Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Holidaze

My first holidays without Steve started a mere four months after he died. My generous friends and family showed up for me in the ways they could, but I spent Thanksgiving pushed beyond my limits and Christmas day alone. What I remember is blurry and full of darkness. Along the way I was made to feel a failure because I couldn't manage to help cook in my own house and because I kept slipping off to do my crying in private. I was called selfish for wanting to spend Christmas at our home. I was told "he's dead, he isn't coming back, get over it," a week before Christmas. I was chastised and scolded for upsetting family with what I thought would be a welcome written message from Steve. Though I tried to focus on the positive, I look back and wonder how I ever managed to make it through. No wonder the following three months were the worst of my grieving.

My second set of holidays started off promising enough. Maybe I had a little Post Traumatic Stress from the holidays before, cause though I was invited out for Thanksgiving, my panic attacks grew worse and more frequent over the three days I was away from home. Watching a young family starting out in life, full of hopes and dreams and possibilities was beautiful. As I stood on a staircase landing listening to their plans for the future, I suddenly realized that my family's hope and dreams weren't going to be realized. We got the time we were meant to have and it was over. At thirty-seven I was a bit old to start over entirely, no young children for me, my life is half over already. In that moment I realized there are opportunities lost to me that I will never regain.

Christmas was better. I spent it back in New York, where it all began. I spent a few days in the city and then Christmas with his cousin, who we had stayed with exactly ten years earlier. Ten years prior when Steve asked me to marry him. Steve was born and raised in New York so every street corner held memories. I visited some of our old haunts, his old neighborhood, places we wanted to go together but never got around to visiting. Beautiful memories. And they kept me warm on those blustery winter streets.

Christmas with Steve's family was bittersweet. I kept expecting him to pop from around a corner at any moment. I saw how much the children had grown since we had last seen them. Marveled at his cousin's new house in Steve's place. Saw his twinkling eyes in his family's faces, heard his laughter emanate from his family's mouths, watched his gestures from his family's hands. And though he was rarely mentioned, we all acknowledged his presence. I felt as though I was there in his place; to see, and hear, and support those he loved most. That was my gift to Steve, my gift to his family, my gift to myself.

This is my third set of holidays since Steve died. There are a whole new set of complications this year. This year I'm spending the holidays with my boyfriend and his children. Two beautiful young girls who keep me laughing, and guessing, and completely in the moment. A man who makes me happy, worries about stepping on memories of Steve, never allows me to cry alone, and puts the biggest smile on my face when he walks into the room.

I spent the night before Thanksgiving looking around my house, imagining what it would look like if Steve were alive. What it looked like in years past as we prepared to host another feast. I thought about the past two Thanksgivings since Steve died. I wondered how I managed to survive this long without him when I never believed I could make it a day. And I got the crying out of my system. I spent Thanksgiving day navigating new traditions, navigating youthful meltdowns and jubilations, navigating the complications and the joys of a new life.

This is my third holiday season without Steve. Each year it hurts. Each year it hurts differently. But each year it gets a little easier. This year, it's finally getting to be a life. My life. My life after Steve.

--------------------------------------------------------

Today's post is part of a monthly blog-hop (first Wednesday of each month). It's a way to find other widow/er bloggers to read, interact with, discuss, and follow. Feel free to leave comments, send e-mails, share and interact. The following links are to other blogs participating in this month's hop. Hope you find someone and something new that helps you.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Day 30: Month of Thankfulness

I.Q.

I believe everything will turn out fine. Because I would rather be an optimist and a fool then a pessimist and right.
"I.Q."

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Day 29: Month of Thankfulness

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Day 28: Month of Thankfulness

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Day 27: Month of Thankfulness

Monday, November 26, 2012

Day 26: Month of Thankfulness

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Day 25: Month of Thankfulness

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Day 24: Month of Thankfulness

Friday, November 23, 2012

Day 23: Month of Thankfulness

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Day 22: Month of Thankfulness

The Journey

One day you finally knew
what you had to do, and began,
though the voices around you
kept shouting
their bad advice —
though the whole house
began to tremble
and you felt the old tug
at your ankles.
“Mend my life!”
each voice cried.
But you didn’t stop.
You knew what you had to do,
though the wind pried
with its stiff fingers
at the very foundations,
though their melancholy
was terrible.
It was already late
enough, and a wild night,
and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little,
as you left their voices behind,
the stars began to burn
through the sheets of clouds,
and there was a new voice
which you slowly
recognized as your own,
that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper
into the world,
determined to do
the only thing you could do —
determined to save
the only life you could save.

- Mary Oliver

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Day 21: Month of Thankfulness

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Day 20: Month of Thankfulness

Monday, November 19, 2012

Day 19: Month of Thankfulness

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Day 18: Month of Thankfulness

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Day 17: Month of Thankfulness

Friday, November 16, 2012

Day 16: Month of Thankfulness

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Day 15: Month of Thankfulness

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Monday, November 12, 2012

Day 12: Month of Thankfulness

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Day 11: Month of Thankfulness

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Day 10: Month of Thankfulness

Friday, November 9, 2012

Day 9: Month of Thankfulness

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Day 8: Month of Thankfulness

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Day 7: Month of Thankfulness

Grief Groupies - Beware

I'm a bit of an advice column junkie. Imagine my surprise when, on one of the rare occasions that a widow/er issue was raised, it happened to be something I was dealing with myself.  
Dear Miss Manners:

I recently became a widower following my late wife's lengthy illness. After her diagnosis, we both had time to plan both her final arrangements and for my one day becoming the surviving spouse. This was never a pleasant consideration, but I do feel that it prepared us well for the inevitable. 

We discovered during her illness that there are two fairly distinct groups of well-wishers: The first is those who genuinely but matter-of-factly say: "How are you doing? We're so sorry to hear of your condition and hope your recovery is going smoothly. Please let us know if we can do anything to help," and then promptly get back to the business of conversing with the living.

The second is the group who approach with hang-dog faces, tilted heads sad puppy dog eyes and almost moan out essentially the same sentiment but never seem to want to get off the subject. (This seems a bit incendiary for Miss Manners, but we came to refer to the latter group as "grief groupies.")

A few weeks after her passing, I attended my first subdued social event as a widower. I enjoyed the company and dinner but left somewhat early, being the only single among a small crowd of couples.

After my departure, my closest friend was approached by someone who said, "How's Ed really doing?" My friend assured him that I was handling things as well as could be expected and seemed to be doing a good job of getting on with my life.

The "well-wisher" assured my friend, based on some past personal experience, that was probably not the case at all and proceeded to ramble on about how griefstricken I must be. 

I'm sorely tempted to reply to such people with something akin to, "I'm doing well except for those people who seemingly won't be happy until I'm miserable," but I know better than that. My parents (and my wife) raised me to handle situations like this with as much grace as one is able to muster, but it just infuriates me to be told how I'm supposed to grieve.

It's difficult enough as it is without being chastised for my technique! 

I learned from my wife (who had to repeatedly handle this during her illness) to be as pleasant as possible as briefly as possible but to eventually cut off excessive grieving with, "Well, surely there must be something more interesting to talk about than this. How have you and Mrs. Buttinski been doing?" 

Would Miss Manners be so kind as to offer some other techniques for handling the "overly grieving"?

Gentle Reader: 

It is a particular plague of modern society that everyone considers himself a freelance therapist, serving humanity by telling others how they feel.

You were fortunate that your wife gave you such a good example. Miss Manners can only adapt for your situation. You can hardly say that your loss is uninteresting. But you can say, in a tone speaking more of sensitivity than indignation, "It's not something I care to discuss" if you immediately follow that, as your wife did, by asking a politely neutral question about the speaker.
(Miss Manners column pulled from the Post-Tribune.)

I was so surprised to hear the term 'grief groupies' as I thought I had come up with it all on my own. The people who only showed up in my life to hear or see the most lurid moments of my sadness but never stuck around to helpful in those moments or any other moments. Those people who are only interested in me for the horrid details of my most personal pain. Grief groupies, indeed.

I wrote about grief groupies, in a roundabout way, several months ago. At the time I was upset about the prying people. The people who wanted to know how he died, having just met me. Like it was any of their business. Like I was that evenings entertainment. Since that post, I've gotten a little calmer about my response. Not always demanding to know breast/penis size in return for asking prying questions. Notice, "not always". Cause sometimes I still throw that answer out. Mostly I just look at them like a strange new bug and say "what makes you think it's okay to ask me that?" Then I walk away. Cause really? I don't want to dialog with stupid people.

And please spare me the "they just don't know what to say and so therefore say the wrong thing" argument. I'm already grieving and can't remember my own name half the time. Now I also have to be responsible to make others feel comfortable? Nope. Not doing it. I'm mourning the death of my husband. They can just figure out the right thing to say or get out of my way.

But I want to get back to that first group. The ones who show up out of the blue, the ones who know what happened, and have come to settle in and watch the floor show. And it's me. I'm the floor show. It makes me sick when I realize I've come across these people. It makes me feel dirty. As if I've done something wrong.

If you're a widow or widower, you know these people. You've had one, or three, or a half dozen of them crawl out of the woodwork. Some may have surprised you. Some, upon reflection, may not have surprised you.

These are the people who show up at the funeral ready to throw themselves on the casket, watching you the whole while, waiting to see if you'll out drama them. Wanting you to out drama them.

These are the people who barely spoke to you before, for some imagined slight, but keep showing up at the house trying to push past you. Trying to get into the house while saying the most sickeningly sweet things with venom dripping from the edges of the words. Craining their necks to see past you, to see how badly you and the house have fallen apart. They won't take no for an answer so you start keeping your blinds down and cower in the bedroom when they knock on the door.

The ones who you meet for lunch or diner and five minutes in start asking the most bizarre questions like "when do you think you'll have sex again" and "have you had him send you messages since he died?"

These are the people who show up to keep you company, spend thirty minutes complaining about how they can't pay all their bills, and then follow up with the "how much are you getting for life insurance" question.

And maybe I have done something wrong. Cause these people were in my life before Steve died. These sick, demented, pathetic, freak show watching people were somewhere in my life - either on the fridges or part of my inner circle - way before something really bad happened. How much of my old life did they poison with their insanity? How did I not see what they truly were and kick them out before they could do me serious damage?

Those grief groupies, they are the ones that really hurt. More than any stranger who is simply stupid and insipid and wanting to hear details. These groupies are the ones who really should know better, and don't. Because the truth is: They. Don't. Care. And they were already in my life.

Now here's the good news. We can kick them to curb. And please, do it while wearing heels. Big pointed spiky heels. Feel free to leave lots of puncture marks as you walk over them, and past them, and beyond them. Cause they are always gonna be miserable, disgusting, facsimiles of human beings with no emotions other than pain, anger, jealousy and glee at other people's depth of the same. And we're not that. We've got our grief, but we've got it because we've had joy, love, friendship, support and all the wonderful things that make up life. It's the reason we grieve. We miss all those wonderful things. And we'll find joy again. And hope again. And love and support and kindness again. Because that is who we are.

There's more good news. We'll see those grief groupies a long way off from here on out. They'll never be able to surprise us again cause we can recognize what they are before they become entrenched in our lives. And when we see them coming, we can just wave our pointed high heels in their direction and scatter them like the roaches they are.

Grief groupies, beware.

--------------------------------------------------------

Today's post is part of a monthly blog-hop (first Wednesday of each month). It's a way to find other widow/er bloggers to read, interact with, discuss, and follow. Feel free to leave comments, send e-mails, share and interact. The following links are to other blogs participating in this month's hop. Hope you find someone and something new that helps you.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Day 6: Month of Thankfulness

Monday, November 5, 2012

Day 5: Month of Thankfulness

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Day 4: Month of Thankfulness

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Day 3: Month of Thankfulness

Friday, November 2, 2012

Day 2: Month of Thankfulness

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Day 1: Month of Thanksgiving

Sunday, October 14, 2012

William, It Was Really Nothing

And everybody's got to live their life
And God knows I've got to live mine
God knows I've got to live mine 
-  The Smiths, "William, It Was Really Nothing"

Friday, October 12, 2012

Inception

Mal: You remember when you asked me to marry you?

Cobb: yes.

Mal: You said you dreamt that we'd grow old together.

Cobb: But we did. We did. You don't remember? I miss you more than I can bear, but... we had our time together and I have to let you go. I have to let you go.

- "Inception"

Today would have been Steve's and my tenth wedding anniversary. I'm wearing his wedding ring around my neck on a chain he wore all the time. I periodically wrap the chain around my hand as I slip his giant ring over my finger and over my wedding band, which has been moved back onto my left hand for the day. 

We wanted to grow old together. We wanted to live our lives to the end together. And, in a sense, we did. He wasn't supposed to die at forty-seven, leaving me a widow at thirty-six. But he grew as old as he was gonna get, with me. He lived the rest of his life, with me. We wanted more but this is what we received.

As I slowly catch up to him, I remember all we had together. It was good. Better than we ever imagined, and we could imagine a lot. And because I had Steve in my life, I can imagine even more. And on this day, of all days, I demand that 'more' for my life. I demand it for me. I demand it in his memory. I demand it in our memory.

This is all so much harder than I ever imagined. But the love we created together gives me the strength to move forward. I thank Steve for that love every day.

Happy anniversary, my love. You are a part of my very being. I feel privileged to have shared my life with you.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Love What You Love

Love What You Love

I've seen this written as "live what you love". Which just seems silly to me. If I need to be reminded to love what I do then I need more help than a simple saying can give me. I prefer the permission to love whatever I love. I'm sick of feeling guilty for loving my dead husband. Sick of feeling guilty for loving to buy expensive shoes and then walking around barefooted a majority of the time. Sick of feeling guilty for being wise in choosing who to love. I love what I love. You can love what you love. And guilt doesn't belong anywhere near that love. 

Monday, September 24, 2012

Marley & Me

"How many people can make you feel rare and pure and special? How many people can make you feel extraordinary?"
- "Marley & Me"

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Another birthday he'll never celebrate

Today would have been Steve's 50th birthday. Instead, he'll forever be 47.

This is the first year since his death that I've stayed home in Richmond. The past two years I've gone to Italy. I don't know that it's more difficult or easier, it's simply different. But, damn, I can't get that man out of my head. Puts me in a New York state of mind.

Love you, baby. Always.

 

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The Legend of Bagger Vance

Junior: You don't understand.

Bagger Vance: I don't need to understand. Ain't a soul on this entire earth ain't got a burden to carry he don't understand. You ain't alone it that. But you've been carryin' this one long enough. Time to go on. Lay it down.  

Junior: I don't know how.

Bagger Vance: You got a choice. You can stop. Or you can start.  

Junior: Start?

Bagger Vance: Walkin'.  

Junior: Where?

Bagger Vance: Right back to where you always been. And then stand there. Still. Real still. And remember.

Junior: It's too long ago.

Bagger Vance: Oh, no, sir. It was just a moment ago. Time for you to come on out the shadows, Junuh. Time for you to choose.  

Junior: I can't.

Bagger Vance: Yes, you can. But you ain't alone. I'm right here with ya. I've been here all along. Now, play the game. Your game. The one that only you was meant to play. The one that was given to you when you come into this world. You ready?

- "The Legend of Bagger Vance"

Monday, September 3, 2012

I'm Not Dating

A few months back, one by one, my friends started asking me if I thought dating was on my horizon. These friends don't know each other so it wasn't a concerted group effort. They just all decided around the same time that maybe I should started taking a new look at my life.

It freaked me out just a tad.

So I came up with an answer. "Find me an age appropriate, single, Scottish man in our area and I'll go on a date."

Since there really are no Scottish men in Richmond, let alone age appropriate or single, I thought I was safe. I figured I had bought myself some time.

I should have requested a midget Zimbabwean.

About a week ago, one of my girlfriends came over so I could view a profile through her account. He's in the local Scottish Society. He owns a kilt. He plays the bagpipes. In a bagpipe band. Doesn't get much more Scottish in Richmond, Virginia.

I freaked out just a tad.

Several glasses of wine later, much pleading on her part, much pacing around the living room on my part, we agreed she could contact him to see if he may be interested in an e-mail correspondence with me.

"This isn't dating," she said.
"You don't have to go out with him," she said.
"You don't have to talk on the phone with him. You don't have to chat online with him. You don't even have to e-mail with him if you don't want. We're just going to see if he'd be interested in e-mailing. That's all."

Okay. Yeah. I can maybe handle that.

A day or two later, as I'm wandering around my house doing whatever it is I do during the day to fill my time, it occurred to me. I'm still listed as married to Steve on Facebook. I still wear my wedding rings. I still wear Steve's wedding ring on a chain around my neck. What in hell am I doing?

Somewhere there's a quote I love. I'm paraphrasing but it goes something like: in order for opportunity to find you, you have to have your life in order so you can run with it.

And I'm not ready.

Or am I?

Facebook had switched me over to the new timeline the week before. One of the side effects, since I had memorialized Steve's account a year ago, was though I showed as married, I no longer showed as married to Steve. It was the married to Steve part that was always important to me. I had already decided I might as well switch my relationship status to widowed. I just hadn't gotten around to it. So I did. And I now show as widowed on Facebook.

About a month back I started taking Steve's ring from around my neck when I showered, something I've not done in the two years since he died. And I noticed the oddest thing. I felt lighter when it was off. My neck didn't feel so heavy. There's even been a few times when I've forgotten to put it back on. And though I still wear it more than I don't, I'm starting to consciously leave it off more and more. I'm even thinking it may be time to go see the jeweler about melting it down into a new piece of jewelry for me.

Which leaves my wedding rings. And while those still never come off, if I have Steve's ring melted down, they'll be melted down as well. My plan has always been to melt our wedding bands together and reset my engagement diamond into the result. It may be awhile before I make it to the jewelers to discuss my options, but I sense it on the horizon.

And all the sudden, I'm not freaking out so much.

I'm still not dating. But I have started e-mailing the piper. I don't know where it's going, and I don't really need to. My friends were right. It's time for me to start taking a new look at my life.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

City of Angels

Maggie: I wanted him to live.

Seth: He is living. Just not the way you think.

Maggie: I don't believe in that.

Seth: Some things are true whether you believe in them or not.
"City of Angels"

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Another Earth

Within our lifetimes, we have marveled as biologist have managed to look at ever smaller and smaller things, and astronomers have looked further and further into the dark night sky, back in time and now in space. But maybe the most mysterious of all is neither the small nor the large. It’s us, up close. Could we even recognize ourselves? And if we did, would we even know ourselves? What would we say to ourselves? What would we learn from ourselves? What would would we really like to see if we could stand outside ourselves and look at us?
- "Another Earth

Monday, August 13, 2012

Donations

2 Year Donor Letter

Back in March of last year, I wrote about a letter I received from a recipient of Steve's tissue donation. I received another letter a few months later. I never wrote about that one.

The night Steve died, I sat on the phone at midnight with a social worker on the other end of the line to approve Steve's tissue donations. She said it could wait until morning but I knew there was going to be no sleeping that night. During the next week the only sleep I did get was with the use of sleeping pills. And even those would only work for about four hours at a time.

The social worker was kind, supportive, and continued to repeat things for me as I tried to translate her words into some sort of meaning through my fog of shock. I remember her explaining why Steve's organs couldn't be used but his tissues could. I remember giving permission for tissues that couldn't be used to help patients to be used in laboratories, hopefully helping future patients with breakthroughs in medical science. I remember her explaining that at two years I would receive a summation of Steve's donations and how they were used. How, tissue donations could be used up to five years after being harvested.

I couldn't imagine, at the time, what two years later would look like. What two years later would feel like. I still can't imagine what three more years from now will look or feel like.

I know I didn't cry as hard over the second letter I received from a recipient as I did for the first letter. And I didn't cry as hard over this summation report as I did for the second letter. Each time I received something, I would call family members and read it to them. At each reading I thought "this time I can get through it without sobbing." Each time I was wrong. Try reading this excerpt aloud without crying:
Stephen's donation consisted of orthopedic tissues, which are used to hasten recovery in individuals suffering from bone or spine disease or injuries. Many bone grafts can be generated from one tissue donor. In the case of Stephen's gift our donation records indicate the creation of numerous bone grafts which have been and will continue to be used to perform reconstructive surgery, spinal fusions, and oral surgery. Our records indicate that a surgery occurred in February 2001 in Massachusetts that enhanced the life of a male patient, and a surgery occurred in March 2011 in Pennsylvania that enhanced the life of a male patient. Also, grafts have been distributed throughout the country to states such as Arkansas, Arizona, California, Colorado, Washington D.C., Iowa, Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Utah, Virginia, Washington and West Virginia.

We do not have all the implant information, but clearly Stephen's donation has made and will continue to make a remarkable and widespread impact on the lives of many others in need.
I am so proud of my husband to have the foresight and desire to help others when he died. I am so proud of that heartbroken, shocked, scared, and lonely wife who sat on her back porch, phone in hand at midnight saying "Yes. Please. Help as many people as you can. Start right now."

Saturday, August 11, 2012

David Rakoff

"Writer Melissa Bank said it best: 'The only proper answer to 'Why me?' is 'Why not you?' The universe is anarchic and doesn't care about us, and unfortunately, there's no greater rhyme or reason as to why it would be me. And since there is no answer as to why me, it's not a question I feel really entitled to ask.
...
You can't win all the contests and then lose at one contest and say, 'Why am I not winning this contest as well?' It's random. So truthfully, again, do I wish it weren't me? Absolutely. I still can't make that logistic jump to thinking there's a reason why it shouldn't be me."
Interview with writer, David Rakoff.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Saudade

Saudade ~ a unique Galician-Portuguese word that has no immediate translation in English. Saudade describes a deep emotional state of nostalgic longing for an absent something or someone that one loves. It often carries a repressed knowledge that the object of longing might never return. It's related to the feelings of longing, yearning.

Saudade has been described as a "...vague and constant desire for something that does not and probably cannot exist ... a turning towards the past or towards the future."A stronger form of saudade may be felt towards people and things whose whereabouts are unknown, such as old ways and sayings; a lost lover who is sadly missed; a faraway place where one was raised; loved ones who have died; feelings and stimuli one used to have; and the faded, yet golden memories of youth. Although it relates to feelings of melancholy and fond memories of things/people/days gone by, it can be a rush of sadness coupled with a paradoxical joy derived from acceptance of fate and the hope of recovering or substituting what is lost by something that will either fill in the void or provide consolation.

Saudade was once described as "the love that remains" after someone is gone. Saudade is the recollection of feelings, experiences, places or events that once brought excitement, pleasure, well-being, which now triggers the senses and makes one live again. It can be described as an emptiness, like someone (e.g., one's children, parents, sibling, grandparents, friends, pets) or something (e.g., places, things one used to do in childhood, or other activities performed in the past) should be there in a particular moment is missing, and the individual feels this absence. In Portuguese, 'tenho saudades tuas', translates as 'I have saudades of you' meaning 'I miss you', but carries a much stronger tone. In fact, one can have 'saudades' of someone whom one is with, but have some feeling of loss towards the past or the future.

* Definition pulled from Wikipedia.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Man of the Hour - Pearl Jam



My father died a year ago today. One year and two weeks after my husband died. Often, my grief for Dad gets entangled with my grief for Steve.

I wish it was less complicated.

It isn't.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Edge of Darkness

"Well, we all know what the facts are. We live a while, and then we die sooner than we planned."
Edge of Darkness

Monday, July 23, 2012

Missing - Everything But The Girl



There are many versions of this song out there. I've always been partial to remixes, though.

I had dinner with my in-laws the other night. I saw them last at Christmas, when I also spent a few days in New York City revisiting old places and times. All of which are connected to Steve. This song was cycling through my head when I visited Steve's old neighborhood. Cousin Frank was at work that day but managed to text me the entire time I was in the old neighborhood. Amongst a dozen other reasons, I love him for that.

Seeing Steve's family a week after his death anniversary has me revisiting my last visit with them. I never feel like I'm able to say what it is I want to say to them. I never feel like I have enough time with them. I wish I could find the words to tell them how much my love has grown for them in the past two years. How much I want to give Steve back to them. How sorry I am that for ten years we didn't visit as often as we could have, as much as Steve wanted to visit.

I never knew how wonderful my in-laws were until we were no longer, technically speaking, in-laws. What a fool I've been.


Sunday, July 15, 2012

104 Weeks (Two Years)

... 104 Moments We didn't Get To Share Together...

There are few things in life that we plan out very far. All the same, I can be pretty certain that these moments would have occurred within the last two years.
  1. Celebrate your forty-eighth birthday in Venice, Italy.
  2. Take a romantic Gondola ride in Venice, Italy.
  3. Buy that special piece of Murano glass we were especially looking forward to picking out.
  4. Sit in Piazza San Marco, eating home made gelato, laughing at the hundreds of pigeons walking around.  
  5. Return home in time to watch the new HBO series, "Boardwalk Empire," all excited to see what Martin Scorsese would create. 
  6. Buy you a new pair of work shoes as your current pair are developing a hole in the sole.
  7. Go to State Fair to "baaaaa" at the sheep.
  8. Watch the movie "Social Network" only because Aaron Sorkin wrote the screenplay.
  9. Hold hands as we Walk for Autism.
  10. Celebrate our eighth wedding anniversary.
  11. Get our haircuts together by our friend John, then all of us going out for dinner.
  12. Try to keep our crack-head dog from running away with all the adorable kids who ring our bell on Halloween.
  13. Go to DC to watch the Packers lose to the Redskins with our friend Dan.
  14. Tailgate at said same game.
  15. Walk in to the church where we vote, holding hands.
  16. Your joy at sending and my joy at receiving, flowers for no particular reason.
  17. Cook Thanksgiving dinner.
  18. Go to the theater to watch "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1" in the middle of a Friday so as to avoid all the kids.
  19. Pull out all our Christmas lights only to find out they've all burnt out in the same year.
  20. Use our backup Christmas lights, which are all red, and promptly name our place the Christmas Hootchie House.
  21. The moment when I finally got your guitars hanging on the walls, like pieces of 3-D art.
  22. Laugh at our dog as she gets crazier than normal during the first snow fall of the winter.
  23. Take our friend Dan to see "The Nutcracker Suite" ballet and, surprisingly, finding out he couldn't really get into it even with a dancing bear.
  24. Celebrate the one year adoption anniversary of Belle. Wonder how we survived that long with a knuckle-headed border collie.
  25. Invite all our friends over for a big Italian meal on Christmas Eve.
  26. Go to Christmas Eve midnight service and giggling like ten year olds through the service cause, really, you can't take us anywhere.
  27. Come home on Christmas Eve, sit by the lights of the tree, open a present each and reminisce about getting engaged exactly nine years earlier in Rockefeller Center.
  28. Freak the F out when my father fell and broke his hip.
  29. Celebrate my thirty-seventh birthday with one of your surprise birthday binders.
  30. Ring in the New Year with a kiss and a slow dance. 
  31. Finally see your band, The Scrubbs, play somewhere outside of practice.
  32. Watch the Packers win the Super Bowl.
  33. Buy the new flat screen, high-def, really big tv to watch said Super Bowl.
  34. Exchange Valentine's Day, hand written, love letters.
  35. You mow the lawn and I plant flowers followed by both of us relaxing and enjoying the view. 
  36. Celebrate Dad's seventy-sixth birthday with him.
  37. Decorate the bushes out front with pastel, plastic Easter eggs.
  38. Walk the Easter Parade talking about all the bands and how you guys could play there next year.
  39. Buy at least one stupid thing at Arts in the Park.
  40. Mark the moment when your convertible finally hit 30,000 miles.
  41. Discuss that now Osama bin Laden is dead, maybe we can go see how the new tower is looking in NewYork, having specifically not gone since it was still a smoking rubble.
  42. Find a new favorite HBO series "Game of Thrones" to whittle away our Sunday evenings watching.
  43. Have dinner with your brother Frank and his wife on their way south to visit friends - and throwing movie quips back and forth all evening.
  44. Have dinner with Doc when he comes to town for business.
  45. At this point, probably mark the moment when your convertible finally hit 40,000 miles.
  46. Celebrate the forth of July by not watching fireworks amongst crowds of people.
  47. Walk out of the theater from watching "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2" all kinda crying because the story is over.
  48. Have dinner with Aunt Jean, Uncle Frank, Cousin Frank, Lisa, Samantha, and Michael and asking, yet again, why your family thinks coming to Virginia in July and August is a good idea?
  49. Stand next to my father's bed in the hours before he died.
  50. Sharing how it was for you when your father died as I cope with the death of my father.
  51. Freak the F out when the earthquake that originated in Virgina shakes things up all the way to New York.
  52. Try and figure out the right food, the right oils, the right anything to solve the problem of our freaky dog's sensitive skin issue.
  53. Get pissed at Hurricane Irene which took out our mulberry tree when, by rights, it should have taken out our black walnut tree.
  54. On the ten year anniversary of 9/11, talk about how 9/11 made us both realize that the other was the most important person in our lives.
  55.  Sort and haul junk from the garage to the street for bulk pick-up day.
  56. Celebrate your forty-ninth birthday in Florance, Italy.
  57. Realizing that Galileo and Michelangelo are entombed next to each other at Basilica of Santa Croce, then spending days comparing the two and their work.
  58. Walk through Roman ruins in the basements of churches and private buildings, and getting that weird butterfly-time-tummy feeling.
  59. Visit so many museums while in Florance that we can start to recognize Medici family portraits without having to read the titles.
  60. Laugh hysterically when you see exactly how long it's going to take me and how many t-shirt I'm gonna end up needing to finish the t-shirt latch-hook rug I've started.
  61. Go to State Fair and try really hard not to come home with a fuzzy bunny.
  62. Celebrate our ninth wedding anniversary.
  63. Once again argue if we should give glow sticks and pencils or candy for Halloween. 
  64. Walk out of the church where we vote, holding hands.
  65. Start to rake the yard only to decide, screw it, we'll mow all the leaves and call it even.
  66. Eat Thanksgiving dinner by candlelight.
  67. Watch HOB's special on Vince Lombardi. Discuss the Packers of your youth.
  68. Go to Lewis-Ginter Botanical Gardens to see the Christmas lights, be disappointed for the second time in a row and vow never to return again.
  69. Buy Green Bay Packer stock because you couldn't afford it during the last offering in 1997.
  70. Immediately buy Packer Owner clothing for bragging rights.
  71. Pick out Christmas gifts for all the kids in the family. 
  72. Celebrate the two year adoption date of Belle. Realize we now drink more because of border collie feet licking tendencies.
  73. Blow off all our usual Christmas traditions to spend it in New York with your family, as we did ten years earlier when you asked me to marry you.
  74. Go back to your old neighborhood and see how it's quickly filling up with boutique hotels.
  75. Take a carriage ride through Central Park because the weather is just that nice and you are just that romantic.
  76. Go see Alan Rickman in "Seminar" on Broadway because no way we're gonna miss a chance to see Alan live!
  77. Finally getting to see your cousin's brand new, gorgeous house with the way cool thermal heating / air conditioning system.
  78. Celebrate my thirty-eighth birthday as we normally do - you having meticulously planned the day and me completely surprised.
  79. Ring in the New Year drunk off our asses.
  80. The happiness you exude when I join you on a work trip.
  81. Watch the Packers have a perfect season right up until they didn't. During playoffs.
  82. Watch "Rio" on HBO - the only movie where the bird doesn't "get it" (die) and be really excited.
  83. Complain that in "Rio" the monkeys (my animal) and the birds (your animal) really should have been on the same side but it's all good cause for once, your side got to win!
  84. A romantic Valentine's Day dinner even if it's not actually on Valentine's Day.
  85. Share stories about my father on his birthday the first year after he died.
  86. Be the only two nerds we know who would spend all day talking about the Titanic the day before the one-hundred year anniversary of it's sinking.
  87. Promise that next year we really will bring the crazy foot-licking dog to the Easter Parade.
  88. Talk about cooking a special Easter diner and then not make one. Just like every year. 
  89. Walk around Arts in the Park talking about how all the painting are really just the same ones secretly moved from booth to booth when we're not looking.
  90. Listen to Beastie Boys songs all day when we hear that Adam Yauch died.
  91. See Michael and Samantha's first communion. 
  92. Cry during Blake and Katherine's wedding ceremony.
  93. Talk for a week about the band at Blake and Katherine's wedding. In a good way.
  94. Discuss every Ray Bradbury book we've read, in depth, after hearing of his death.
  95. Entertain Dan's parents when they came into town for his graduation.
  96. Scream our fool heads off when they called Dan's name to walk the stage.
  97. Take Dan out for a special graduation / moving away dinner.
  98. Excitedly watch the new HBO series "The Newsroom" because finally! Aron Sorkin is back on television where he belongs! 
  99. Also? "The Newsroom" music is written by Thomas Newman. Double bonus points!
  100. Mourn the loss of the sugar maple falling down on the house from a freak storm.
  101. Get excited over the opportunity to upgrade the back porch, thanks to the sugar maple and freak storm.
  102. Be royally pissed that the damn black walnut tree, which by all rights shoulda been gone long ago, is still standing unscathed.
  103. Celebrate the forth of July by making our own fireworks. In the bedroom.
  104. July fifteenth would be a normal day for the two of us. As it has always been.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

The Tree of Life

You make yourself what you are. You have control of your own destiny. You can’t say “I can’t.” You say, I’m having trouble. I’m not done yet. You can’t say “I can’t.
- "The Tree of Life"

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Take A Deep Breath

As I deal with a home catastrophe involving a huge tree that fell on the house, I remind myself to...


Take A Deep Breath
 

Friday, June 8, 2012

Dan

State Fair

Steve was working a contract in Wisconsin when he met Dan's father. In the course of their time working together, Steve found out Dan was accepted to VCU/MCV for his doctorate. We immediately invited them to Richmond to visit the school and promised to give them a full tour of the city.

Guess we were good tour guides, because Dan decided to stay. Steve immediately announced that Dan would be at our house for every Packer game. This wasn't an invitation, it was a command. I lent a hand by looking at apartments for Dan while he went back home to pack for the move.

That first year, Dan did come over for every Packer game. We took him to the state fair, where Dan got to watch my New Yorker husband be amazed by livestock. (Yes, Steve, sheep actually say baaaaa.) We had Dan over for cookouts. We took him to the botanical gardens at Christmas to see the lights. We drove Dan to his first marathon. We drove like maniacs to as many of the stops along the marathon so we could scream our fool heads off as Dan ran by. We brought Dan back to our place after the marathon worried he wouldn't be able to climb the stairs to his apartment. We were, we came to realize through a series of events, surrogate parents. We called Dan our adopted college-aged son. And though he made us feel old when he expressed shock we could use the word "epic" just as appropriately as any hipster, we loved having him around.

Steve had a favorite story about Dan. And this version isn't purely Steve's language because we often told this story together, one interrupting the other to insert some piece of information. Here it is as we would tell it together:
Dan is the stereotypically nice, corn-fed, mid-westerner. Please and thank you are the words we most often heard come from his mouth those first few months. He wouldn't say "shit" if he had a mouthful. Always willing to help or lend a hand however he's able. Always a smile. Always up for anything.
One game-day Monday, Steve was working out of town. Dan came over to the house to watch the Packer game with me. I was on the phone with Steve as the game was starting. Steve started bragging about watching the game on a large, high-def, flat screen TV in his comfy hotel room with the air conditioner cranked to the max.
"Are you jealous" Steve asked Dan.
... pause ...
"I have your wife" replied Dan.
We were so floor by the unexpected change from wouldn't-say-shit-if-he-had-a-mouthful guy to clever retort guy, that we were still telling that story regularly when Steve died.

After Steve died, everything reversed. Dan made sure I was sitting in front of a TV for every Packer game. Dan invited me over for cookouts with his grad-school friends. Dan competed in a triathlon in Steve's memory and gave me the medal. Dan grubbed in my yard. Dan took me out to eat. Dan accompanied me to Christmas ballets, anniversary dinners, and Packer games in Washington DC in place of my husband. He kept me company when I wasn't fit company.

Which may be why I felt so genuinely happy and excited for Dan when he graduated a few weeks ago. He is an amazing man who picked up and moved cross country not knowing anyone, met an incredible group of friends, and with apparent ease, earned his doctorate. He bikes, he runs, he hula-hoops. I have yet to hear him say a bad word about anyone. I have, however, finally heard him say "shit" and I don't believe he actually means it when he says it.

Tonight was Dan's going away party. Dan is moving cross country, once again. Moving somewhere he doesn't know anyone, once again. This time he's starting his career. And I am, once again, genuinely happy and excited for him.

But as everyone was telling their favorite Dan memory, I kept quiet. Not because I don't have one, but because mine are so... oddly tainted by grief that I don't trust myself to speak without weeping for the kindness he's shown me. All the same, here are a few:
Sitting in the parking lot before the Packer / Redskins game, me drunker than I realized, watching the swooping dragonflies while wondering where they all came from. Then getting lost trying to find the car after the game because I was too drunk to pay attention and Dan was too preoccupied with keeping me on my feet on the way into the stadium.

Dying Dan's hair a bright turquoise and shaving it into a mohawk for the triathlon he ran in Steve's memory. He looked like he'd rubbed a smurf up and down the center of his head. It looked good on him.
Dan, quietly dogging me around as I drunkenly climb eight foot tall, cast iron fences in my dress and heels to read a monument on my wedding anniversary simply because I'm not ready to go home to that empty house yet.
Plastering half a pound of pink glitter on Dan's eyes for his "naughty school-girl" Halloween outfit. Then plastering another half pound all over his face. Dan's runner's legs look good in fishnet stockings, by the way.

Wandering around some small, hick, West Virgina town arguing that yes, that house with the sign out front saying it's a place to meet singles and an ATM neon light in the front window really IS a whore house.

Watching the world's worst Christmas play of "A Christmas Story" in the same small, hick, West Virgina town. And being able to pick out the town's hairdresser because he's the gay man in black leather pants, black leather vest, with a bright red button down shirt. The diamond earrings are what gave him away, though.
Dan and I have known each other longer without Steve than we've known each other with Steve. The relationship changed along the way. I don't know how I'd describe it now. Friends, I suppose. Though I don't feel I've the right to be named a friend as I haven't done much to hold up my end for the past two years. Maybe better is to state, one friend who is deeply indebted to the other. And while I am happy, excited, and thrilled for Dan and this new journey he's beginning, that didn't stop me from crying the entire drive home.

I will never be able to repay your kindness and support, Dan. But that won't stop me from trying. Good travels, my friend. I will miss you.


Saturday, June 2, 2012

Memorial Tattoo

A good amount of the time that I spend thinking of Steve, I spend thinking about how I failed him. How I should have saved him. The little things he loved that I should have done for him more often. The big things I vetoed so we could save for a future we now won't have, that I should have enthusiastically agreed to do. A million ways to feel like a bad wife.

Steve would hate that I do this.

My number one head-shrinker tells me it's survivors guilt. Makes sense. I'm here, he's not, and there's no one in my head to argue with my own bad counsel.

I positively light up when someone tells me about how much he used to brag on me or how much he used to gush on his love for me. Leaves me with the warm and fuzzies for days. Those stories pull me out of my own cycling thoughts of failure and remind me - we had it good. He adored me as much as I adore him.

But those stories are few and far between. It just doesn't come up in conversation very often. So I decided to go and get my own reminder:

Steve memorial tattoo

Those are his words, his signature, in his own handwriting. I pulled it from the bottom of the card he gave me on our six year wedding anniversary.

Tat template

And now I can look down and remind myself - we had it good. We adored each other. Every day we woke up and choose each other all over again.

And all those bad thoughts I carry around in my head?

They can just fuck off.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Forrest Gump

Mama always said that dyin’ was a part of life. I sure wish it wasn’t.
- Forrest Gump

Sunday, May 27, 2012

What I REALLY needed that first year

Four months after Steve died I wrote my version of a letter titled "How You Can Help Me". It was structured around the many I saw on different widow/er websites explaining what I understood (at the time), as needing. Looking back at that first year, that letter didn't even begin to cover what I needed so I'd like to give this another shot. Maybe another widow/er out there can use this second version to help themselves in some way.

Hugs:
I need a hug. Not one of those stick-your-butt-out-so-crotches-don't-touch while you sorta pat my shoulder hug. I need a real hug. A grab-me-by-the-shoulders and wrap me in suffocating bear arms hug. An I'm-never-gonna-let-you-go hug. I need a hug like our parents gave us when were were little and woke up screaming in the night from nightmares. I need to be hugged so hard it squeezes all my tears out in huge gasping sobs. I need a hug that when we finally separate I'll apologize for ruining your shirt. I need you to give me the hug my husband would be giving me if he were here and saw this pain in my heart and on my face. I need you to do this in his place. My husband needs you to do this in his place.

Crying:
When I cry, I need you to hand me tissues. When I cry, I need you to hold my hand. When I cry, I need you to put your arm around me and pull me into your shoulder. When I cry, I need you to rub your hand up and down my back. When I cry, I need you to give me one of those hugs from above and not stop hugging me until I can breath normally. When I cry, I need you to touch me. Unabashedly and without fear or nervousness, just reach out and touch me. Nearly two years in and I can tell you, there aren't words. You won't find them. But that touch will speak to me directly from your heart.

Touch:
And you need to know that with my husband gone, no one touches me anymore. I've gone from being touched with love every day, several times a day, to not being touched at all. That physical disconnect from humanity is going to send me over the edge. So hold my hand even when I'm not crying. Hug me hello and goodbye. Take or send me to get massages. Just touch me.

Food:
I need you to look in my fridge. In days gone by people would bring food to widow/ers. I bet if you look in my fridge you'll find I haven't gone shopping and that I'm not eating. Take me to the grocery store. Help me pick out food that will be easy to prepare. Frozen dinners may be all I can manage for the next year if I have to cook for myself. If we go out to eat, remind me to take home the leftovers. I'll eat them the next day if they're waiting for me in the fridge but I won't think of that while sitting in the restaurant. You see, I don't want to even be alive with my husband dead. So I'm certainly not thinking about the basic necessities to keep my life going.

Pets:
This is the one that embarrasses me the most but... my dog needs you too. Those weeks where you can hardly get me to answer the phone so you stop by my place? Please check on the dog. If I'm not eating and answering the phone, I may have forgotten the dog as well. Check that she's getting fed, doesn't have fleas, or needs to go to the vet. I love my dog. I do. But I'm sitting in an empty house fighting for a reason to live. And I hate that it's gotten this bad, I hate myself for being a bad doggie-mama, so please check on my dog. I'll thank you later for it.

Brain Damage:
I have no clear way to explain how my mind is (not) working except to say: think of it as brain damage. You're going to tell me something that I'll turn around and ask you about two minutes later. You're going to ask me simple questions and I'm going to look at you like you're speaking a foreign language. I'm going to tell you the same things over and over; not hearing when you remind me I've already told you this. It may be months before I remember to ask you about your life. It may be several more months before I can remember what's going on in your life.

I'm not doing these things on purpose. I'm not "wallowing" in my grief. I'm not being a widow diva. I've experienced a trauma. A trauma of the heart, soul, and yes, brain. Every part of my life has been turned upside-down and inside-out. It's going to take me a lot longer than you think, a lot longer than I think, to get my head fully wrapped around this.


And all those things I wrote in that last letter? They still apply as well. I need you to tell stories about my husband. I need you to help fill my time. I need help around the house. Just wish I'd known to ask for these other things that first year, too.  

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Andrew Wight

What did you learn about survival from your experience?
 I learned that what’s in front of you is what you have to deal with. What could happen is not as important as what is happening. We had to make decisions based on that and take responsibility for those decisions.
 - Andrew Wight (director of Sanctum), interview

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Holding On

Number 13: It's the human response. It's either overly saccharine, because giving sympathy makes them feel better, or they ignore you, because hiding from mortality makes them feel better.

Wilson: Why can't they just say something that makes me feel better?

Number 13: Like what, exactly?


- House "Holding On"

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

There are two responses to finding out that I'm a widow that continue to stump me.

The first is the, I suppose completely proper, and more common "I'm so sorry for your loss" or some deviation that includes an apology. It's that apology that throws me for a loop.

I usually either say thank you or just nod and kinda bow my head in acknowledgment. "Thank you" seems both right and wrong at the same time. It's a 'yeah, I heard you and appreciate the thought' but it's also feels like I'm saying 'thanks for my dead husband'. Look, I know I'm not thanking them for my dead husband just like I know they're not apologizing for the fact that I have a dead husband. I get that. It's just a way for them to express sadness for my sadness. And it's just a way for me to say thanks for that expression. Still feels wrong to say "thank you". So mostly I just duck and nod.

The second response that trips me up is the "how did he die" question. It's always followed by this moment where I stare at them as wrap my mind around the fact that a perfectly innocuous, and usually pleasant, conversation just took a turn to the most painful and private part of my life. After the pause, they realize that something is a little off in the conversation and so follow up with some slightly embarrassed version of "just curious". That's the point where my heart quits sinking from the sadness that my conversation with this person is over and changes to being pissed. Royally pissed. Because now they've just flat-out admitted that the most private parts of my life are cocktail chatter, that I am the evening's entertainment.

What I usually manage to bumble out of my mouth is some version of "I don't (like/want to) talk about this" and then wander away as soon as I realize I have feet, which can take awhile. I say that to people I am most likely to run into again, friends of friends, etc.

What I really want to say, and have said to complete strangers on a few occasions is "how big are your tits/dick cause if you're interested in my most personal details I feel it's only fair that you fucking dish up as well." I want them to feel as shocked and as verbally raped as they just made me feel. Mostly it doesn't work. They just stomp off feelings post-justified in having been so invasive of my personal life. Kinda a 'she's such a bitch I don't have to feel bad for being a total ass to start.' Doesn't stop me from wanting to say it, though.

And I'll admit, I actually have to hold back on that tit/dick response Every. Single. Time. someone asks me about Steve's death. I'll admit one other thing. It doesn't make me feel any better to say something nasty than it does when I stumble out whatever version I can manage of 'thanks but no thanks, not sharing tonight'. There's just no response I've found that can put things back to feeling right after having been violated.

Recently, my mother reminded me of something my brother says that I'm going to try out. Here it is: "I'm trying to have a nice time here" and then he walks off. I'm just hoping that I can remember both the line and that I have feet in the moment. Cause mostly I'm so shocked, violated, sad, and angry that I couldn't tell you my name. But I'll give it a whirl cause the questions certainly aren't going to go away.

Which begs one last question: what is the best thing they could say? And ya know, I don't have the answer cause I have yet to hear it. But if I stumble across an answer, I'll be certain to share.

Monday, May 7, 2012

The Day the Earth Stood Still

But it’s only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve
The Day the Earth Stood Still

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Feels Like Summer

Steve ~

I haven't written to you in such a long time. When you first died, back when I was lucky to get four hours of sleep a night, I'd write you every morning. As soon as the sun came up I'd grab a cup of coffee and the notebook you used to keep music notes, and spend an hour watching the birds at the feeders while writing you how hard it was to face each day.

A lot has changed since then. A lot about me has changed since then.

Tonight I want to tell you about how it feels like summer.

I spent the day gardening. I started gardening a lot last year. Mostly it was something to do with my hands while I tried desperately to chase away the cycling thoughts of you. How much I loved you. How I failed you. How I missed you. How much I wanted to come find you. So I dug in the earth and told myself you were watching me. That I had to behave.

I bought two bleeding heart plants last year. I thought it apropos since it felt like my own heart was bleeding. I never managed to put them in the ground, though. Two weeks ago I went down to Lowe's and bought two more. I got them in the ground the day I brought them home. They're right next to the back porch where the rain is always washing the dirt uneven. Where the slate used to be. I dug up all the slate last year. I dug up the entire grown-over walkway of slate leading from the side gate to the shed. My plan had been to smooth the area out and plant grass. Never happened. But this year I started planting grass. It almost looks like a yard now.

I moved the bird-feeders again the this year. I moved them last year, as well. I think I may have even added a new one or two, but I can't exactly remember. There's so much about last year that I can't remember. But this year I finally got them right. I can see each feeder from any spot on the porch and the wind won't cluster them up again. I even bought some domes to hang over them so the squirrels have a more interesting time trying to rob the birds of their food.

I've managed to keep the feeders stocked since you died. Once or twice I've fallen into a funk and they ran dry but as you always told me: the birds come back when the food is back. The weather has been nice enough that I frequently sit on the back porch around dusk to watch all the birds come and feed. Do you hear me when I sigh and point out the babies fluffing themselves for mama bird? You always like the babies with their constant 'feed-me-now-mama' chirping. I don't feel as lonely without you here to watch them as I did last year. Can you see that, too? Does it make you happy?

I put in an addition to our bird friendly house today. I installed two cedar birdhouses on the back fence. They're supposed to be good for blue birds. I'm afraid I didn't get them up early enough to be used this spring. If not, there's always next year. These won't fall apart like the ones I painted several years ago. I don't think those were actually meant to be hung outside. You never complained when you had to stop your mowing to pick up the pieces, though.

I've been good about the mowing this year, too. I weed whack each time I mow and it makes a huge difference to the look of the place. Last year, I broke down crying every time I mowed. I would force myself to mow because I didn't want to slump on your chores. If you were looking down on me, I wanted you to be proud of the way I pushed through the pain. I wanted you to see me doing all the things you would want to do for me if you were here. Now I do it because it makes me feel good to have a nice looking yard. I enjoy the exercise and the making of my vitamin D.

I have a lot of projects to finish this year. Last year it seems I just tore things out with the plans of replacing or upgrading them. By the time I tore something out I was too upset to finish. I couldn't forgive myself for not having started and finished the project while you were alive to enjoy the change. I don't know if I'll get them all completed this year, as I've found several things I want to do that I'd never before considered. I'm rather excited about those. But did you hear that? I'm excited! I didn't think the day would come when I'd ever be excited to change anything ever again.

I still miss you like crazy, though. Tonight was the first night I had to light incense to keep the mosquitoes away. That smell always makes me look around to see if you're coming through the back door to join me on the porch. And I'm drinking our 'Eastern Shore' concoction. Cheap light beer mixed with clamato juice. I have a lot left over from the barbeque I threw last year. Seems my guests didn't like our drink as much as we did.

And because it was such a hot day I gave your dog a Frosty Paws. I found the box in the freezer after you died. I saw one was missing from the box already. I can't remember if I gave one to Belle last year or if that one was missing because you had given it to her before you died. It saddens me that I can't remember things like that. All the same, when I handed it to her, I told her it was a gift from Daddy for keeping me company in the yard. Do you know she still perks up when I say Daddy? I wonder if it's just habit or if she's still waiting for you to come home.

I know I was. I'm not anymore. And I can't figure out if that makes it easier, harder, or just different.

I love you. With all my heart. And I don't know if you can see me, but if you can, I hope you're proud of me. I was proud of you. Always.

- Karen

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Just Remember I Love You - Firefall



Woke up this morning with this song playing in my head... I like to think it's a message from Steve.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Never Let Me Go

It had never occurred to me that our lives which had been so closely interwoven could unravel with such speed. If I’d known… maybe I’d have kept tighter hold of them and not let unseen tides pull us apart.
- Never Let Me Go

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Love and Other Drugs

"You meet thousands of people, and none of them really touch you. And then you meet one person, and your life is changed... forever."
- Love and Other Drugs

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Crazy Sexy Cancer

"We all have something we'd like to go back and fix, to stop time, and start over."
- Crazy Sexy Cancer

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Shit People Say to Widows (Video)



Though I'm listed in the credits, my contribution was a little long to make it into the final cut. These are all widow(er)s repeating the stupid shit our mostly well-meaning friends, family, and sometimes complete strangers have said to us.

I have so much more I want to say about this topic - but it'll have to wait for another blog post. A day when my "widow meds" are working a bit better.

Friday, February 3, 2012

That's My Dog

Nate: It just doesn't stop, does it?

Ruth: It gets better... but it never goes away, no.

- Six Feet Under

                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here's a funny story for you.

My apartment landlord, after a year of my non-barking collie mix living with me, suddenly decided he didn't want pets in the building anymore. I didn't feel like going to court over a lease dispute and so agreed to move out in three months. My mother's comment, when I started moaning about having to move in the middle of March, said to me "My grand-puppy needs a yard. Go buy a house." So. I bought a fenced in yard that came with a nice little house. That was four months after my twenty-fourth birthday.

Two years later I had a friend who had to quickly move from her home into an apartment that didn't allow dogs. She boarded her Scottish terrier with me. It was cute. It was old. And it peed on my floors a lot due to some bladder aliment. But it never barked. And it always peed on the kitchen floor, for which I was eternally grateful in a house full of wood floors.

One lovely spring, my mother came to stay with me for a week. And, being not long out of college, along with already being burdened with a house mortgage, we had to share the only bed I owned. Since the weather was nice, (and I was cheap) we slept with the windows open. We slept with the windows open right up until about five in the morning. When a dog started barking.

Mother: What's wrong with that dog?

Me: I dunno, Mom. It's not my dog.

Mother: Is that dog hungry?

Me: I haven't a clue, Mother. It's not my dog.

Mother: Well, should I go let that dog out?

Me: Mother, that's not my dog! I don't bathe it, I don't feed it, I don't take it for walks. THAT'S NOT MY DOG!

The barking was coming from three yards over but between both of us being half asleep and the acoustics of the neighborhood, my mother assumed it was my furry little guest. As far as I was concerned, the dogs under my roof were mine, and were my responsibility. All the other dogs were, well, not my dog - nor were they my responsibility.

All this to say there are many things that are not my dog:
How uncomfortable people feel when I cry in public. Not my dog.
How disturbing it is to people the frequency with which I still think about my husband. Not my dog.
Making those around me feel comfortable with the idea that my life currently has no real direction. Not my dog.

Getting on with my life, knowing this grief may never fully leave my soul and coming to terms with that idea, working on getting better. That's my dog. That's my responsibility.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Time Flies

Nate: I just feel like all I do all day long is manage myself, and try to fucking connect with people. But it's like no matter how much energy you pour into getting to the station on time or getting on the right train, there's still no fucking guarantee that anybody's gonna be there for you to pick you up when you get there. You know what I mean?

Maggie: Well, I know that if you think life's a vending machine, where you put in virtue and you get out happiness, then you're probably gonna be disappointed. I know that. 

Nate: Is that how I sound?

 Maggie: A little.

- Six Feet Under