Dear UD,
I miss spring in Missouri—smiling daffodils,
green green grass, tiny buds on limbs, morel mushrooms hunts, crocuses popping
up out of the ground even with a light dusting of snow, earthworms wiggling
away from hungry robins and blue jays, bird nests speckled with tiny eggs,
chick hatchlings chirping, box turtles just out of hibernation, freshly tilled
gardens planted with rows of spinach and green onions and carrots, quick spring
showers that leave mud and puddles, asparagus sprigs standing proudly ready to
pick and eat....the beauty of spring teeming with life, yes, I miss it so.
But more than anything, I miss Mom, miss Dad, miss you, miss the me I was then, miss the family unity, miss what passed for normal just six years ago.
Grief
changes us. It rips us apart and puts us back together like a Humpty Dumpty
that could never be put right again.
Uncle David, I don’t know how you did it—you, mom, and Uncle Bob. You were all in your late twenties when you lost your mom, and then in your forties when you lost your dad. I remember your lament of “we’re orphans now. We’re orphans now” at Grandpa Bruce’s funeral. I didn’t understand anything then. Not at all. No one can at all…until it happens. But now. Now, I need your guidance and wisdom. How did you do it? How did you all process and handle that grief and still move forward with life and love and living? How did you all still keep the family together and make it seem so easy? I don’t know how we’re supposed to do it without you and mom. Or is that your secret? That you had each other? The three of you together could face anything. Well, the three of you and God. Having a relationship with God—is that your secret?
I have siblings I love and am close to. I
have God. We still even have Uncle Bob (Thank God). But nothing’s the same now.
Nothing is okay without you all. Nothing. It’s been six years since we lost you
and Dad and two years since we lost mom, and it still hurts so much. I still
reach for the phone all the time to call mom, call you. I still ache to hear
mom’s voice, your voice, again. I still have a hole in my heart where I am
missing mom.
Moving forward also means remembering and honoring what was and the people who were such a vital part of our story. Filling our hearts and lives with reminiscent moments. Like seeing a full moon and knowing mom is looking down and smiling. Or searching for signs of spring just like mom and you, UD. Or celebrating birthdays with traditions and recipes passed on from generation to generation.
Which brings us back to you. Happy birthday, Uncle David. Thank you for all that you were and are in our lives.
Love, Rach
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