Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Twelve

The day has come.
And nearly gone.
I have gone through twelve years.
Sometimes, I just survived.
Mostly I have lived.
As he wanted.

It has not always been easy.
It still isn't sometimes.
The last few weeks stand as a good example of sometimes.
But it has been worth the work,
    surviving grief
        and learning to live again.

In our last coherent conversation,
he gave me instructions for "after".
It is best summed up in this statement,
"I don't want you to die of grief!"
He opened doors for me to be happy again.
That's the kind of man he was!

I've thought about what to say on this twelfth anniversary.
Did I want to talk about the challenges of this January?
Did I want to talk about the healing that has happened over the years?
Did I simply want to talk about him and what kind of man he was?
I still am not sure what I want to say.

So I will just say that years bring about change,
    whether or not one has lost a spouse,
        whether or not one has remarried.
In twelve years, change simply happens,
    for everyone!
This year is no exception.

I have thought often the last few days about how I announced
that he had finally gone home.
I gave it a lot of thought ahead of time.
The words still stick with me today.
"The battle is over, 
the war has been won, 
the angels are rejoicing over another victor come home, 
and Al is kneeling at the feet of Jesus."

Al is kneeling at the feet of Jesus.

That says it all!
 
 


Wednesday, January 22, 2025

I don't want to remember...and I don't want to forget

I am less than a week from completing my twelfth year of widowhood.
This coming Tuesday, 4:59 pm,
I will cross into the thirteenth year.
 
This twelfth January has pretty much followed the pattern
of the previous eleven I think.
I think about "it" and him more, much, much more. 
    The "discipline" of putting it out of my mind is difficult to impossible.
        I don't sleep well.
            My dreams are strange and convoluted, 
                few are pleasant,
                    but few are actual nightmares.
                        Just mostly strange.
Pretty standard stuff for January these days.
 
Every year during the month of January,
I take a Facebook sabbatical.
I want to avoid the written out memories.
And every year, the closer I come to the 28th,
the more I want to look.

This year is a little different.
Oh, I still want to look.
And, to be honest, I have been.
But this year, I am reading my journal entries from that time in preparation for my book
    so all the events, 
        all the raw emotions, 
            all of the process of Walking Al Home are very present and real.
 
I tried, back then, to post little on my FB page about Al's cancer.
FB was my escape from cancer and I wanted to keep it that way,
so I mostly used CaringBridge to keep people updated
and to process my own thoughts, feelings, and experiences.
CaringBridge was my therapist then much as all of you are now.
I recall that decision more and more with every "peek" at the memories.
This may be my last January grief sabbatical.

As I am reading in my journal,
I am surprised at the number of times I say,
"I forgot about that!" or "I don't remember that!"
I find that I am both relieved and sad at the realization that
    time - and probably age to some degree - has done what time does.
        It has softened most of the memories -
            and completely erased a few.
 
I have not forgotten his suffering,
    but I have forgotten, no longer feel the intensity of it.
Seeing it written...
I have not forgotten my grief at what was coming,
    but I have forgotten, no longer feel the intensity of it.
Seeing it written...
I have not forgotten every single "event" of those days,
    every single heartache,
        every single kindness,
but I have forgotten some of them.
And, once again, I find myself in that strange state of longing -
    I long to forget...
        I long to remember every detail...
 
One of the things I have discovered in the reading of those entries,
and I am pleased,
is that I seem to have remembered most of the lessons
I promised myself I wouldn't forget.
That July of cancer, I wrote:
I find that I am enjoying simple things more these days. Lying in bed listening to my husband snore has become a pleasure not an irritation. Listening to him pray for me and our children when he wakes in the night rather than asking him to pray more quietly. Cutting his toenails. Picking up after him. Cooking for him. I wish I had sought this perspective BC [before cancer].
I have continued to enjoy simple things,
    have continued to find myself less irritated by small inconveniences 
        and signs of life,
            have continued to enjoy service to those I love,
                particularly to my Lanny Love,
                    rather than resenting it or finding it a burden.

As I read on, I read the following in an August entry:
Al and I were very young when we became "us" rather than "him" and "her". When I look back, it's hard to remember life before Al. As I think forward to a future without him, it is unfathomable. But the more I think about it, the more I realize that whether he is here on earth or in Heaven "getting things ready for me" as he says, he will always be part of me. Time and distance will not erase him from my memory, I will see him every day in our girls and grandchildren, I will see him in our home, I will see him in my dreams. I will always love him, always cherish the memories. He will always be a part of me!
"He will always be a part of me!"
This is a great and mighty truth!!!
 As this twelfth year comes to a close and I prepare to enter the thirteenth,
    this brings me comfort.
It allows me to be grateful for the effects of passing time,
    the softening of the feelings of grief and anguish associated with the memories,
        and even the forgetfulness that I have discovered is more prevalent than I realized. 
At the same time, I am grateful that
    it also allows me to live in the new life that was born that dark January.
For while I have forgotten some of the specifics of those days,
    while the intensity of the emotions has softened,
        while I no longer remember some of the more distant names and faces,
            I have not forgotten him!
 
                I have not forgotten him............ 
 



 
 

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

It's time...

God said several years ago,
"Do this which I ask of you."
I've looked at it.
I've printed the original.
I've begun re-typing it -
            several times...
I've written several versions of the forward.
I've even worked with an interested publisher's editor.

But I haven't done it.
I still feel the spiritual urging to do it. 
I no longer have an interested publisher or editor.
I have several files associated with it.
But it's just been too hard.
 
I cry when I try.
But it's time.
So this month, I am reading it,
my journal entries from that time.
I will shed tears, undoubtedly.
But I will clean that wound, expose it to the air,
and I will begin writing that book
from those entries
of Al's and my journey through cancer and grief.
 
Why today?
Because today is the day that was his first full day
as an in-patient in the hospice facility.
Following a scary and dangerous-to-me night,
our girls and hospice nurse convinced me
that moving him was no longer an option,
it was a necessity for both his sake and mine.
And so the night before,
            at about 7PM,
he left, for the last time, the house where I took him to die
and the transport vehicle took him to the place where he would die
            sixteen days later.
Avoiding the "memories"
hasn't made me forget that -
or any of it.

Why today?
Because I have, in the past,
against my editors wishes and instructions,
given copies of the raw book, still in journal form,
to recently widowed friends who were helped by it.
 
Because my cousin was recently widowed and is struggling -
and the book God has directed me to write isn't there for him.
 
Because another cousin is facing widowhood very soon,
and it isn't there for him.
 
Because it wasn't there for my dearest female friend
when her husband died not quite two years ago.
 
Why today?
Because I am struggling in this 12th January
and think back to that first one
and wish I had realized I wasn't alone
in my thoughts and feelings.
 
Why today?
Because I have been reminded this month
that writing is, for me, a healing balm.
 
Why today?
Because God said so. 
Firmly.





Sunday, January 12, 2025

I dreamed of Madison

I never met Madison.
She died several years before I entered her arena,
long before I ever heard her name.
I have met her mother and one sister,
and perhaps the rest of the family as well,
though I don't recall it,
but I never came to know them well.
I am Facebook friends with her sister and father,
but I'm not sure that should we pass in the mall
they would recognize me nor I them.
Yet, early this morning,
I vividly dreamed of Madison.

During his illness,
one of the things that most bothered my Al
was that our then three-year-old granddaughter
would probably not really remember him.
Nearly 12 years later, I now know, despite insisting otherwise,
he was not wrong.
And now it bothers me.

Another thing that bothers me these days
is the knowledge that our great-grandsons 
will never meet him this side of Heaven.
 
It also bothers me that Lanny's Judy will never meet her grandchildren.
 
All three of these things bother me a LOT recently.
 
I suppose it's the time of year
coupled with the fact that our great-grands are so fun 
toddling 
    and crawling 
        and learning to talk 
             and stacking blocks 
                and.... 
 
And the fact that as a grandmother,
I know what pleasure my grandchildren bring me
and as a parent, I know how sad it made me that 
my mother did not see my children grow up,
that the one who met her has no actual memories of her
coupled with the fact that it bothers my Lanny Love and bonus children
causes me angst.

But early this morning,
I dreamed vividly of Madison
    whom I never met.
We conversed about things she would have been interested in.
    We did things that she would have enjoyed doing.
        We laughed a lot!
            We talked about my new, very short, curly haircut
            and how similar it is to hers
            but not nearly as cute on me.
The dream was extremely vivid.
And, I think, pretty accurate to Madison's personality.
Madison, whom I never met,
yet know because of the vivid, loving posts
of her sister and father.

I do not remember Madison,
but I know her.
 
Thanks for the clarity, young friend! 

 

 
An interesting aside.
After I had mostly completed this post,
I discovered that today is the 13th anniversary
of the end of Madison's earthly life.
I suppose somewhere in the back of my mind,
I probably knew this,
but it was way in the back of my mind.
I love God's timing and use of His children,
even after they have left this world.
 

Friday, January 10, 2025

Stalling

I am stalling right now.

I am a SAD sufferer.
Even before my
Al's death,
January through March were difficult for me.
Shorter days and the resulting lack of sunshine
negatively affects me.
Over the years, I have learned coping tools
like increased vitamin D,
    increased time in God's Word,
        increased exercise (this one is the most likely to be pushed to the side),
            and surrounding myself with people and things that bring me pleasure.
For example, I have carried on my mother's tradition
of early setup and late break down of Christmas decor.
The sparkle and twinkle and magic makes me smile.
So they always go up on or before Thanksgiving weekend
and never come down until after Epiphany (January 6).

So last week on January 7,
we unplugged the outside lights and the inside window lights,
and I dismantled and took down the living room tree 
that stands in the front window and is visible from the street.
I switched out the Christmas dishes for the regular dishes.
And that's where I stopped.
For the last several days,
my to-do list has included taking down some piece of Christmas decor.
I have a LOT of Christmas decor
including eight indoor trees.)
So far, I've been doing an excellent job of stalling.

So thank you for being a part of my procrastination -
and just another few moments of magical smiles.


Monday, January 6, 2025

The twelfth January

It is January,
the month I became a widow.
Today is January 6.
A significant day in my journey to widowhood.
But not a sad one.
 
That January 6 day was difficult.
It was filled with pain and hallucinations.
But it ended with God's brilliant light and deep, deep love surrounding us.
Today is a day I celebrate.
 
Perhaps some January 6
I will tell the story of that day,
22 days before his death,
but not yet.
It was a precious, intimate moment in time
between my Al, my God, and me.
 
This is the twelfth January since my Al went home
and it is odd.
I told my sister yesterday that
this year, it is constantly on my mind,
that time of his increasing illness and approaching death.
It's a return to that time of constant awareness that he is gone.
But it is not the hard grief of that first January after his death,
or even the strange pre-widowed dread/grief of watching him die that January.
It is just constantly there.
I find myself having trouble concentrating,
like grief-fog but without the anguished pain and tears.
I am having trouble sleeping soundly
and am, therefore, sleeping more.
It's an odd time.
 
And yet, in the midst of my odd grief awareness,
I am happier and more content that at any other time in my life.
My Lanny Love and I grow more in-love daily.
My life is filled with God's favor and blessing.
Life is good!

That is what remarriage from widowhood is like!
Really, I suppose, I pray, 
what widowhood is like, remarried or not.
We never forget.
    We never stop loving.
        We never stop missing.
And yet, life moves forward.
We learn to live.
    We learn who we are in this new, unwelcome life.
        We learn to smile, even when it's forced.
Then one day we realize,
life is good once again!
It's different, but it's good!
The forced learning is over
and natural living and the same learning we all experience in life
has replaced the confusion of those first early days, weeks, years.

If you haven't reached that place yet,
it's okay, you will.
It doesn't come easily.
It takes "intentionality" and practice and following God's leading,
but you will eventually reach it!
Just keep putting one foot in front of the other
and moving forward!