Showing posts with label remembering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label remembering. Show all posts

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Conversation, Interrupted

Dear UD,

               Eight years ago on this day, we all gathered to celebrate your 61st birthday. The next month, we lost you. I can’t believe it’s been eight years since we’ve talked. Eight years since I’ve heard your voice. Eight years since we played Bridge together, ate together, laughed together.

                Time is uncountable. There are so many things I want to tell you, so many changes in the world, in my life, so many times I want to brainstorm with you again.

 

Conversation, interrupted.

 

Even in this past year so much has happened that I wish you, and mom, and dad, were here to witness, to share. 


I’m starting my own business, a publishing company, and publishing some of my books, and your plays. So many days, I wish I could call you to talk about the company, the editing, the excitement, all those details that you nurtured, and I wish so much you were here to see Memorial Day Picnic published.

 

My grandson, DJ, David James, is a source of love and joy and happiness. He shares a name with you, and like you, he is the epitome of loving and creative and smart and sweet.

 

I met a brilliant, kind, amazing man, and I wish we could all sit around the table, play Scrabble or Spades, and talk and laugh and learn together.

 

One two three…those are only three but some of the top, best, most precious I want to tell you, mom, dad…

 

Conversation, interrupted.

 

It’s Spring again, UD, so time to celebrate and honor you and your influence on me, in this world, and in our family. Happy birthday, Uncle David. You are remembered, you are missed, you are loved.

 

Love, Rach


Monday, March 15, 2021

Spring Fever 2021

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.

 

America gives us three days to grieve. What a joke. Grief is a never-ending monster of heavy aches and overwhelming sadness. After three days, people tell us to move on, stay busy, get back to life and living. After a year or two, they tell us to let go of the old or previous pain, that it has nothing to do with anything happening in life now. What they don’t realize is that we ARE moving on, staying busy, living, and even moving forward because there’s no other choice; however, the pain is ever present, ever there, ever impacting everything everything everything that happens in life from that moment on. Yes, the pain ebbs and flows. The wound scars over. The bruise fades. Time dulls the ache, and memories, old and new, fill the hole in our hearts to a certain extent. However, the pain NEVER goes completely away, and there’s not a second when we don’t see and feel that grief. Because moving forward means a new normal, a new life, a new self. It means living in the shadow of what used to be and will never be again, not on this earth.

 

There are times when living is lighter again, fun again, happy again, and there are still times, will always be times, when the grief encompasses us and all we do. Today is your special day, UD, and so I feel both happy and sad. Happy that we had you in our lives, happy for all the memories and all that we learned from you, happy that you lived and loved once upon a time on this earth and we got to share part of that journey with you. At the same time, I am still so sad without you here with us.

 

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

Friday, March 15, 2019

Of March and Memories

Dear UD,

First dad, then you, and now Mom. Gone. All within a few years. We lost you all too soon, too young, too quickly, and I can hardly stand it.

I didn't want to write you again because it makes it more real that mom's gone. When we lost you four years ago, I wrote about feeling “unmoored,” like I’d lost a rare safe haven in this turbulent world.  And now that we’ve lost mom too, I feel like I’ve lost my touchstone. Talisman. The saying that we don’t know what we’ve got until we’ve lost it is so true. You helped us process everything that life throws at us, and we felt wanted, loved, safe in this world. Mom prayed for us and guided us as we turned to her to measure everything in us, everything in this world. With a million little things throughout our life, every day, in every way, she helped us, and we felt wanted, loved, safe in this world. The matriarch of our family is now gone, and I don’t know how to feel safe in this world anymore.
Orphaned. On the way to your funeral, I rode with Mom and Sonny, and I remember him telling the story about how, at your dad’s funeral, you repeatedly cried, “We’re orphans now. We’re orphans now. We’re orphans now.” I remember that day and how you wept unashamed in front of all of us. At the time, I had no idea how you felt. Now I do. Orphaned. There are no words to describe it. Losing that sense of knowing and being known completely by someone who's known you from birth. Looking at the preceding generation, at the place your parents occupied, and seeing it empty. There are no words for such loss.

No wonder I’ve been plagued with anxiety, panic attacks, nightmares, and sleeplessness since losing Mom.

After I wrote the first part of this letter, I discovered this quote:

“A person who has the habit of hope also has the habit of remembering. Hope needs memories the way a writer needs notes. This is partly because hope depends so much on imagination. Our images of the future are sweepings from our remembrances of things past. If we expect to keep hope alive, we need to keep memory alive. Happy memories of good things we hoped for that were fulfilled, and grateful memories of bad things we survived.” Lewis B. Smedes, Keeping Hope Alive

I found the quote in my new Jeremiah Study Bible, the last gift Mom gave me. Last December when I stayed with her, she said that she wanted me to have a good study Bible, and we picked this one out together. During that month, I made many new memories with her, some happy memories and others difficult ones because it was so terrible to see her struggle, to watch her body betray her as the aggressive cancer advanced. But one memory that is both happy and difficult (happy because I shared it with her, tough because of the reason that I needed to read to her) is of me reading Psalms to her one Sunday morning. Normally, faithfully, she went to church every Sunday; however, by then, she had no energy and too much pain. Also, she read the Bible daily and was in the process of reading through Proverbs and Psalms in a month; however, she could hardly keep her eyes open on that morning, so on December 23, I read Proverbs 23, Psalms 23, 53, 83, 113, and 143 to her. Then, we sang several hymns and prayed together. I am grateful for moments like that, for so many memories and conversations.

But this week as I struggled through the grief of missing Mom and the sorrow of missing you, I read that quote and Psalms 63.

When I remember You on my bed, I mediate on You in the night watches. Because You have been my help, therefore in the shadow of Your wings will I rejoice. My soul follows close behind You; Your right hand upholds me. Psalms: 63 6-8

I was reminded to remember those moments, to celebrate the love shared, and to find hope in those memories, that love, and in God. Hope that God is with me right now, hope that He is with me when I’m tossing and turning in bed at night, and hope that we will all be together again in heaven one day.

UD, it's your birthday month and Dad's, and I would give anything if we could all meet again at your place for cake, cards, celebration with the family. But all we can do is remember you, remember Dad, remember Mom, remember those we lost too soon. I imagine you all together in heaven, celebrating your birthdays, watching over us. I raise a toast to you today, and I want you all to know what you meant to us, to me. How you shaped our lives, how much we miss you, how we love you so.

Love, Rach

Thursday, April 14, 2016

How Do I Miss Thee, Let Me Count the Ways

Dear UD,

This month, everything reminds me of you, and every day feels like a countdown to the day my foundation was shaken.

For instance, Facebook reminded me that one year ago, I tagged you in a photo of Mom’s flower garden, the one that you helped her create by buying her so many bulbs over the years. Yellow daffodils, pretty tulips, purple irises, and so many more.

One year ago today, you were on this earth, and I could tag you in a photo that you would see.

One year ago today, you were at home where I could call and talk to you almost any time of day.

Tonight, I’m drinking tea that I finally dug out of the cabinets, an herbal brand that I took from your home on the day of your funeral. You had so many boxes that you would never have a chance to use so I took one. I didn’t drink any tea for almost a year; opening the box was an acknowledgement that you were gone, but when I came down with a bad cold this spring, I remembered the box of tea, and now I sip the minty brew and think of you. When I drink tea, I will always think of you.

One year ago today, you were drinking iced tea, and I had the hope of another family meal at your place.

This month is a minefield and every day a reminder that the day the earthquake struck is approaching. I take a step to the right, and I remember an email conversation last April where you helped me revise a prompt for my Creative Writing class. I asked how you were, if you were writing, what you thought of the prompt, and if it made sense, and you replied:

               Hey, Rach,

               1)      Okay, not great. 
               2)      Not really. 
               3)      I think it is clear but a bit overwhelming. 
               4)      Yes, it makes sense.

          Grammar—parallel tense:  How did what you learn in Creative Writing . . .

          I would consider selecting 6 to 8 quotes for the assignment and then giving out the rest of them as an appendix for             further consideration.

          Love, UD

I love how you always, always started with a salutation and ended with love. What I would give for another email conversation with you.

A step to the left, and I think about how you coached and supported Lexi as she developed as a performer. Now, she has her first professional dance job, and I am so proud of her. We always thought you would be here to see her blossoming into an adult and professional dancer, and we want to call and tell you all about it. But we're grateful that Lexi had that chance to learn from you on her journey here.

A step to back, and I remember the day before, the day when I talked to you on the phone and wrote my last journal entry. I talked to you about wanting to visit in May, and I said that I loved you. I’m so grateful that I spoke to you that day, but I wish so much that I could talk to you again. That night, I wrote in my journal about my day, and then I ended it with a positive narrative about what my ideal life would be, something I’d wanted to do for years. The next day, I lost you, and I haven’t journaled since.

UD, a friend recently told me that I’d been searching for something outside myself. At one time, yes. Sometimes, yes. I am human, fallible, imperfect, yearning for love and belonging.

If I try to search for answers outside myself, that’s not good. If I’m looking for someone or something to make me okay or to fix or save me, that won’t work.

However, all humans need positive male role models in their lives.

Someone remarked that I am different, unique because of how deeply the loss of an uncle has impacted me, but it’s not just me who is feeling so unmoored in our extended family. Plus, you were one of those special people who impacted so many around you. Not to mention the fact that your loss was near the end of a long, hard set of traumas dealt all within a fairly short amount of time, and like a domino effect, one by one, they crashed down, leaving a scattered mess in my life.

And grief is the same yet different for everyone….it’s the same because, whether we’ve lost a beloved aunt/uncle, parent, grandparent, child, sibling, friend, there is now a hole in our heart, and our life will never be the same; we will never again be the same. Yet, it’s different because those relationships are different and because we are all different people with different personalities, needs, desires. Ultimately, loss is difficult, demanding, arduous, and the grief that follows is something that can take time because it shakes us up and spits us out alone and altered.  

And the thing is…you were one of the very few people on this earth with whom I felt completely safe. One of the few people who saw and accepted all of me. Nothing can replace that.

Safe….I realized recently, that there are only a handful of people I feel completely emotionally safe with and that I do not speak up as much as I need to around those I don’t feel emotionally safe with. It’s time to change that. Though difficult, it’s healthiest for me as well as those around me. I wish I could talk to you about this and process it, but I know you would be proud of me. I hold onto that as I attempt to navigate a new way of interacting and of being true to myself and others.

I feel like I am waking up from a long, hard nightmare…so much to handle in the past few years that I have been overwhelmed, numb, depressed, anxious. January 2013, the girls’ dad dropped a bomb in our lives that we are still processing. October 2013, Lexi moved to NYC for performing arts school, and, while natural and normal for her to go off to college, I grieved. May 2014, Grandpa Crawford died, and a few months later, Dad was diagnosed with cancer and put on hospice. December 2014, Laina and I sold what we could, packed what we could, gave away the rest, and moved back to the farm to be with my Dad and help the family. January 2015, he died. April 2015, you, Uncle David, died suddenly. May 2015, we moved back to Florida so Laina could go to high school with her friends. December 2015, we lost Charlie from Florida (my writing friend and the reason we moved to this area near the ocean), and I fell and broke my right wrist in three places. January 2016, I had surgery on my arm and was virtually helpless for a couple of months. Too much in too short of time, too difficult to process all of this, especially without you.

But this month, this month, every day, I remember you…

Love, Rach