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Posts Tagged ‘mourning’

…a decade…an unbelievable amount of time during which boys became men, adults became middle aged, and the pain lessened a little bit at a time.

It was 2015, Thursday, July 16th. I was running VBS at church just as I am this week. The pastor’s daughter came over to the church from the parsonage to say that my husband was trying to find me and to call him. I did and he said there had been an accident.

We went to the trauma center. And it’s important to realize that that told us a lot. From where he had the accident you had to pass two or three hospitals before getting to the trauma center. So if they passed those it meant it was serious. It meant it was not good. Once we got there more signs told me that it was not good. They put us in a private family room off of the waiting room.

An hour or so later. Honestly I don’t remember how long we sat waiting. It felt like years. Someone came in to tell us that he had passed. They had tried to repair the internal damage but he had another heart attack on the table and that was the end.

Each time the double doors opened to the hall leading to the patient rooms, you could hear the staff chit-chatting and holding each other up considering the challenging job they work. Yet when those double doors swung open by the staff member leading me to the room so I could identify the body, everything was quiet. A respectful quiet. A somber quiet. They seemed to know that as hard as their job was I was about to do an even harder job.

Sadly I can close my eyes and still see his face perfectly. They did a beautiful job trying to clean him up. But he had just been in a fatal car accident. There was only so much they could do. I can never unsee that. However, it was my honor to walk into that room to confirm that it was him. I got to see him one more time. I got to tell him I loved him. I got to thank him for years of happiness and love and family. I had that privilege. I had that honor. So while the image is still startling in my mind’s eye, it was a gift to do that for him.

Ten years, a decade, without our Bearpaw. Sometimes it’s still hard to believe.

28 “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” Matthew 11:28-30

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It has been exactly a year since Bear died. This is a different kind of new year. I have to move myself out of mourning. Each day I will have a Bear moment, doing something that makes someone feel special & happy for the time spent together.

I have to say goodbye to Wally. No more comfort eating.

Tonight as I write this there is a thunder storm. But we all know that’s Bear bowling in heaven. Of course he’s scaring the crap out of Rex, so I hope he’s on the tenth frame soon.😜

I love you and miss you, Bear. Thank you for decades of love & laughter. And for the traditions & memories.

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These last two weeks before the anniversary of Bear’s death feel much like the first two weeks after his death in that horrific car accident. Once again, the image of Bear when I identified his body haunts my days and nights. The memories of planning his service, communicating with the funeral home, cleaning out his car, comforting the boys-they are swirling in my head, seemingly 24 hours a day right now. Emotions about decisions beyond my control are swelling up inside of me all over again.

I’ve driven through the accident site several times now in my travels, and on the 16th I will drive through it twice. After the second time, we will continue to the cemetery to pay Bear a visit, tell him we love him and miss him. Leave some carnations for him to look down on and smile at.

I don’t imagine that life will resume normalcy without Bear on July 17th, having worked my way through the first year. I’m fully aware that life is forevermore different. I know he wants me to be happy, to not spend time missing him, but loving those around me. And I am working on letting go to do that more fully.

I lost a lot when Bear died, more than meets the eye. My family of origins’s dynamic went through quite a metamorphosis.

But…I have a deeper appreciation for my friends who are my family, for extended family. I have had reunions in the past year that I never thought would happen and have more reunions to look forward to in the coming months. I’ve made peace with many aspects of my personal history. I am exploring my early childhood that I had tucked away. While I do have many difficulties in remembering much from then because of the schizophrenia, it is neat to hear stories. Not that schizophrenia causes memory loss, I just didn’t pay attention to everything as well because of the delusions and hallucinations. It’s cool having gaps filled in.

Hubby, Sons, and I will be visiting New Orleans soon. I haven’t been there since the 70’s when my family moved from my hometown. I’m taking risks that I wouldn’t have before because each day is so precious and why spend each day tired, drained, frustrated? I come home from work now and I have energy to spare. I yell less (although the boys would disagree after the past few days, hence why I’m blogging first thing after work, to clear my head). Little projects around the house are finally being finished, some were started three or four years ago, others I just started because I finally finished the old ones!

It still hurts, I still miss Bear dearly, I still want one more hug from him. Still, I am learning how to tuck that away in my heart and to focus on my many blessings. To let go of things I cannot control. To set boundaries to end useless, painful cycles. To focus on the love surrounding me in so many ways. To be open and ready for the way family and friends show up when you didn’t even know how much you needed them.

 

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Soul Sadness

It’s been four months.  And my soul is still so sad. I spent most of today with tears gently streaming down my face.  While sitting at the cemetery, it was a full-out bawling.  I got home and planted my ass on my love seat and stared at the television.  Then I did some grading.  Then I went on Facebook.  I checked my Twitter.  I sit and try to fill my brain with thoughts other than my father.  I am going to be graphic below so if you don’t want to read yucky stuff stop reading here.  I need to write this out and writing it in my journal hasn’t cut it and so I am sending it out into the cyber world void.

I keep telling myself my dad is dead because I have not accepted it.  I should have by now.  I identified his body and that image haunts me in my dreams and while I’m awake.  I still see the shape of his body under the sheet and it just looked wrong.  The hospital had done a beautiful job with cleaning him up before I saw him, but he still had tears of blood gently streaming down his face.  From what I’ve been told that would have been because of serious head trauma.  I knew something was wrong with his legs that night and a few days later, when I cleaned out his car, I saw one of his shoes had come off at impact.  So I know I was right about his legs.  It was my father’s body on that table and I know that but I still think he will call any minute.  Or one of his goofy letters will arrive in the mail tomorrow.

All of our birthdays have passed without a card from him, except for my father-in-law’s birthday.  I don’t know if he sent a card in the mail to Pop, but I do know he would go over with a pie and the two of them would spend a couple of hours eating pie and shooting the breeze.  Thanksgiving, Christmas.  I can’t imagine it without him.

Tomorrow night we go to A Christmas Carol.  My father started this tradition five years ago.  He had gone once before and then invited us the next year.  This will be our fifth time and our first time without him.  I am bringing a box of tissues and fully expect to be a mess.  I wonder if tomorrow night will make his death more real.  I need to accept it and find a way of living with it.

But I miss him.  And I want to ask him how he is.  I want to ask him for advice about anything.  I want to show him the boys’ school pictures.  I want to listen to one of his really, really long answering machine messages.  I want to see him when he comes on campus for an event.  I want to pick out a new bumper sticker for his car.  I want to hug him again.

I want the image of him in the trauma center erased from my memory.  I know by the extent of his injuries that it was merciful that he died, and the doctors said he was in a coma the whole time and didn’t know what happened, but I want him back.

And I know there are so many other things in this world that are sad, tragic, horrific, probably more so than one woman experiencing the death of her father, but this is where my mind is stuck.  I am trying to unstick it.  I feel like I’m caught in a loop and can’t get out of it.  I want to focus on the happy memories of my father, the wonderful things he taught me, the love he gave me unconditionally.  I just wish I had longer with him.  He came into our lives when I was twelve, adopted me when I was 22, and I want more time.

I realize though that I have to find a way to accept the death of my father and get my mind “not stuck” on that night four months ago.  Before it becomes all encompassing.  Before it impacts my husband, my sons. Before I get stuck with this sadness in my soul.

So far I’ve been using counseling and food.  I’ve gotten good at the food part.  Put on 25 pounds in four months.  I’ve gone to my other doc at this point to ask for something to take the edge off and to check my blood pressure with the weight gain.

So now I’m trying this too.  Writing soothes the soul.  So I’ve been told.

 

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