He was an inspiration to so many people. The way he handled
his lack of mobility and loss of speech after his stroke was so upbeat and
lacking in self pity that he was even filmed for a video textbook that was produced
for speech pathology students. Everywhere we’d go he’d make people smile at his
antics. Facial expressions and gestures---he could say more with those than
some people can with words and what he couldn’t say he’d point to me to fill in
the blanks. He made friends easily both before and after his stroke and I was
just along for the ride, his ke-mo-sah-bee coasting in the making friends
department because he was so good at it. Am I too old, now, to learn to do it
on my own? Do I even have enough time left on earth to master the art?
I am a reasonable person. I know that life cannot go on
forever, especially a life living inside a vessel that was so damage by a 12
year old stroke. The pneumonia that finally took my husband, we were told, may
have caused brain damage from lacking oxygen too long. I am a loving person. I
would not have wanted him to struggle to overcome losses like that again. No
one should have to do that twice in one life time. So turning off the machine that
kept him breathing was a fairly easy decision. I accepted his passing in a way
that not all widows are able to do and I live with the loss of his loving
presence in my world. Most days I am alone but not always lonely. Some days I
feel Don’s presence holding my hand, whispering a joke in my ear or telling me
to move foreword. And I do that for him. I do that for me. I’m a reasonable
person. But I question if I’ll ever feel whole again. Is that even possible
after losing a spouse?
I used to think that if I could get through this first year I’d be whole again. I even boasted to myself that I’d do my “grief year”---like a prison sentence---then I’d pronounce myself healed and ready for the next chapter of my life. I believe in self-fulfilling prophecies and a year was all the time I felt I could afford to spend mourning what was and can never be again. But the closer I got to this first year anniversary the more I realized how unrealistic those expectations were. What I didn’t understand about this journey in the beginning is that moving though grief is not the same thing as finding a door at the end of a dark tunnel and walking through it. Check that off the list. I’m cured. No, it doesn’t work that way. It’s more like a window screen is dividing the two parts of my life---the pre and post-Don’s death---a screen that lets my strength and resolve flow from the past to form the steps in a staircase to my future. But as quickly as that strength and resolve can flow toward the future it can flow back through the screen seeking refuge in familiar territory. It won’t stay there for long. I know myself; it always comes back and stronger than it left. But I acknowledge, now, that the second year of widowhood is not going to be sunny stroll on other side of a tunnel door that I had imagined. It’s not going to be a tar pit, either, holding me in place. It’s going to be a step by step climb as I rebuild my life and find me again. The woman who is sometimes wise, sometimes silly but always wanting to honor what Don and I had together by striving towards being as upbeat and lacking in self pity as he was. The first year I just came through? What was that all about? Most widows would answer ‘survival’ and I’d concur. ©
I used to think that if I could get through this first year I’d be whole again. I even boasted to myself that I’d do my “grief year”---like a prison sentence---then I’d pronounce myself healed and ready for the next chapter of my life. I believe in self-fulfilling prophecies and a year was all the time I felt I could afford to spend mourning what was and can never be again. But the closer I got to this first year anniversary the more I realized how unrealistic those expectations were. What I didn’t understand about this journey in the beginning is that moving though grief is not the same thing as finding a door at the end of a dark tunnel and walking through it. Check that off the list. I’m cured. No, it doesn’t work that way. It’s more like a window screen is dividing the two parts of my life---the pre and post-Don’s death---a screen that lets my strength and resolve flow from the past to form the steps in a staircase to my future. But as quickly as that strength and resolve can flow toward the future it can flow back through the screen seeking refuge in familiar territory. It won’t stay there for long. I know myself; it always comes back and stronger than it left. But I acknowledge, now, that the second year of widowhood is not going to be sunny stroll on other side of a tunnel door that I had imagined. It’s not going to be a tar pit, either, holding me in place. It’s going to be a step by step climb as I rebuild my life and find me again. The woman who is sometimes wise, sometimes silly but always wanting to honor what Don and I had together by striving towards being as upbeat and lacking in self pity as he was. The first year I just came through? What was that all about? Most widows would answer ‘survival’ and I’d concur. ©
