Saturday, November 18, 2017

Let's not be Graceful in our Grief

Recently there were ads on the radio for a weekend seminar offered by the Sisters of Something or Other. It was called "Graceful Grieving". I held off on commenting because since Brian died I seem to be the Lady of Perpetual Anger, and I wanted to think about why this seminar upset me so much.

I think it is a huge disservice to try and instruct people to grieve gracefully. In fact, I think we need to do the opposite. Grief is raw, and messy, and anything but graceful. To grieve gracefully is to stifle your feelings for the comfort of others. Why should anybody do that?

Why should a mourner smile politely and hide the tears for private moments. Why should a mourner say "thank you" and offer a sweet if phony smile when someone says "he's in a better place", or "God had a plan", or "this will make you stronger"? Grief is hot, wet, and smelly. Grief is loud and grating. Grief is primal screams, and collapsing to the floor. It is forgetting to shower and brush teeth. Grief is tears, snot, vomit and diarrhea. Grief is private pain, but public spectacle.

How offensive that anyone would instruct anyone else on how to mourn gracefully?

When Brian was dying, I tried to shield him from my grief. I couldn't understand what it must have felt like for him to be dying, and I didn't want to burden him with my pain - a pain that he couldn't make go away. I'm sure I failed miserably. I cried when he slept. I left his room when I had to collapse to floor. I stifled my screams. I tried to shower, dress, and eat. I tried to show him that I would be okay. He knew that I wouldn't be ok for a long time.

Then he died, and nothing was ok. I showered and dressed in a suit and went to his memorial. I stood and received "guests" after the service. I sent thank you notes. I told people that I was "fine". I listened to everyone tell me that I was strong.

No.

I wasn't strong. I'm not strong. I continue to breath because that is what you do. Because you live, and you learn to live in agonizing pain. You learn to hide it until private moments, but it never goes away. It becomes easier to live with, but the pain and loss are always there. Every sad occasion that you can't share; every happy accomplishment that you don't celebrate; every holiday that you attend alone; everything new that happens in a world without them hurts - but we are expected to be graceful and grateful.

I am so grateful for the time I had with Brian, but I don't want to be graceful. I wish I could go back a few years and allow myself to fully experience the pain. I wish I could scream in public, tear my clothes, rant at God, curse at others' happiness. I wish I could be ugly, loud and offensive. I wish I could be honest with the force of my pain, because maybe then it wouldn't be so hard now. Maybe had I been allowed to be weak, ugly and selfish then, I wouldn't have to feel so alone in my pain now.






Sunday, June 11, 2017

Perspective

Grief doesn't get easier. We learn how to live with it, but it doesn't ease, we don't heal, we don't move on - we somehow live. Even after four years it isn't easy. It is a continual struggle to see good in a present that will never be as complete and joyous as the past.

Something happened in the past week, that has really helped me to form a new perspective. Something that I wish I could talk with Brian about. Something that feels really profound.

Brian was the love of my life. Losing him will always be the greatest heartache of my life. Loving him, I believe, will always be my greatest joy. I am blessed to have many family and friends that I love. One person stands out, and that is my niece, Denise. She is permanently in my heart in a way that I can't explain. She is my niece by marriage - Brian's niece - but she is my family. I have no children, and she is the closest to a daughter that I will ever have. I hurt when she hurts, I am delighted with her accomplishments. I want the world for her.

Denise's mom was Brian's sister. She died of breast cancer three years before Brian died of appendicial cancer. She didn't have it easy. She was on active chemo for over 11 years, but this lady had a perspective that was beautiful. She said that everyone had something about themselves that they don't like - some people don't like their hair, or their weight, or their fears - she didn't like her cancer, but she was going to live with it. She didn't "fight cancer"; she just chose to live. And despite what the cancer and the chemo did to her body, she lived as best as she could. We had some private time to speak a few days before she died, and I got to thank her for showing me what it really means to live on one's own terms. I wish I had had more time to know her better, but I loved her and I miss her.

Denise and Brian had a special relationship, and it didn't take long for me to fall in love with her. She and her cousins are the greatest inheritance that Brian left me. Denise has been there for me. She was there with us when Brian died. I have a bond with her that is unlike anything I have with anyone else on this earth.

So when she told me a few months ago that she had an amazing opportunity at work, I was so happy for her. When she was selected from a national team for a promotion that would move her for four years to the other side of the world, my heart swelled with pride and joy for her. I would be lying if I didn't selfishly feel some sadness that she would be so far away, but I knew what this opportunity meant for her, and I couldn't be more proud.

Then, two weeks ago she called me and told me that she felt a lump in her breast and was going to see the surgeon. The fear that I felt was unlike anything I had felt before. I felt fear when Brian was diagnosed, but I hadn't lived through his illness yet. I hadn't seen close up what surgery and chemo does. I hadn't seen how cancer can eat a person until there is nothing left to eat. I now understand cancer, and the thought that those things might happen to my Denise, filled me with a fear and rage that were consuming. Her mother died of cancer. Her uncle died of cancer. Her grandmother survived cancer. With this family history, this wasn't just a scare - it was a moment of harsh realities.

They scheduled her for biopsy the next week. They took five cores. We didn't talk after the biopsies. We texted. She needed to turn off the phone from the world. I needed to be supportive but hide my fears. They told her she would have results by the end of the week. So I waited, and I prayed like I have never prayed before.

I believe in God, and I believe in the power of prayer, but my "idea" of God is unlike that of most organized religions. I don't believe in God as an entity that controls our individual fates. I don't believe that people get sick or not because some god decides that. I don't believe that prayer can cause or prevent illness or death. I was never angry at God because my Brian died. To me, God is more of an idea - more of the unembodied embodiment of what is good and true and right in the world. God is the belief in the goodness of people and a recognition of the beauty of life. God is the way things are supposed to be.

On Friday morning I was driving to work, and I couldn't stop the tears. The thought of what could be was so unfair and so terrifying. I cried and I raged, and I cursed at God. I thought if the biopsies come back positive, then there is no God. Then there is no point in prayer, or hope. Then the world is just unfair. And then, as quickly as this rage had escalated, I had a thought. If Denise did have bad news and I blamed God, would I show corresponding appreciation and gratitude if the biopsies came back negative?

Suddenly, I was a hypocrite, because I knew that I wouldn't. As grateful as I would be, I probably would not have expressed that gratitude to the order of goodness and rightness in the world. And that stopped me in my tracks. I have been living with this horrible sadness since Brian died. I know that it will never go away, but I need to focus more on gratitude. I need to feel appreciation that I experienced a love so strong that most people will never know - that even though I now have a profound sadness, I was so lucky to experienc true happiness -  that despite cancer, and poverty, and politics and tragedy there is good in the world, and that life itself is a miracle that I can't take for granted. It's ok for me to feel sad, but only if I recognize both sides of the coin.

On Saturday morning I got a text. All of the biopsies were negative. I immediately called Denise and we laughed and cried. I cried all day - happy tears, because despite how unfair life is, sometimes things end up exactly how they are supposed to be. I cried because someone who I love will be able to take an amazing promotion, and move to the other side of the world for four years, and experience life - and I will get to share that experience with her.

Denise and I spoke this morning, and we laughed, and I cried some more and we talked about all this. We talked about how real the fear was and how amazing the relief is. We talked about how important it is to appreciate the good things because they can be so fleeting.

Bad things are going to happen to me and to the people I love. There will be more fear and loss, but I have been so wrapped up in my fears and losses that I haven't been able to appreciate the gifts that I still have. No, my present is neither as full nor as happy as my past, but I still have life and love and wonder. I hope I can remember to keep that in my consciousness. I am truly thankful for the beauty of life, and to know that while life is not fair, sometimes things turn out exactly how they should.





Saturday, April 29, 2017

Depressed

The first year of grief was unbearable raw pain.

The second year the shock is gone, but the reality of loss sets in.

The third year was a fight to have hope.

The fourth year was unbearably lonely.

I'm starting my fifth year, and the depression is debilitating. The tears come daily. I work, I sleep, I do little else. I feel like the gift of life is wasted on me. I have nobody to talk to. I spend too much time alone. I feel like I don't matter.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

It never goes away

Four years ago tonight was the worst night of my life. When you realize that the idea of the person you love most in the world dying is less horrific than the thought that they will continue to live in their current state.....  When you start to press the morphine button to help him die instead of to help him live.....

That is a pain that never goes away. That is a blow from which you never recover. That was me four years ago tonight, and right now it hurts almost as much as it did then.

I miss you, Brian. This pain is so awful because our love was so strong. Your died too young. Fate was so unfair. I live, not because I expect to regain the happiness we had, but because I know how incredibly lucky I am to have had the love we shared. I will always love you.

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Time Does Not Heal

It will be four years on Thursday. I remember those last days. I remember how brave he was. I remember how searing the pain of losing him was. Time doesn't heal. Time allows you to get used to living with loss and pain. Time eases the shock, but when the shock is gone the starkness of reality is so clear. I miss my husband. I miss our life. I miss feeling that there were things to look forward to. I truly don't believe that I will ever again be happy. I was so lucky. I had the best life could give. It is sad to know that the best is in the past.

Saturday, April 1, 2017

Done

I've wanted to write many times since my last post, but I couldn't log on my devices. I guess my password is saved on my desktop, but things have been hard, and fighting to log on was too much work. I guess getting up and walking to the desktop was too much work too.

It will be four years later this month, and while the raw all-consuming grief has passed, in some ways things are worse. The shock of the loss is gone; now I'm dealing with the reality of life post-Brian. It's not good. I suppose if I'm honest I would have to say it's not bad either. Bad was hearing that your husband had terminal cancer. Bad was watching your most loved one die. Bad was getting his ashes left on the front porch by UPS. Bad was burying a bag of ash that used to be your husband. Bad was choosing a headstone for a wonderful man who died too young. What I have now is just not good.

I think the worst part is the isolation. In early grief people blanket you with care and concern. It's not that they stop caring, its just that with time, the loss is no longer on their radar. It's always on mine. At this point, the grief isn't something I can't talk about with others. They don't understand. They think I should have moved on, but what does that mean? Move on? I have. I buried our cat. I buried our dog. I adopted a new dog that he never knew. I sold our home. I bought my new home. I started a new job. I have accepted that the love of my life is dead. That's moving on, I think. I live in the here and now; I'm not caught up in the past. And that's the problem. I'm lonely. The here and now is lonely. I come home to a nice house and a great dog, but there is nobody to come home to. Nobody gives me a hug, asks how my day is, sits down to dinner with me. Nobody helps with responsibilities at home. Nobody supports me on the bad days. Nobody makes me tea when I don't feel well, or comforts me when I cry, or shares in any sort of accomplishment. Nobody relies on me to do all those things for them. The sadness isn't dissipated; the joy can't be shared - and that makes the sadness so  much worse, and the joy so meaningless.

I'm not young, but I'm not old, and I feel like I am destined to this lonely mediocrity for the next few decades.

My dad is 87 years old and having health issues. He is on dialysis three times a week, and while he is doing great, there is a lot more life behind him than in front of him. My mom is dealing with all sorts of stress and anxiety related to his illness. She is depressed and doesn't know what to do about it. She hates being old, but how do I help? I totally  understand how she feels, but she has no idea that I too feel old and depressed. I work Monday through Friday. I sleep on the weekends. The bills get paid, the laundry gets done, but the house could be a lot cleaner, I could eat better, I could get involved with hobbies or friends - but I don't. It's all too much work, because no matter what I do, I am doing it alone and without my life partner.

I don't believe in heaven. I don't believe in a God that takes people because he needs them more than we do. Brian is dead because he had horrible luck - he had a cancer cell that ate his body, and that modern medicine couldn't fight. The idea that he is in a better place is absurd to me. Death, I believe, is the absence of life. I don't believe in life after death, I don't believe in consciousness after death. I believe that we have the here and now and that we live and then we are gone - and I hate myself for not being able to live now while I have the opportunity. When I die will I regret this inertia, or will I be grateful that I had 9 years together with a wonderful man who knew me, loved me, let me love him, and made my life complete?

I was so very lucky. Now I just feel done.


Monday, January 2, 2017

Holidays suck

I don't write here as often as I used to. I think maybe I need to write a lot more. Maybe this is the only place that I can express myself. I know that very few people see these posts, and I don't know if anyone that I know reads them. Maybe I should write more because there is no other outlet for the grief. The world moves on, and people expect that I have moved on, so grief is no longer tolerated. I'm supposed to accept my life and see the beauty in it. I accept that Brian is dead. I don't look for him around the corner anymore. I don't expect that he will come back. I live in today; I accept my reality.

I didn't know true happiness until Brian came into my life, and I haven't experienced it since he has been gone. That isn't to say that life is awful. Watching him die was awful. Being unable to help him was awful. This isn't awful - it's just not good. I miss him. I miss who I was when he was here. I miss the life we shared. I miss being "us". When Brian was in life we were two perfect halves of a wonderful whole. We fit. We made life meaningful. Now I'm a whole of nothing. I don't really matter to anyone. Nobody asks me what I want, and I couldn't answer. I don't even know. I no longer dream or plan or hope. I just get through one day at a time.

This week we wrapped up the holidays. Hanukah, Christmas, New years. It was a hard week. It is always a hard week now. I miss celebrating with him. From Thanksgiving until his death date in April is hard - so many occasions without him - so many memories.  Thanksgiving, his birthday, Chanukah and our Jew Bear celebration, his families Christmas, the anniversary of when he got sick, the anniversary of his diagnosis and all the bad luck in the hospital, the day we moved to hospice, Valentines Day, our anniversary, and ultimately his death. All of these things. I feel his absence through all of these. So if I invite people to celebrate with Jew Bear, for me it is a very hard bitter sweet event. For others it is a party. On New Years I remember just four years ago when we spent New Years Eve day in the ER and New Years day in bed. How sick he was - but that we still had hope - before that horrible diagnosis.

I seem to have forgotten how to live. I don't know how to be happy. I don't know how to allow anyone in. I know that I could love again, but I'm afraid. I want someone to know me again, but I can't imagine anyone knowing me like he did, loving me like he did. And the idea of losing again is too too hard. I am angry at life, and at the people in my life. Maybe it isn't fair - maybe I have nobody to be angry at but myself, but I feel like I just don't matter.

These holidays sucked. On Christmas day I went out with friends - the same friends that Brian and I went out with 4 years ago - but it wasn't fun. Then that night I got food poisoning. I felt awful, and I cancelled the Jew Bear celebration. I had another small get together planned for New Years, and woke up that morning with a horrific migraine. Every time I stood up I was overcome by waves of nausea. I couldn't cancel though - nobody cared enough to tell me to take care of myself. And then a friend mentioned that I'm having a party in front of others and I ended up with double the people that I had invited. So I doubled up on pain meds and I suffered through, and it was fine. Everyone had an ok time - even me, despite the headache. But I was angry. It was like my life isn't even about me. I had to have this party for others despite that I was sick. I don't have my partner to help set up and clean up. I don't have anyone to lean on. And I became furious. I'm not going to put others first anymore. I'm not inviting people or hosting out of a sense of obligation. I'm not doing things because other people think that I should. I'm not pretending to love my life because anything less makes others uncomfortable. I want to matter to someone the way that I mattered to Brian.  

I am so sad, and so lonely. I am so angry. I am so tired of living like this. I feel like I don't know how to relate to people anymore. I don't even know myself anymore. I don't know what I enjoy and don't enjoy. I don't know what I want. I don't know how to lighten up and enjoy the gift of life. I hate that this is who I have become. I hate what my life has become. I am so tired of hurting.

Grief doesn't go away. We learn to live with it, but we don't heal. I haven't healed. I have moved forward in time from those horrible days when I heard that he was dying and that there was nothing we could do. I have moved forward from the multiple surgeries, the sepsis, the chemo. I have moved forward from urinals, and drainage tubes, and vomit. I have left the sights and smells of death behind, but I have also left the joy of life behind. Grief is no longer raw, but it is as whole as it ever was. Others may have forgotten, but I never will. If there is beauty somewhere in my future, it will never erase the pain of my loss. I can't pretend to be who others want me to be because pain is too hard for them to deal with. I need to give myself permission to be fragile.