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An Analogy on Grief

Found this comment on reddit years ago. I post it in most threads where I see someone has lost a loved one. Hope it helps you as much as it did me. If you have lost someone dear to you, I hope this is something that you can draw some comfort from.

 

“Alright, here goes. I’m old. What that means is that I’ve survived (so far) and a lot of people I’ve known and loved did not. I’ve lost friends, best friends, acquaintances, co-workers, grandparents, mom, relatives, teachers, mentors, students, neighbors, and a host of other folks. I have no children, and I can’t imagine the pain it must be to lose a child. But here’s my two cents.

I wish I could say you get used to people dying. I never did. I don’t want to. It tears a hole through me whenever somebody I love dies, no matter the circumstances. But I don’t want it to “not matter”. I don’t want it to be something that just passes. My scars are a testament to the love and the relationship that I had for and with that person. And if the scar is deep, so was the love. So be it. Scars are a testament to life. Scars are a testament that I can love deeply and live deeply and be cut, or even gorged, and that I can heal and continue to live and continue to love. And the scar tissue is stronger than the original flesh ever was. Scars are a testament to life. Scars are only ugly to people who can’t see.

As for grief, you’ll find it comes in waves. When the ship is first wrecked, you’re drowning, with wreckage all around you. Everything floating around you reminds you of the beauty and the magnificence of the ship that was, and is no more. And all you can do is float. You find some piece of the wreckage and you hang on for a while. Maybe it’s some physical thing. Maybe it’s a happy memory or a photograph. Maybe it’s a person who is also floating. For a while, all you can do is float. Stay alive.

In the beginning, the waves are 100 feet tall and crash over you without mercy. They come 10 seconds apart and don’t even give you time to catch your breath. All you can do is hang on and float. After a while, maybe weeks, maybe months, you’ll find the waves are still 100 feet tall, but they come further apart. When they come, they still crash all over you and wipe you out. But in between, you can breathe, you can function. You never know what’s going to trigger the grief. It might be a song, a picture, a street intersection, the smell of a cup of coffee. It can be just about anything…and the wave comes crashing. But in between waves, there is life.

Somewhere down the line, and it’s different for everybody, you find that the waves are only 80 feet tall. Or 50 feet tall. And while they still come, they come further apart. You can see them coming. An anniversary, a birthday, or Christmas, or landing at O’Hare. You can see it coming, for the most part, and prepare yourself. And when it washes over you, you know that somehow you will, again, come out the other side. Soaking wet, sputtering, still hanging on to some tiny piece of the wreckage, but you’ll come out.

Take it from an old guy. The waves never stop coming, and somehow you don’t really want them to. But you learn that you’ll survive them. And other waves will come. And you’ll survive them too. If you’re lucky, you’ll have lots of scars from lots of loves. And lots of shipwrecks.”

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Annie, my only mom…I will miss you.

Today is August 9th and it is just now that I feel ready to blog again.  It’s been a long, hot summer.  Preceding this sweltering couple of months I suffered a sadness I had not felt for almost 30 years.  I watched for six long weeks-with unwavering hope- that my mom would recover from an extensive open heart surgery she had on April 3rd.   She lingered in the hospital, suffering from kidney failure, breathing problems and a heart that just wouldn’t heal.   On May 21, 2012, my mom gave up her fight and passed away.

My mom and her husband John, my step dad. This was taken in December, her last Christmas.
I impulsively took this photo of my mom just before they took her into heart surgery. It is the last photo of her able to sit up and fairly normal. She never recovered and was unable to sit up or walk again.

We prayed and prayed.  We had a few glimmers of hope, but it was not to be.   It was very sad.  It was very spiritual.  It was emotionally and physically grueling for us to watch.  By the end of April, I felt like I was going to have a nervous breakdown from the stress and despair I was  feeling.  I had never felt so on the brink of losing my mind.   Eventually I worked it out and cried a lot and did whatever I could do to work through the harsh reality that my mom was dying.  I took photos.  I decided that I wanted to document my mom’s journey for my own memory.

If you are a reader of my blog you may have seen the tribute I wrote about my mom a few years back for Mother’s Day.  I’m so glad she got to see this.  I had many chances to tie up loose ends with her, talk about things and tell her what I wanted her to know in the event she did not make it through the surgery.  A few weeks before my mom had her surgery, she was in the hospital and I came to see her and it was just the two of us.  I came in the  evening  and I ended up staying after visiting hours till 10:30pm.  We had such a close, tender conversation.  We shared tears and love and it  made my heart happy to have had this moment in time to keep forever with her while she was sitting up and able to still get around.

My mom told me she had to take a chance at the heart surgery because without it, she wouldn’t last too long because her heart was inevitably going to stop working. This was her only chance and she had to risk it.  She suffered from aortic stenosis that was so progressed, she would get winded just walking across the room.  Her life had come to a complete standstill.  She was a shadow of her former self and she hated it.  Prior to her illness, she was a firecracker of a lady-spunky,  energetic, and sassy.  She was a career waitress, and worked hard her whole life.  She and my dad, a blue collar factory worker, had pooled their resources their entire lives to have the little house of ours on Kilbourn-a little cracker box of a home on a Chicago city lot, but it was a house of love, and it was good, and I am so grateful I had it and these people in my life to love me.

It is now two and a half months since I buried my mom and I have had my moments of sadness.  They come in waves and because menopause is beginning to wind it’s roots  in my soul, the grief comes on stronger and at times without warning.  Writing helps.  I want to push through this sadness and carry on.  I have so many good memories and so much more to tell you all.  You see, Annie was the only mother I ever knew.  I had another mother-the woman who gave birth to me.  I found out when I was 37 years old I was adopted.  Quite a shock, it was.  But that just makes my love for my mom that much more.  Even though, from the very beginning, I worked my way into her heart, she loved me as if she had carried me under her heart.   And for that, I will love her always.

My three sons carry their grandma’s casket. She would be so proud of them for doing that for her.

The day before my mom died, the nurse told me that she was calling out to her parents.  She referred to them as, “Momma & Daddy”.  She was from the South and had called them that until they died.  I know my grandparents were in her hospital room waiting for her so they could walk with her when she passed.  I was so thrilled to hear this-to know they were there for her and she wasn’t alone.  I know she missed them so much.  Now they are together once again.  And, after learning my mom had seen her parents… for the first time in a long time, I had a renewed sense of hope.

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Come on, come on get healthy!

Holy goodness, I just realized I haven’t blogged since the first week of March.  Lame.  No excuse.  I’m just totally busy with life.  So many things are going through my mind-I’ve been dreaming about the future, worrying, stressing and trying to pull out my usual positive attitude which is almost always right there in my center, beneath my heart.  It’s coming.  It’s there.  I’m just going through a little rough spot now but all will be well soon.  Nothing ever gets the best of me.  In the mean time, I have changed my eating habits and have begun eliminating excessive sugars from my diet and now I eat powerhouse foods that are made up of disease fighting antioxidants.  In addition, I’m now  focused on slimming down naturally without stress or pressure on myself.  I wanted to share with you the few changes I’ve made and I hope you, too, will begin to eat more healthy and make those changes a way of life, to keep weight off and disease away.   Here’s what I do:

 

1.  Fage brand plain Greek yogurt in the morning and evening as a snack with Stevia as a sweetener, a 1/2 tsp of cinnamon and a handful of fresh, organic blueberries.

2.  Less coffee and in place of it I sip black tea and green tea with Stevia.  I also like lots of water.

3.  I watch my sugar intake carefully and don’t consume much of it any more.

4.  I eat a lot of fresh veggies like brussles sprouts, bok choy, cabbage  and broccoli-cooked, of course!

5.  I love red seedless grapes as snacks.  They are so delicious, and they help stave off dementia and help my heart.

6.  I snack on a handful of nuts like Brazil nuts and walnuts.  Both amazingly healthy for you.

(Please check with your doctor before you consume any of these foods, be wary of allergies to foods.)

These are the few changes I’ve made and so far and I know they’ve made me feel and look healthier and more energetic. Not only that, these dietary changes have lessened the amount of calories I take in which has been a benefit in the weight loss column.  Slowly I’ve taken off 27lbs since  last May.  I am happy.

What changes have you made to get healthier?  Let me know…I need some new suggestions!

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My newest painting ala Flora Bowley style

I am in the fifth and final week of Flora Blowley’s first online painting course, Bloom True.  I have wished for and anticipated this class for many months and I was not disappointed.  It was so well thought out, organized and very professionally done with videos of her painting and demonstrating the techniques every week.  I learned so much and I had an interesting  time learning her very freeing way to paint using intuition as my guide.  I have another canvas in the works that isn’t complete yet, but this one is the large 4′ X 5′ stretched canvas that has me feeling very proud and pleased in what I have accomplished.  I can’t wait to begin more canvases using her techniques while spinning my own style within them.

I’m calling this one Undaunted .  Click on the photo to get a better look.

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Romantic, Haunting Florence.

I just discovered Florence Welch of (The Machine) and after spending a few hours playing her music and watching her sing on YouTube, I’m officially loving her.  She is amazing.  She has the style and demeanor of a Pre-Raphaelite woman or Venus on the Half Shell with pipes like Grace Slick-only more haunting.  Oh my. Love.

 

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Ten years is all you need.

I have a friend who is just a few years older than me and she and I were talking about our dreams and what we’d like to do with this second half (or 1/3) of our life now that our kids are older.  She expressed a little bit of angst at the thought that she might be too old, and there won’t be enough time to accomplish everything she hopes to do with her dream of restyling clothing.  And it’s not that she thought she was going to die any time soon, she was more concerned about ‘how will I feel, when I’m older?’  Will I have less spunk than I would have had I unearthed my dream in my thirties? And for a moment,her anxiety became infectious.  After all, there are no guarantees how anyone is going to feel as they age upwards into their sixties and seventies.  But, I quickly got to thinking that ten years is all you need. I know, in my personal life anything I’ve done for a long time usually phased out after ten years.  That’s about the extent of where my interest lies, unless of course, it’s profitable and the motivation moves me to continue on and be more successful.  Ten years.  That’s doable and within reason.  She took great comfort in my wisdom and found it to be just what she needed to keep her feeling hopeful and positive about working toward making that dream come true.  It’s something she’s wanted to do forever and there really is time for it to happen.  We are all going to be here anyway (hopefully), aging gracefully, we might as well be busy, beautiful, mature people with a mission and a dream to accomplish.  What are you hoping for?  What is your dream?  It’s not too late to make it happen.  And that dream we are busy accomplishing may be just what we need to keep us young.

Raise your Glass to aging with sass and working toward that dream.  Don’t  let it go this time!

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Winter is a time for comfort…

These are a few things I found this week that I feel are really wonderful.  Each of these items are something I’d love to have.  As far as the floral clogs go, well, I just had to order myself a pair that look just like the photo below. And, they were on clearance!

This is the Zen Den.  Can you imagine having this little place of peace and quiet and serenity just waiting to be used for your benefit?  When I watched the video, the first few people had the right idea….it was a place of quiet.  And, yes, I would love to have one of these in a corner of my living room….but, in my house it would have to be sound proofed to be effective.  Can you imagine, though, how nice this would be?

I’d love to have my own Zen Tent

These floral clogs by CapeClogs.com make my heart happy.  (I ordered myself the floral ones below.) click here to shop for happy clogs for yourself.

My friend Laura introduced me to this fun show last weekend and I just love it.  In the winter, sitting under a fleece blanket and watching sitcoms back to back is almost like comfort food to me. It’s doubly special that the show takes place in my hometown, Chicago.  Mike and Molly are that special comfort for me, as well as The Office.  Seriously, I can’t get enough of The Office.  It’s the BEST.

Mike and Molly is a very cute show.

Which brings me to this….how funny is it Quill.com carries Dunder Mifflin paper, just for fun?  I love it.  Click here to get yourself a box.

I just made this soup tonight-Skinny Tastes Cabbage soup with pork.  Oh.My.Goodness.  Was it good!  Absolute pure winter comfort food.  Get the recipe here.

This book has me dreaming of what I’d like to have in the future….a little farm.  (I’ll write a blog post about that later.  It’s worth writing about.)  The book shows me all things are possible.

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My word for 2012

It seems to be a trend over the last few years to choose a guiding word for the new year.  A singleton resolution, so to speak.  Last year my word was ‘undaunted’ and to commemorate it I purchased a sterling silver ring with UNDAUNTED engraved on it.  (Midway through the year I accidently lost it, but that didn’t stop me from living up to my word).

My word for 2012

I’ve decided that that is the year I am going to expand my creativity and work on developing my art.  My word for this year is PAINT.  I want to paint on a regular basis this year (several times a week, if not daily), developing my style and reaching 100 completed paintings by years end.  I’m taking a painting class in September with Flora Bowley in Wisconsin (can’t wait!) and I intend to take a few other painting courses in March/April using the Michelle Cassou Point Zero method.

My only intention for this year is to paint.  And that’s exactly what I intend to do.

What’s your word for this new year?

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Why do I miss it so?

I stumbled upon this tonight and when I watched it  my heart began to ache. I love New York so much.  I have visited numerous times and still, I have so much yet to see and do.  I have to get back.  It’s calling me.

———————

Some folks like to get away, take a holiday from the neighbourhood

 Hop a flight to Miami Beach or to Hollywood

But I’m taking a Greyhound on the Hudson River Line

I’m in a New York state of mind. I’ve seen all the movie stars

 In their fancy cars and their limousines.

 Been high in the Rockies under the evergreens.

 But I know what I’m needing, and I don’t want to waste more time

 I’m in a New York state of mind. It was so easy living day by day,

 Out of touch with the rhythm and blues, but now I need a little give and take

The New York Times, The Daily News 

It comes down to reality, and it’s fine with me ’cause I’ve let it slide.

 Don’t care if it’s Chinatown or on Riverside.

 I don’t have any reasons I’ve left them all behind

I’m in a New York state of mind 


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Tis’ the season…for knitting…

It’s happening again.  A few days ago I was in the basement organizing my clutter and I came across my insane stash of yarn.  Now the reason it’s insane is because I’m not actually a knitter- and someone who’s not really a knitter should not have this much yarn.  However, I have enjoyed the process of knitting for lengthy amounts of time, knitting up rectangular anything because that’s all I can do.  I’m just not a pattern knitter and I wish and hope I will someday be able to open up a knitting book, pointer finger to the design of my choice and just begin knitting away.  But, that’s for another time, and I digress.  Opening those Rubbermaids was the equivalent of opening a Pandora’s Box.  I now have The Fever.  I want to knit.  And knit.  Now.  I can so relate to the quirky woman in this little animation-one of my favorites that illustrates The Fever.