Sing for the joy that's found in setting up the pins and knocking them down

Friday, April 17, 2015

This Man


This Man...
  • was the most amazing father, even though his own father died when he was only two
  • loved farming and happily looked forward to the busyness of both planting and harvest
  • never missed an opportunity to tell his kids how proud he was of them
  • married his neighbor girl and spent the rest of his life being the kind of spouse and parent that we all want to be when we grow up
  • could bring your world crashing with the words, "your mom and I are disappointed in you"
  • was a leader not because he put himself at the front of the line, but because everyone wanted to follow his example
  • always told my mom that she had prepared exactly what he was hungry for--whether it was a gourmet meal or a bowl of cereal
  • said "we'll be thinking about you" which really meant "we'll be praying for you"
  • was concerned about us wasting ketchup, really concerned
  • was gentle with his animals, disciplined in his work and playful with his children
  • could sneeze louder than anyone I know and usually did it in sets of 9
  • told us kids that he had the most beautiful wife around and believed it with all his heart
  • never missed an opportunity to tease his grandchildren who adored him
  • gave free rides in his combine
  • always made my friends feel welcomed at our house
  • was proud to have served his country
  • grew up in a single parent home where his mom continued to run the farm even after she lost her husband
  • prayed before and after every meal I ever ate with him
  • owned a well worn Bible
  • will not be in history books, but was one of the most influential men I've ever known
  • asked me two questions before I married Eric, Is he good to you? and Does he love the Lord?
  • let me lay my head on his shoulder and cry in the middle of night after Eric left us
  • always had enough peppermints to pass down to each of us just when the church sermon started
  • was a humble hero who saved a little boy's life on an autumn day during harvest
  • is the reason I named my oldest son, Henry
  • cried easily
  • entered into his eternal home on a Good Friday
  • lived conservatively and gave generously
  • had calloused hands, but a tender heart
  • was everything you could ever hope for in a dad and is missed deeply each and every day








Wednesday, April 1, 2015

The Stage of Sad

I don't spend much time thinking about the stages of grief.  I just googled them to even see what they were and the list which was provided sounded familiar to the emotions that cycle through my head on almost an hourly basis.  Overall, I've never been much of a fan of someone telling me how I will feel on a given topic at a given time.  Grief has made me feel even more strongly about that. 

A couple of days after Eric died, Bea came to me and said "They say I should be angry.  I'm not angry.  Do I need to be angry?"  I told her there weren't any rules to how she should feel.  I certainly knew that my head wasn't holding to any.  For the record, I'm not angry either--weary and frustrated some days, but not angry.

The stage where I'm stuck lately is just sad.  Going forward I'm going to refer to a lot of "they"s in this blog and when I say "they" I don't mean the experts or those who study these topics around grief and loss.  I mean a sweet and select cabinet of people close to me who have lost spouses and/or children.  I rely upon them tremendously on my journey through this maze that follows the loss of someone.

I can recall conversations with almost all of them that ended with a shrug of the shoulders, a sigh and this comment, "I'm just tired of being the person that's sad."  That's where I am lately.  Because you don't see me collapsed on the floor in a pile of tears, most people are pleased to see that I'm doing pretty well--and for the most part, I am. 

I'm going to steal a section from a well read blog of a newer widow than me because she says it better than me and why reinvent the wheel. (myhusbandstumor.com)

People know I’m grieving, they just don’t know what it looks like. Or how long it takes. Or that it’s an actual, time-consuming act that can’t be compartmentalized and scheduled for convenient times like, perhaps from 6-8 on Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings.

If it could have been, I’d have done it, because at my heart I am just an overachiever looking for a gold star.

I fear sometimes that by being positive and not collapsing into a pile on the floor, I’m making it look easier than it is. And that doesn’t do any favors to the world, because it isn’t easy.

Survivable? Absolutely. 
Okay? Sometimes!
Doable? Yes.
Easy? No. Not easy.
There is no quiet.

And to all of that I say, Amen!

Recently, a new member of my grief cabinet told me that it's a constant reel playing in her head.  I wanted to hug her for saying that because I could finally visualize what was going on in my own head.  A looping video that plays constantly those moments and days around the loss.

This is what it's like. I'm blow drying my hair and I'm thinking about walking down the aisle with my kids at his funeral.  I'm choosing what spaghetti sauce to buy and in my head I can hear the ambulance sirens screaming while I told him it was all going to be okay.  I'm setting up meetings at work and he's short of breath and frantically asking me to pray for him.  I'm loading the dishwasher and I'm thinking about wrapping my arms around Henry on the couch as some kind-faced ambulance attendant told us Eric was gone.  All those sad, but meaningful moments  that are stuck on repeat in my head.  Do I want them to stop--no, because it would mean that I would lose those last pieces of him.  Do I want them to quiet down and be less of a distraction--yes, absolutely. I assume that over time the volume and clarity of all those scenes will soften and then become less and less.  But never be completely gone. 

Some days I lay on my bed and try to think back to what was in my head before Eric died.  What did I even think about?  How did it feel?  What made me happy?  What made me sad?  It's almost impossible to imagine what that was like. I can't remember the before because of the enormity of the after.  And that's the rub.  To want to purge my mind of that sad movie that keeps playing is to get rid of parts of him from my memory.  I don't want that.  But to look away from the real world and keep my eyes glued to the video that runs in my head puts me in a sad place and probably dangersous place that isolates me from the good that remains in my real life--and there is so much good. 

So I'm working on figuring out how to make this sadness a part of the good and even beautiful landscape of my life.  There is a part of me that will always be sad for the loss that I've experienced.  But, I don't have to let that sadness and loss ruin the joy and abundance that's still all around me.  They can live beside one another in the same way that a harsh winter makes spring just that much sweeter.  Can I do that?  I don't know.  It sure sounds good, but it will take work.  I also have to remind myself--over and over--that I'm sad because of this amazing person that I lost.  He is worth being sad about.  That life we had together is worth the sadness I carry today.  I would gratefully do it all over again even knowing exactly how it would come to an end. 

Sad?  Unbelievably
Thankful? Absolutely
Happy? Honestly, yes
Hopeful?  By God's grace, always