It has
been 1 year since my dad called and told me my mom had cancer.
I remember it very clearly. I
remember where I was. I remember knowing, before my dad told me, that something
was wrong because my mom was always the voice on the other end when "Mom
and Dad" popped up on my phone. It was the first time in my life I have ever
heard my dad cry. I remember listening, having a million questions swirling but
not being able to form any of them into cohesive sentences that made sense. I
remember hanging up the phone and bawling and immediately googling everything I
could recollect from the conversation and knowing it was not good. I remember
texting my sisters "have you talked to dad today?" It was such a hard
day.
Only a year ago we found out she
was sick... and now she has been gone for almost 7 months.
In some ways it feels like 7 long
horrible months. She has been gone for Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas.
She has not been here for my birthday or dad's birthday or one of my kid's
birthdays. She was gone for her mom's and dad's birthdays. She has missed her
anniversary and my anniversary.
She was not here for the birth of
my child. That is so, so hard.
She has already been gone from this
earth for so many occasions that it feels like she has been gone so long...
yet... the pain and sadness is still so fresh and real and hard that it feels
like she died yesterday.
Grief has been a hard thing for me
to learn to navigate.
I am a checklist girl. They talk
about the "Stages of Grief" and to me that meant, I do a stage (like
anger) and then it is checked off and I move on to the next stage. But grief
doesn't really move in stages... not like I thought it would. It should be
called the "Grief Cycle". Stages implies that you complete it
and move on, but really, you may move on to another aspect of grief, but you
are going to circle back around and experience again... maybe a 100 times.
Grief for me just seems to be never ending and ever changing.
I have been surprised at how some
things have caught me completely off guard when it comes to grief.
I went home for Christmas. I knew
this was going to be hard... and as much as I truly wanted to be there with my
dad, I dreaded it. It would be the first time that I had to go home and she was
not going to be there. I prepared myself as best as I could... but man, there
are just some things that caught me off guard.
My mom had about 9 million pair of
dollar store reading glasses. She was always losing them. And where ever she
sat in her house there were always a pair of glasses within reach. When we got
to mom and dad's house, I walked into the bedroom to but down luggage and I walked
past a little box full of all of my mom's reading glasses. For some reason that
very odd, non-sentimental thing is what made it really real for me. And it was
so hard.
I was in the bathroom looking for
something and opened the top drawer and her toothbrush and hairbrush were
there... just as they always have been... and I broke.
There were a lot of hard
moments...hard conversations while we were home. But there were also a lot of
laughs and smiles and good memories made.
I feel like I have a lot of weird
grieving things...
-I can't go through the box of
stuff I brought back with me when we left from the funeral.
-I can't bring myself to take my
mom's obituary/funeral program sheet out of my purse.
-I get very angry anytime I see a
commercial for cancer treatments with happy smiling people talking with their
doctors and living their lives. Like... really- leave the room-angry.
-I have some costume jewelry of my
mom's that I find myself wearing to events and thinking "taking mom to the
Kennedy Center" or "taking mom to the White House"
-I find myself constantly trying to
make her proud... when I never consciously did that when she was alive
-I get offended when I hear the
phrase "I kicked Cancer's A**" Like somehow my mom didn't try hard
enough so that's why she didn't live (totally irrational, I know)
-When I see other people that get
diagnosed and people say encouraging things like "you are strong, you can
beat this" I want to immediately jump in and say... it doesn't matter! My
mom fought harder than anyone... sometimes cancer just wins.
-It is hard for me to talk to
people who loved her most about her... I don't know why
-I have an irrational fear of
people around me (my husband and children in particular) dying
-When something is wrong with me or
anyone I love, my first thought is always "is it cancer?"
-I have a lot of guilt about maybe
not being the daughter that she needed
-I have guilt about not being home
more
-When I see cottage cheese in the
store, it makes me cry (when my mom had sores in her mouth it was one of the
few things she could eat)
-I want to work really hard to not
let people forget my mom
-I get choked up when I take pictures of my kids with my dad and my mom isn't in it
-I get choked up when I take pictures of my kids with my dad and my mom isn't in it
-I can't
bring myself to do anything for a cancer organization... even though I think I
want to... it is just too hard
Grief is different for everyone.
Something I have discovered through
this grieving process is that my mom was a different person for each of her
children, and we are all grieving a different aspect of her.
I have so many times I think,
"I should call and ask mom..." and then remember I can't. This week I
just wanted to call and ask her when she knew my sister was a lefty because I
think Jax might be a lefty. There are so many things I just want to ask her and
I want to share with her that I will never get to this side of heaven. And dang
it... it's just hard!
I've decided that grief, for me,
has been like a blanket. Some days it is all consuming. I am completely covered
and wrapped in it and it totally consumes me. Some days, I embrace it for just
a bit. I have a good cry, sometimes I call someone and sometimes I sit alone...
but I don't spend my entire day under the blanket. And some days I see the
blanket... but it is a nice sunny day and I can just look at the blanket and
know that it is there, but choose not to get under it.
If you are grieving... whether it
has been 7 minutes, 7 days, 7 weeks, 7 months, 7 years, or 7 decades... don't
let anyone make you feel like there is a right or wrong way to do it. Grief is
personal and everyone does it differently.
I love my mom. I miss my mom. And
not everyday is overwhelmingly hard, but today I'm just wrapped up in my grief
blanket.
Life here on earth is a journey we
all venture through... good and the bad and the hard... thanks for joining me
on mine.
Hi Cassie!
ReplyDeleteI just wanted to encourage you and let you know this is one of the most beautiful descriptions of a grief journey (I like your word cycle better!). Thank you for sharing your heart so openly. If it helps at all, I don’t think any of your “weird grieving things” are weird at all...they’re totally legit.
Praying you feel the Father’s peace as you face your day today, no matter what kind of blanket day it is.
-Hillary
This truly is wonderfully written. I don't have advice for you. I know these journeys/cycles can go on for decades from personal experience. I can tell you this -- at least in my trip -- I finally found a peace with what had happened. It took forever. Your mom helped that be possible for me with her final promise to me--to find Jayson and love on him. While you are forced to go on with your life you will always have those things on your list--they change and return from time to time and someday you won't be caught off guard as often but they are there. Again, a beautifully written article. I love you and pray for you and all of your family daily.
ReplyDeleteThis is the most accurate snapshot of grief from the perspective of saying goodbye to your Momma, that I have ever read. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDelete