It was Thanksgiving weekend. My father had taken himself off of dialysis. He’d lost both of his legs. His eyesight was gone. His ability to use language, one of his most treasured gifts, was now a tormenting memory. He was done. The doctors advised him that he would probably live no more than 10-21 days. I went home on emergency leave, leaving my young family in the weeks before Christmas. When my leave had been used up, and Christmas was imminent, I caught a commercial flight back to Washington DC to spend the holidays with my family and get back to work.

Yesterday, in a flood of grief that caught me by surprise, I realized that I had held on to the guilt I felt for not being there when my father finally left his body behind on March 2, 1993. In releasing that guilt, and forgiving myself for the damage I had done to myself, I became aware of some of the other “stuff” I was carrying around that I could let go of, including some of the more recent stuff.

And then, this morning, one more revelation. I was in the middle of acknowledging to myself that, in many ways, this second year post-Bill has been harder than the first when I noticed the ache was gone. The almost physical ache that like a python had been tightly wrapped around my throat and chest from morning til night for so long that I had grown accustomed to its presence. In resolving the conflict I had with guilt and grief, I didn’t notice how loose Grief had become until it had gone, slithering away to join its friends: anger and fear.

And that’s when mourning ends.

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Reflection on New Years Eve 2011 (written 12/31/11)

It’s the end of the year. I feel like I’ve come a very long way and I am standing in front of a door I’ve never seen before. I can’t go back. There is nothing for me there. I can only go forward, through this door. But for the moment, I want to contemplate the door itself — its shape and size and color and heft. I won’t be back this way again, and so I want to pause and pray a prayer of gratitude for having made it safely this far. Thanks for all those wonderful moments in the journey and the loving souls I’ve been blessed to share this time with. I take a few long, deep breaths and pray for continued guidance and protection as I open the door to 2012 and step into the awaiting adventure.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments