For three months now, I've been dealing with a bad case of plantar fasciitis. One of many daily annoyances to cope with, on top of the ever-present grief.
It has been pretty bad, to the point that I have trouble getting around and executing basic daily tasks. The steps I take each day must now be carefully planned and monitored. If I will be on my feet to make dinner, I cannot also do laundry or run errands. If C.T. plays outside with a friend a few houses away, I call by walkie talkie or by texting his friend's mother instead of "using up" my steps by checking on him every so often.
The one activity I'm still able to do with C.T., without pain because it's not weight bearing, is ride my bike. And, at seven years old, even without gears on his bike, C.T.'s little legs are now able to conquer a 10-12 mile trail ride easily. He loves going fast and being out in nature, pedaling hard to summit a slope, calling out on your left to alert trail walkers we are passing by. Despite not having Zachary in a kiddie seat attached to my bike, which hurts every single time, it's been a decent activity for us this summer. We are both getting (some) exercise and fresh air. I am not in physical pain. The stroller mommies, with their talk of sippy cups and naptime, can be largely ignored as we zip by them at high speed.
One day last week, we invited C.T.'s friend E to come along on one of our morning bike excursions. We planned to ride a trail C.T. and I knew well, but it was the first time I was taking someone else's child with us. I wanted to be certain we were taking reasonable precautions to avoid confusion, a fall or accident. The plan was that C.T. would lead, followed by E and finally me, so that I could have my eyes on them at all times. At all significant crossings, we would carefully stop our bikes and walk them across. There was to be no sudden stopping (unless absolutely necessary) to avoid collisions from behind.
We talked about the plan at length and then we were off, C.T. proudly leading the way.
Things were going well. C.T. seemed happy to have a friend with us and E was having no problems keeping up. We went further on the trail than I had expected, further than C.T. and I had pedaled on our previous trips. At our second water stop, probably six to seven (maybe more) miles from our starting point, I suggested we turn around and stop at the park on the way home. None of us were tired yet, but I reminded them we had to pedal back the same distance we'd come, and that the temperature would be creeping up. C.T. and E, neither prone to taking risks, agreed, and we began our bike ride home.
About a mile into the final leg of our trip, just before a winding, forest-dense part of the trail, E suddenly could not pedal his bike. He came to a stop as carefully as he could. I hopped off of my bike and yelled Wait up, C.T., as I set my kickstand down. My hands grasped E's handlebars and I sat down on his seat, tried to pedal. Sure enough, they were completely jammed.
I looked up and didn't see C.T. I thought to myself, He's probably just turning around up ahead, standing up on his pedals like he does. He'll be here in a few seconds. My focus back to E's bike, I knelt down to inspect his bike chains, assured him we'd figure it out.
Ten or twenty seconds later, still no sign of C.T.
I dropped E's bike and began running ahead on the trail, up around the first winding part, assuming I'd see C.T. goofing around or examining a squashed bug just 100 or so unseen yards ahead of us. E became anxious that I had left him but also sensed something was seriously wrong. I yelled over my shoulder, reminding him I'd be back in just a few seconds. I yelled C.T.'s name, then screamed his name several times. No answer. C.T. was gone.
There was a moment when I could no longer see E behind me, and with no clue where C.T. was ahead of me, the reality of the situation began to sink in, sending waves of panic through my body.
I ran back to E and quickly explained that we needed to focus on finding C.T. We'd find and fix his bike later. Abandoning E's bike trailside, I dialed his mother while mounting my own bike and explained our suddenly scary predicament in a few seconds. She said she'd come and see how she could help. Not really knowing if he could manage, but with no other choice, I told E he would have to run alongside my bike as we looked for C.T.
We took off, me darting ahead on my bike, but then slowed by the knowledge that E was on foot. I lunged forward from my bike, screaming and wailing C.T.'s name over and over again, as I pedaled frantically and E tried to keep up.
C.T.
Where are you?
C.T.
Please come back.
I imagined C.T. struck by a car, his body laying in the street, at the first intersection he'd have to cross alone. I imagined someone grabbing him, stealing him, dragging him down to the river, with no parent to protect him. I thought about how scared he must feel, not knowing where I was. I started to imagine telling B I had lost C.T., our only surviving child.
About ten excruciating minutes from the time I first realized C.T. was missing, we found him. He was pedaling back towards us, about a mile away from where E's bike broke down. I dropped my bike and we threw our arms around each other, weeping and trembling with fear turned relief. C.T. was severely shaken and angry with himself for getting lost, for upsetting and scaring his already-broken mother. My knees in the dirt, head in my hands, I could not stop wailing.
C.T. hadn't heard me call to him when E broke down. He'd been distracted, riding, leading the way, when he finally realized we weren't behind him. Confusion set in and he wondered if maybe we passed him and he hadn't noticed. He kept pedaling forward, too frozen by fear to turn around. He broke down into sobs when he explained:
I had to stop someone and tell them I lost my mom. I was so scared. She told me I should turn around and see if I could find you.
My C.T. He is still so little. He was with me, in my care. And then he was gone in an instant. Right under my nose, he was gone.
(To be continued)
Sunday, August 9, 2015
Friday, July 3, 2015
Your lovey
When your brother C.T. was eighteen months old, he became fascinated with construction equipment. We would come across a construction site, big or small, and if time permitted, he would stand and watch for hours. Yes, somehow his attention span extended to hours in the case of diggers. When we learned about construction happening in or around our community, we made time to visit and observe. Your father (also interested in construction since childhood) educated both of us, pointing and talking over the noise, about the pieces of equipment, their parts, functions and applications. If we found a "digger" book, C.T. had to read it. We must have checked out every construction-related book that existed in our local library during those first couple of years after we realized how enthralled C.T. had become.
We have many photos of your brother from the time he was eighteen months old, deep in thought and completely mesmerized by a piece of equipment or a construction job. Your father and I would well with tears as we witnessed the wonder in his eyes, the serious yet contented contemplation on his face, as he began to ask and absorb and actually became a little expert in construction. We felt so fortunate to be basking in C.T.'s development after having lost B.W.
I recently watched a small boy about your age, walking on the sidewalk, holding his mother's hand and carrying a well-worn stuffed puppy dog by the tail. It must have been his lovey.
I wanted to drop to my knees, sobbing, and pound my fists on the concrete.
You would have been eighteen months old on July 7, my love. It hurts so much not to know what your lovey was to be, what interests might have been sparked in your one-of-a-kind brain, at this age. I had accepted I would miss all of this with your brother B.W., but it is too much, Zachary - to accept I will miss all of this with you too.
I love you. I still cannot believe we are apart.
We have many photos of your brother from the time he was eighteen months old, deep in thought and completely mesmerized by a piece of equipment or a construction job. Your father and I would well with tears as we witnessed the wonder in his eyes, the serious yet contented contemplation on his face, as he began to ask and absorb and actually became a little expert in construction. We felt so fortunate to be basking in C.T.'s development after having lost B.W.
Around the same time, C.T. started carrying a specific yellow shovel everywhere we went. It became his "yellow digger" and to him, it was just as vital we had that piece of plastic as it was that I had my wallet when we left the house. Most kids choose a soft toy or blanket to carry as their lovey, but not him. Your brother wanted to be ready to work, to dig, to shovel - just like his beloved construction equipment. He carried it around for at least a year, maybe two.
I recently watched a small boy about your age, walking on the sidewalk, holding his mother's hand and carrying a well-worn stuffed puppy dog by the tail. It must have been his lovey.
I wanted to drop to my knees, sobbing, and pound my fists on the concrete.
You would have been eighteen months old on July 7, my love. It hurts so much not to know what your lovey was to be, what interests might have been sparked in your one-of-a-kind brain, at this age. I had accepted I would miss all of this with your brother B.W., but it is too much, Zachary - to accept I will miss all of this with you too.
I love you. I still cannot believe we are apart.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Verdict
Do not exhale or
relax your
shoulders.
Do not be fooled by the
calm, his obedient vitals,
the mood of
recovery.
Don't even think about sleep.
Stop believing he will
come home,
grow up,
no matter how likely
it was.
Dismantle the pile of prayers,
mop up the slobbering
gratitude
from His unwilling feet.
The eighty-five year old
with cancer,
the triplets born earlier and
much, much sicker,
the drug addict mother:
they will get their miracle.
Not him.
relax your
shoulders.
Do not be fooled by the
calm, his obedient vitals,
the mood of
recovery.
Don't even think about sleep.
Stop believing he will
come home,
grow up,
no matter how likely
it was.
Dismantle the pile of prayers,
mop up the slobbering
gratitude
from His unwilling feet.
The eighty-five year old
with cancer,
the triplets born earlier and
much, much sicker,
the drug addict mother:
they will get their miracle.
Not him.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Frustrated for him
Happy Father's Day, they say. It must be so, for many fathers.
It is the second Father's Day since Zachary died. The ninth since B.W. died.
As disorderly as it is, from the day he became a father, my husband has also been a bereaved father. Today, seventeen months and one day since Zachary died, he is a twice-bereaved father,... and still adapting to the cruelty of it.
There were many, many supporters last year on Father's Day, but only a few people reached out to B today to acknowledge the unbearable. Only a couple of people uttered (or wrote) comforting words today. This must be an extra difficult day for you. I'm so sorry it isn't a joy-filled day with two of your (three) boys with you. As his wife, I am so very thankful for the gentle compassion and persistency of the few. Those five minutes to buy a card, to put a hand on his shoulder, even send a text, are so precious.
It is difficult for me to understand why people who care and want to support us neglect to do so, for B, on a day like today. Are they just too wrapped up with their own happy day, traditional activities and busyness? Is there just nothing they can think to say? Is it simply too sad to deal with or too frustrating that nothing makes this all better? Is it perceived B would be missing Zachary only on the first Father's Day without him? Or my worst fear: is Zachary already forgotten, like B.W. was years ago?
I try not to let the dwindling support bother me, as I notice it more and more, with each passing month. I try to focus on the people who do remember Zachary (and B.W.), who are there with us and for us in wonderfully different ways. I tell myself that with two dead children there are almost too many significant dates, too many pain points in our life, to remember and acknowledge them all. I remind myself that Zachary's death on top of B.W.'s death is our burden, our grief, to carry. I try to keep in mind that no one loves Zachary like I do, like B and C.T. do. I try to accept that other peoples' lives were not shattered when Zachary suddenly and senselessly became ill and died, that other people still somehow believe in happiness, hope, optimism and life's goodness, still relish in their own "happy" Father's Day.
I just wish more of the people in our life had the attention span for B's ongoing, grief-filled reality. I wish more (or at least a consistent ratio of) people would recognize his loss and his pain, particularly on a day like Father's Day. It is so infrequent, otherwise, that Zachary or B's compounded grief is acknowledged at all.
*****
B said something a few weeks ago, during a tearful dinner, and as I have mulled it over, I think it is heartbreakingly true.
Sadly, for many of our family and friends, Zachary was a historical event.
An event from January 2014. History. Not a painful, gaping, human hole in daily life. Not our beloved son who changed us forever and then died, who we will never again see or kiss or feed or bathe or watch grow into the man he would have been. Not the almost eighteen month-old toddler who is supposed to be making first fat crayon marks on a Father's Day card for his daddy today.
It is the second Father's Day since Zachary died. The ninth since B.W. died.
As disorderly as it is, from the day he became a father, my husband has also been a bereaved father. Today, seventeen months and one day since Zachary died, he is a twice-bereaved father,... and still adapting to the cruelty of it.
There were many, many supporters last year on Father's Day, but only a few people reached out to B today to acknowledge the unbearable. Only a couple of people uttered (or wrote) comforting words today. This must be an extra difficult day for you. I'm so sorry it isn't a joy-filled day with two of your (three) boys with you. As his wife, I am so very thankful for the gentle compassion and persistency of the few. Those five minutes to buy a card, to put a hand on his shoulder, even send a text, are so precious.
It is difficult for me to understand why people who care and want to support us neglect to do so, for B, on a day like today. Are they just too wrapped up with their own happy day, traditional activities and busyness? Is there just nothing they can think to say? Is it simply too sad to deal with or too frustrating that nothing makes this all better? Is it perceived B would be missing Zachary only on the first Father's Day without him? Or my worst fear: is Zachary already forgotten, like B.W. was years ago?
I try not to let the dwindling support bother me, as I notice it more and more, with each passing month. I try to focus on the people who do remember Zachary (and B.W.), who are there with us and for us in wonderfully different ways. I tell myself that with two dead children there are almost too many significant dates, too many pain points in our life, to remember and acknowledge them all. I remind myself that Zachary's death on top of B.W.'s death is our burden, our grief, to carry. I try to keep in mind that no one loves Zachary like I do, like B and C.T. do. I try to accept that other peoples' lives were not shattered when Zachary suddenly and senselessly became ill and died, that other people still somehow believe in happiness, hope, optimism and life's goodness, still relish in their own "happy" Father's Day.
I just wish more of the people in our life had the attention span for B's ongoing, grief-filled reality. I wish more (or at least a consistent ratio of) people would recognize his loss and his pain, particularly on a day like Father's Day. It is so infrequent, otherwise, that Zachary or B's compounded grief is acknowledged at all.
*****
B said something a few weeks ago, during a tearful dinner, and as I have mulled it over, I think it is heartbreakingly true.
Sadly, for many of our family and friends, Zachary was a historical event.
An event from January 2014. History. Not a painful, gaping, human hole in daily life. Not our beloved son who changed us forever and then died, who we will never again see or kiss or feed or bathe or watch grow into the man he would have been. Not the almost eighteen month-old toddler who is supposed to be making first fat crayon marks on a Father's Day card for his daddy today.
Sunday, June 14, 2015
Garden
When we moved into this house in the summer of 2012, we had plans to create a garden in memory of B.W. We knew we wouldn't get to it right away because of all of the other expenses that come with building and moving, but this was intended to be as close to a "forever home" as we could imagine, a place where we could create a living memorial for our son without worrying (too much) about being forced to leave it behind one day when we moved again. As a house warming gift, my friend Megan gave us a gift card to a local garden/nursery and wrote on the envelope something like:
A little something to help with B.W.'s memorial garden. I'm sure it will be beautiful.
Only a year and a half later, Zachary died. The implication, as mind-blowing and infuriating as it is..., B.W.'s memorial garden would now also be a memorial to Zachary. A garden for not one, but two, dead sons.
In autumn of last year, we worked with a landscape person to design the garden. For a very small budget, she thought about sun vs. shade, soil, drainage, color and blooming seasons. I honestly don't think our memorial concept or our dead children were in the forefront of her design, but she created a beautiful and well thought out outline for the garden, which we can personalize. She selected two trees for the space, not even realizing the significance of their blooming timeframes. One of the trees blooms in October (B.W.'s birthday) and the other in late winter (the closest we will get in Chicago to something blooming around Zachary's birthday).
We have spent virtually all of our free time over the last few weeks sourcing and implementing (ourselves) a good chunk of the garden plan. We have edged, shoveled, planted and mulched around something like 45-50 trees, shrubs and plants. It has been a physical labor of love for B and me, with plenty of anger and bitterness embedded with it.
You see, this is not how it was supposed to go. The garden was supposed to be yet another way to assimilate B.W.'s death, our grief, the place in our hearts that he holds, into the fabric of our lives. I had imagined a living Zachary involved in this, involved in everything we do in memory of B.W. We were not supposed to add his name to the memorial garden. The garden is not supposed to be for him too! It is still so hard to accept, still so unbelievable that it's real. Of course, I wonder if and when we'll have need to memorialize C.T. too.
We installed a chicken wire fence today to see if the Japanese forest grass will grow back in front of the bird bath. Rabbits ate them overnight, leaving trails of pellet droppings everywhere. I know we'll need a longer term solution but we were hoping to at least allow those plants to grow again, unbothered, if possible. After the bird bath seemed to sit unused for two weeks, which was really depressing for all three of us, B and I finally saw a bird land and play there yesterday.
We are still working on ways to personalize the garden. Ideas and items that had B.W.'s name incorporated now need to be replicated for Zachary. C.T. has been collecting rocks "for Zachary" for over a year now, and we have to figure out how and where those fit. A bereaved friend from Colorado stayed with us a couple of nights last weekend, as she and her daughter made their way to the east coast. She gave us a few beautiful items, in memory of B.W. and Zachary, to incorporate into the garden.
I have spent hours online looking for other customizable memorial garden things. There are very few that don't make me want to vomit. My searches turn up thousands of cutesy options for acknowledging living children, for pet memorials, for the perpetually overused butterflies and dragon flies. Then there are the ones that attempt to sanitize and pretty-up the situation... too beautiful for earth or God needed another angel / flower for his garden. Most of the more sobering items, intended as human memorials, look like tombstones and include wording about a long life lived and how the memories will live in our hearts. Isn't there anything that leaves a painfully real impression, that allows for the injustice of having lost two children?
I don't know that I will ever be satisfied with anything I find when it means allowing for some kind of beauty to come out of Zachary's death. I could find the sweet amidst the bitter, a few years ago, for a garden in memory of B.W. I find I am not as capable or willing now, after having been struck again by the death of another son, who died against all odds. It is still too wrong, still too uniquely horrifying, for his broken mother.
A little something to help with B.W.'s memorial garden. I'm sure it will be beautiful.
Only a year and a half later, Zachary died. The implication, as mind-blowing and infuriating as it is..., B.W.'s memorial garden would now also be a memorial to Zachary. A garden for not one, but two, dead sons.
In autumn of last year, we worked with a landscape person to design the garden. For a very small budget, she thought about sun vs. shade, soil, drainage, color and blooming seasons. I honestly don't think our memorial concept or our dead children were in the forefront of her design, but she created a beautiful and well thought out outline for the garden, which we can personalize. She selected two trees for the space, not even realizing the significance of their blooming timeframes. One of the trees blooms in October (B.W.'s birthday) and the other in late winter (the closest we will get in Chicago to something blooming around Zachary's birthday).
We have spent virtually all of our free time over the last few weeks sourcing and implementing (ourselves) a good chunk of the garden plan. We have edged, shoveled, planted and mulched around something like 45-50 trees, shrubs and plants. It has been a physical labor of love for B and me, with plenty of anger and bitterness embedded with it.
You see, this is not how it was supposed to go. The garden was supposed to be yet another way to assimilate B.W.'s death, our grief, the place in our hearts that he holds, into the fabric of our lives. I had imagined a living Zachary involved in this, involved in everything we do in memory of B.W. We were not supposed to add his name to the memorial garden. The garden is not supposed to be for him too! It is still so hard to accept, still so unbelievable that it's real. Of course, I wonder if and when we'll have need to memorialize C.T. too.
We installed a chicken wire fence today to see if the Japanese forest grass will grow back in front of the bird bath. Rabbits ate them overnight, leaving trails of pellet droppings everywhere. I know we'll need a longer term solution but we were hoping to at least allow those plants to grow again, unbothered, if possible. After the bird bath seemed to sit unused for two weeks, which was really depressing for all three of us, B and I finally saw a bird land and play there yesterday.
We are still working on ways to personalize the garden. Ideas and items that had B.W.'s name incorporated now need to be replicated for Zachary. C.T. has been collecting rocks "for Zachary" for over a year now, and we have to figure out how and where those fit. A bereaved friend from Colorado stayed with us a couple of nights last weekend, as she and her daughter made their way to the east coast. She gave us a few beautiful items, in memory of B.W. and Zachary, to incorporate into the garden.
I have spent hours online looking for other customizable memorial garden things. There are very few that don't make me want to vomit. My searches turn up thousands of cutesy options for acknowledging living children, for pet memorials, for the perpetually overused butterflies and dragon flies. Then there are the ones that attempt to sanitize and pretty-up the situation... too beautiful for earth or God needed another angel / flower for his garden. Most of the more sobering items, intended as human memorials, look like tombstones and include wording about a long life lived and how the memories will live in our hearts. Isn't there anything that leaves a painfully real impression, that allows for the injustice of having lost two children?
I don't know that I will ever be satisfied with anything I find when it means allowing for some kind of beauty to come out of Zachary's death. I could find the sweet amidst the bitter, a few years ago, for a garden in memory of B.W. I find I am not as capable or willing now, after having been struck again by the death of another son, who died against all odds. It is still too wrong, still too uniquely horrifying, for his broken mother.
Friday, May 15, 2015
Imagine
Since Zachary died, people often tell me --
I can't even imagine.
It's validating to hear my very real nightmare acknowledged. I appreciate the sentiment because it is absolutely the truth. One simply cannot know what it is to have experienced the tragic and traumatic losses I have endured, cannot understand their impact on every facet of life, without having lived them. And, declaring inability to imagine is much preferred to those who have the audacity to claim they can understand my loss and my grief, when they actually have no clue. Believe me, that has happened too.
I believe the basic intent behind the statement is most often to comfort and support me..., and intent is huge in the context of profound loss and, so often, vacuous words. Yet, I often hear something else in those words, emanating from the depths of the subconscious where ego and fear and self-preservation exist. Sometimes I recognize, in a flash, that the statement is not about me and my dead children at all, but rather --
I am so glad it wasn't me, wasn't two of my children. I don't even want to think about it.
I suppose it's human nature. We never really entertain the idea that our own children might die before us. We think those kinds of things happen to other people, not to us. We stick our fingers in our ears, close our eyes and sing "la, la, la, la, la" to drown out the frightening possibility. We want to hold on to the belief that our family is safe. We want to believe our planning, our acts of prevention and hyper-protectionism will do the trick. Many of us pray for the health and safety of our children - prayers, we have rationalized, God readily hears and answers.
We turn off or ignore the television news because there are too many innocent children being gunned down, in neighborhoods usually far from our own. We prefer sending in our money to a non-profit or aid organization rather than coming face to face with a child's suffering or death. We change the radiothon station when the bereaved parents come on to talk about their child who fought and "lost" his battle with cancer. The thought of a cherished son, dying in a hospital bed, in the context of modern treatments and a conscientious loving family, is intolerable for us. We don't want to acknowledge it could have been us. We retreat back to our own orderly lives, where things are humming along sufficiently well, where plans generally materialize, where children are alive and well.
In his memoir The Book of My Lives, which is brilliant by the way, author Aleksandar Hemon remembers interacting with people when his nine month-old daughter, Isabel, was suffering with a rare brain tumor, from which she ultimately died:
When people who didn't know about Isabel's illness asked me what was new, and I'd tell them, I'd witness their rapidly receding to the distant horizon of their own lives, where entirely different things mattered. After I told my tax accountant that Isabel was gravely ill, he said: "But you look good, and that's the most important thing!"
So, what if you are unable to ignore or suppress the truth about child death? What if what cannot be imagined is, in reality, your life? What if you have a terminally ill, or dead, child? What if, against all odds, you have two, or three or more, dead children? What if your family's story of child death is so horrific that no one wants to acknowledge it or to ever be reminded of it?
You walk around wearing a mask, politely avoiding the topic no one cares to talk about, but which presses on your soul incessantly: your gravely ill or dead child(ren), your grief. When you interact with people, you stick with topics they are comfortable with. You keep your miserable story, your ugly emotions, hidden so that no one has to be reminded that children die, that your child(ren) died. It is exhausting work, an exhausting act to keep up, especially as you adapt to it. I believe it is one of the most humiliating and isolating things about living the life of a bereaved parent. Not only does your child(ren)'s memory fade into the oblivion of absence and other peoples' discomfort and fear, the grief you carry becomes conveniently and almost entirely, invisible. For the sake of preserving the mirage of life's orderliness for people not directly affected by unimaginable tragedy and grief.
*****
B left yesterday morning for a four-day work trip. He will run into people he sees only once a year, usually at this conference. He decided not to attend last year in light of Zachary's death and so this will be the first time he has seen many of these colleagues since before Zachary was part of our lives. Spouses are invited (although I decided not to attend, again) and so, for the social aspects of the trip, there will be plenty of cocktail-style chatting about life and family, in addition to work.
Imagine the conversation starters.
How are the kids? Remind me, Brandon, how many children do you and your wife have?
We didn't see you last year. What's new?
Where is Gretchen?
As he was packing to leave, B told me he was anxious about the trip, about his ability to float around the light conversations of the weekend, with Zachary's death and his grief as constant companions. And, knowing the way people tend to react, getting through it without slinking into the depression of disillusionment. It is precisely the reason I am not attending.
B is carrying Zachary's photo, his comb and his ear muffs (used to drown out the sound of the oscillating ventilator when he was battling the infection), in his pockets, like he does every day. No doubt, he will have plenty of opportunities to bring Zachary and our new reality into conversation. There will be no way around it. I wonder if someone, just one person, will dare step out of their own orderly reality, for just a few minutes, and imagine a sliver of his.
I can't even imagine.
It's validating to hear my very real nightmare acknowledged. I appreciate the sentiment because it is absolutely the truth. One simply cannot know what it is to have experienced the tragic and traumatic losses I have endured, cannot understand their impact on every facet of life, without having lived them. And, declaring inability to imagine is much preferred to those who have the audacity to claim they can understand my loss and my grief, when they actually have no clue. Believe me, that has happened too.
I believe the basic intent behind the statement is most often to comfort and support me..., and intent is huge in the context of profound loss and, so often, vacuous words. Yet, I often hear something else in those words, emanating from the depths of the subconscious where ego and fear and self-preservation exist. Sometimes I recognize, in a flash, that the statement is not about me and my dead children at all, but rather --
I am so glad it wasn't me, wasn't two of my children. I don't even want to think about it.
I suppose it's human nature. We never really entertain the idea that our own children might die before us. We think those kinds of things happen to other people, not to us. We stick our fingers in our ears, close our eyes and sing "la, la, la, la, la" to drown out the frightening possibility. We want to hold on to the belief that our family is safe. We want to believe our planning, our acts of prevention and hyper-protectionism will do the trick. Many of us pray for the health and safety of our children - prayers, we have rationalized, God readily hears and answers.
We turn off or ignore the television news because there are too many innocent children being gunned down, in neighborhoods usually far from our own. We prefer sending in our money to a non-profit or aid organization rather than coming face to face with a child's suffering or death. We change the radiothon station when the bereaved parents come on to talk about their child who fought and "lost" his battle with cancer. The thought of a cherished son, dying in a hospital bed, in the context of modern treatments and a conscientious loving family, is intolerable for us. We don't want to acknowledge it could have been us. We retreat back to our own orderly lives, where things are humming along sufficiently well, where plans generally materialize, where children are alive and well.
In his memoir The Book of My Lives, which is brilliant by the way, author Aleksandar Hemon remembers interacting with people when his nine month-old daughter, Isabel, was suffering with a rare brain tumor, from which she ultimately died:
When people who didn't know about Isabel's illness asked me what was new, and I'd tell them, I'd witness their rapidly receding to the distant horizon of their own lives, where entirely different things mattered. After I told my tax accountant that Isabel was gravely ill, he said: "But you look good, and that's the most important thing!"
So, what if you are unable to ignore or suppress the truth about child death? What if what cannot be imagined is, in reality, your life? What if you have a terminally ill, or dead, child? What if, against all odds, you have two, or three or more, dead children? What if your family's story of child death is so horrific that no one wants to acknowledge it or to ever be reminded of it?
You walk around wearing a mask, politely avoiding the topic no one cares to talk about, but which presses on your soul incessantly: your gravely ill or dead child(ren), your grief. When you interact with people, you stick with topics they are comfortable with. You keep your miserable story, your ugly emotions, hidden so that no one has to be reminded that children die, that your child(ren) died. It is exhausting work, an exhausting act to keep up, especially as you adapt to it. I believe it is one of the most humiliating and isolating things about living the life of a bereaved parent. Not only does your child(ren)'s memory fade into the oblivion of absence and other peoples' discomfort and fear, the grief you carry becomes conveniently and almost entirely, invisible. For the sake of preserving the mirage of life's orderliness for people not directly affected by unimaginable tragedy and grief.
*****
B left yesterday morning for a four-day work trip. He will run into people he sees only once a year, usually at this conference. He decided not to attend last year in light of Zachary's death and so this will be the first time he has seen many of these colleagues since before Zachary was part of our lives. Spouses are invited (although I decided not to attend, again) and so, for the social aspects of the trip, there will be plenty of cocktail-style chatting about life and family, in addition to work.
Imagine the conversation starters.
How are the kids? Remind me, Brandon, how many children do you and your wife have?
We didn't see you last year. What's new?
Where is Gretchen?
As he was packing to leave, B told me he was anxious about the trip, about his ability to float around the light conversations of the weekend, with Zachary's death and his grief as constant companions. And, knowing the way people tend to react, getting through it without slinking into the depression of disillusionment. It is precisely the reason I am not attending.
B is carrying Zachary's photo, his comb and his ear muffs (used to drown out the sound of the oscillating ventilator when he was battling the infection), in his pockets, like he does every day. No doubt, he will have plenty of opportunities to bring Zachary and our new reality into conversation. There will be no way around it. I wonder if someone, just one person, will dare step out of their own orderly reality, for just a few minutes, and imagine a sliver of his.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
Milestone in a box
I have feared this day for a couple of months now. Yesterday afternoon, Zachary's trunk was finally delivered to our doorstep. Just slightly bigger than a box which might have held Zachary's casket, it sits unopened in our foyer. B and I agreed we would wait until the three of us are together, with some intentional uninterrupted time, to open it.
I know how this works. We will inspect the trunk, our fingers will trace the inscription of his name, his dates, his painfully short story, as if this were his headstone. There will be tears and another cruel jolt of finality, the kind that no parent or (young) brother should ever have to feel, but that we live with,... now, times two. The next logical step will be to go through Zachary's things and place many of them carefully, one by one, in his trunk. We will pick a time to do that. Together we will debate what goes in and where it gets placed, reminding each other it can be opened, contents shifted and snuggled, whenever and as often as we choose. And then, we will shut the lid.
We will shut the lid, again, on our senselessly dead boy.
Instead of a wispy haired, sixteen month-old toddler running around with a sippy cup, instead of the giggling, squirming, pulsing with life, presence and personality of our Zachary, we will have a box. The stark contrast is never lost on me. This is not what I planned to do on the day that marks sixteen months from my son's birth.
*****
It's the neverness that is so painful. Never again to be here with us - never to sit with us at table, never to travel with us, never to laugh with us, never to cry with us, never to embrace us as he leaves for school, never to see his brothers and sister marry. All the rest of our lives we must live without him. Only our death can stop the pain of his death.
A month, a year, five years - with that I could live. But not this forever.
I step outdoors into the moist moldly fragrance of an early summer morning and arm in arm with my enjoyment comes the realization that never again will he smell this.
As a cloud vanishes and is gone,
so he who goes down to the grave does not return,
He will never come to his house again;
his place will know him no more.
Job 7:9-10
One small misstep and now this endless neverness.
~ Nicolas Wolterstorff from his book Lament for a Son
I know how this works. We will inspect the trunk, our fingers will trace the inscription of his name, his dates, his painfully short story, as if this were his headstone. There will be tears and another cruel jolt of finality, the kind that no parent or (young) brother should ever have to feel, but that we live with,... now, times two. The next logical step will be to go through Zachary's things and place many of them carefully, one by one, in his trunk. We will pick a time to do that. Together we will debate what goes in and where it gets placed, reminding each other it can be opened, contents shifted and snuggled, whenever and as often as we choose. And then, we will shut the lid.
We will shut the lid, again, on our senselessly dead boy.
Instead of a wispy haired, sixteen month-old toddler running around with a sippy cup, instead of the giggling, squirming, pulsing with life, presence and personality of our Zachary, we will have a box. The stark contrast is never lost on me. This is not what I planned to do on the day that marks sixteen months from my son's birth.
*****
It's the neverness that is so painful. Never again to be here with us - never to sit with us at table, never to travel with us, never to laugh with us, never to cry with us, never to embrace us as he leaves for school, never to see his brothers and sister marry. All the rest of our lives we must live without him. Only our death can stop the pain of his death.
A month, a year, five years - with that I could live. But not this forever.
I step outdoors into the moist moldly fragrance of an early summer morning and arm in arm with my enjoyment comes the realization that never again will he smell this.
As a cloud vanishes and is gone,
so he who goes down to the grave does not return,
He will never come to his house again;
his place will know him no more.
Job 7:9-10
One small misstep and now this endless neverness.
~ Nicolas Wolterstorff from his book Lament for a Son
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