tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25529819206921690292024-02-18T23:24:03.182-05:00A Young Widow's BlogThis blog was created as a means of support to those who have lost someone to suicide, or are grieving the death of a loved one. Grief is messy and complicated. The more we learn about it, the easier it makes it for us to get through to a place of peace. This is part of my healing process, to share my grief with others.This is raw; this is real and uncomfortable. I'm putting it all out there for you to see.S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.comBlogger41125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-56204333005557871402017-05-18T21:19:00.000-04:002017-05-18T21:19:52.731-04:00White Shoes<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Today I saw too many people standing on the side of the road, asking for help. In the three miles I travelled to get to my errand, I saw three people. The one that struck me the most was a woman standing alone with a small sign in front of her that read, "family needs help." She didn't look like she should have been there. She looked clean and decently clothed, and her face was full of worry. You never know what people are going through. How many times have I been walking through the grocery store, probably looking like a "normal" person, but in total agony on the inside? Too many. </div>
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In these past 5 years, there were some points where I felt so hopeless I also wanted to end my life. It all gets too much sometimes - still. And then people came to my rescue in some way. I know God orchestrated all of this. There is no way you can tell me any different. Some helped in big ways, like paying bills for me, some just being a friend to me when I really needed one, a job offer, and more. So, today I felt like I really wanted to do something to help. </div>
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Today is R's Birthday. He helped people without giving it a second thought. Year after year, I try to think of something special to do on his birthday and these grieving anniversaries, but I have been waiting for the right idea to come to me that could start a yearly tradition to celebrate his character. Maybe today I found it. Maybe it'll just be for this year. We'll see if it sticks. </div>
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Here is the back story:</div>
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One evening we were walking to our car after a movie, in quaint little downtown San Marco. An older man stopped us and asked for money. R surprised me <i>and</i> the man when he pulled out his wallet and said, "I can do better than that! Here ya go," he said as he handed him a gift card to Burger King. R looked at the man's feet, and said, "what's your shoe size?" I was confused. <i>Shoe size?</i> </div>
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The man said a "12."</div>
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R said, "Come on over here, man." He led him over to the trunk of our car, opened it and handed him a pair of very gently used leather white shoes. The man was so surprised, he tried to turn them down.</div>
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"Aww, naw man! I can't take your shoes!" </div>
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R insisted- "take them! I don't need them!" He put them in the old mans hands. </div>
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He looked at R and grinned and thanked him profusely. </div>
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I don't have a lot of money to give out, but I figured, a person who is on the side of the road will probably take anything. I've always wanted to make Blessing Bags to keep in my car, but struggled with what to put in them that won't melt during summer... or for that matter, what do they really need at this moment? I don't want to assume that I know what they need. That's when I thought of a gift card. I can keep it in my car for when I run across these poor souls and just hand it to them, with a little word of encouragement. So, I went into Dollar Tree with some money I just made off of selling my son's clothes to a consignment store. I didn't spend all of it, but it was enough to create 4 Blessing cards. One person will get an especially nice message. I bet God has that person picked out already. </div>
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I had these cards from the Billy Graham Library, that have been sitting in my purse waiting to be given out. Benji kept grabbing handfuls of them and we came away with a little stack. So, each card contains one of these, too. I planned to hand them all out today, but wouldn't you know it, on my way back home they had all disappeared. So it will have to wait for the next time. For those chosen people. Who are they? What are their circumstances? God knows. <br />
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Don't ever think that your little bit of kindness isn't worth anything. I have appreciated a sympathetic <em>look</em> in my darkest days. Your kindness could be saving someone's life by letting them know they are worthy to be here. </div>
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-86733175395917471842016-04-13T08:43:00.000-04:002016-04-13T08:43:16.932-04:00Turn Up the Volume: You Are Not Alone<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-61539144008282907222016-01-29T08:52:00.001-05:002016-01-29T08:52:31.121-05:00A Father's LoveI dare you not to shed a tear while you listen to this and read all the promises He has made to you.<br />
<a href="http://www.fathersloveletter.com/video2.html" target="_blank">http://www.fathersloveletter.com/video2.html</a>S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-69124364762041522712016-01-20T09:45:00.000-05:002016-01-20T09:45:26.882-05:00The Grief SeasonThis morning I woke up happy and tired because I stayed up too late watching Nurse Jackie episodes. I did everything as usual. Hit the snooze a couple times. Got up to feed the cats. Got my coffee. Read the Bible. Looked at the weather. Hoped for snow. Woke up my son. Fought to get him out of bed until I had to drag him out by his blankie.<br />
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He walked to his calendar with puppies on it and as he circled today's date, it hit me. I said, "Today is the day that Daddy and I got married." No comment from Mr. Pajamas. We went about our business of getting dressed and brushing teeth. And as I was making our lunches, I started to think about how long it has been since we got married, our wedding day, and everything R has missed since he died. Or maybe not missed, if he is hanging out with us in spirit. But his son certainly has missed his Daddy being there. And that is what pains me the most.<br />
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I found myself apologizing to him over and over. Hot tears streamed down my face. <i>I'm sorry you have missed so much. I'm sorry you are not here. I'm sorry that we didn't communicate well. If you had just talked to me. I was supposed to be your BFF. I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry... </i><br />
I know he wouldn't want me to keep apologizing, but it's just what is natural. What can I do now? What can I say now? Nothing. He is gone.<br />
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Suddenly I became angry. Angry as hell. Angry at everything. <i>You did this to us. WHY? Do you see the hell that we have been through? Look at me! Trying to make a sandwich and crying all over it!</i><br />
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The only way to keep it in check is to remember WHY I am angry. It's grief rearing it's head again. I lost someone. It turned our lives upside down. We went through trauma. But things are finally starting to come together, looking like I really will get a new beginning after all.<br />
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And this is what I must remember. Grief will come and go. But, now I am healthy and happy. So healthy that I just recently came off of my anti-depressant medication. 3.5 years after his death. That's how long it took me. This is a big, huge deal! There was a point where I resigned myself to likely being on an anti-depressant for the rest of my life. When I realized how much of my energy it might be stifling, I wanted to get off of them, but not until I was ready. I have been trudging through everyday, one day at a time, trying to keep up with exercise and eating well and keeping positive thoughts. It takes discipline, I tell you.<br />
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We got married on January 20, 9 years ago. Life is so busy now that writing this blog might be the only time I get to sit and reflect today. But I have a feeling it will permeate my thoughts all day long.<br />
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I'm so glad the grief anniversary season is coming to an end. Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's, the wedding anniversary, my son's birthday. All of this happens within 3 months. And then not too far off is Mother's day, and then Father's day. And not too long after that is the anniversary of his death. It never ends, really. There are memories not just in these special days, but the every ordinary day, too. Like making a sandwich. What is it about a sandwich? R used to come home for lunch everyday and while he was on his way home he would text me and ask me to make him a sandwich. And I happily did that for him, eager to spend a little time together during the day. Today it was a trigger for tears. Most days it's not; but today is just one of those days when grief gets intertwined with my new life.S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-73499853297044438182015-11-06T10:56:00.001-05:002015-11-06T10:56:27.745-05:00It's Like he Wrote a Song About Me<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-32070862626375650592015-11-01T10:13:00.003-05:002015-11-01T10:13:54.959-05:00Pity Party for 1This morning I have been reading Women Living Well, by Courtney Joseph. She talks about how to balance life as a Christian woman. I have been reading about how she had a hard time figuring out how to balance being a good wife in the beginning of her marriage while supporting her husband finishing school. She goes on to say she figured it out, mostly by letting go of being perfect. While that is wonderful for her, I sit here listening to my son slurp his cereal with his headphones on, in my crappy rental condo with the horrible smell I cannot get out of the carpet, and piles of STUFF all over the place because I am too busy with my part-time job that takes full-time work, to clean it up. I.AM.TIRED. I am exhausted from trying to survive everyday. I can comprehend why R became so overwhelmed that he needed a desperate escape, but will never understand how he could follow through with it. <br />
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Yesterday was Halloween and today I just need a break from my son. Some time to myself. But I cannot get it. I have no one here to take over for me. So when I read about how perfect someone else's home life is, I am so envious it brings me to tears. It's all I want to be able to stop surviving day to day, and focus on being a good wife and mother. I want a family again. That sounds like a dream come true. But that's not my reality and I am pissed off about it. I didn't ask for this. I didn't expect to be a single parent.<br />
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"Don't you have family around that could help you out?" People ask. <br />
No. No, I don't. Because I am an idiot. I moved here knowing no one, which I thought was quite adventurous of me. It was definitely what you would call an adventure, with all the ups and downs. But, I was also desperate to get away from all the memories and triggers of the place where the 3 of us were a family. Everywhere I went was a memory of some kind. I lived with all of that for a year after his death. <br />
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Sometimes it is so difficult to be grateful. Today is one of those days. I'm going to start really simple just to start somewhere. <br />
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I am thankful for a place to live.<br />
I am thankful for the food we have in our kitchen.<br />
I am thankful for a beautiful child.<br />
I am thankful for supportive parents.<br />
I am thankful for re-discovering a wonderful man.<br />
I am thankful for hope.<br />
I am thankful for my church family and all of their support.<br />
I am thankful that my body is intact and I am a healthy person.<br />
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I'm already starting to change my attitude. <em>Buck up, S! Life is not over.</em> S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-39357639881969097052015-10-06T22:50:00.000-04:002015-10-06T22:50:06.769-04:00Tug of War"Why is Nursing still on your mind?" my counselor asks me. I wanted it for myself. It was something I chose to do, a commitment I made to myself and our family to help make things better. I was fascinated with the human body and the medical world. I was two semesters away from graduating with a BSN. Then everything stopped. <em>R decided to leave us.</em> Then this struggle begins between my reasoning and what could have been his: <em>How could you have done that to our little boy? Why did you do that when everything was about to get better? Why didn't you just talk to me?</em> <span style="font-family: "Helvetica Neue", Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;"><em>I can't go on like this. She doesn't love me anymore. I can't lose my son. Everyone will be better off.</em></span><br />
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Three years later I have moved to a different state, and tried to start over again. It hasn't gone so well. <em>You can't spring back from something like the suicide of a spouse, and ever be the same again. You cannot throw your life back together and expect it to work.</em> There are so many stages of healing to go through, in addition to grieving that I could never have known about until <u>now</u>. I used to think healing meant that it wouldn't hurt as much or bring back as many painful flashbacks and memories when a trigger went off. But that is only part of it. It's a good part of it, a good indication of healing, but that is really only a part of what is going on inside. If you let God heal you, he will. If you let people help you, they will. Can you swallow your pride enough to let him do his work? Can you give the chaos up to him and trust that he will lead you the right way? I got to a point where I felt I was at my absolute low. I could not go anywhere but up and was forced to ask others for help. When help started pouring in I knew God had placed me exactly <strong>here</strong>, and certain people in my life exactly <strong>now. </strong><br />
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I taught for a long time before I made the switch to nursing school. I swore that I would never teach in a classroom again because I had a horrible experience as a new, young teacher. So. Here I am teaching again, with joy in my heart. Do you hear that? It's God laughing. It has been a completely different experience this time, probably for various reasons. Mostly, I know my priorities and my perspective on life have totally changed since R's death. Life is too short to be pissed off all the time. Life is too short to be stressed out about nursing school all the time, too. I really cannot force myself to give a crap about a test when I have to figure out how to emotionally support my young son who lost his Daddy. I would have been a good nurse, I already knew that. I already had a job waiting for me on the way out of school. I did not give up. <em>S does not give up. S fights tooth and nail until something drags her down </em>(like an actual rock). I FAILED. Yes. I FAILED. Let me say it again, I FAILED. <em>I was mad as hell, angry at myself, angry at R.</em> But, here is what I learned: How would I teach my son to fail and get back up again if I have never had that experience myself? <br />
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I love the picture that shows the road to success being a squiggly mess and not a straight line. I don't actually consider myself a successful person yet. My time has yet to come. There are goals I have had my entire life, that have not been conquered. Writing is one of those things. <br />
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My son and I spent two nights in the hospital recently after he had a vicious broken arm. While I was there, I was very appreciative of my nursing education. I knew what was happening. I knew during the times of waiting exactly what was going on behind the scenes. I knew how to make their jobs easier for them. When I talked to the nurses, and then thought about nursing school and what going back would mean, it felt daunting. It felt like a race I was never going to win, because maybe I wasn't meant to anymore. Did the trauma of my husband's death literally change my brain? It may have. Maybe I cannot handle all the itty bitty little facts I need to keep straight for every single medication my patients would take, but maybe I can handle using my creative side by teaching others and writing. Maybe I am different now. Maybe I have grown. Maybe part of my heart has healed and this is what's left of me. <br />
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-67773006704585629112015-07-31T11:40:00.000-04:002015-07-31T11:40:04.583-04:00What You CAN Take With You When You DieHere I am again, with the boxes. <br />
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As I was purge-writing in my Morning Pages today, I decided that today I was going to dive in and start unpacking. I've moved so many times in only three years, it's become easy to put away the things that are not necessary for everyday living in a box and shove it in a corner. And then it's not only in the corner of my living place, but also in the corner of my mind. Think about this: why is it so relaxing to go away for a weekend to someone else's home or to a hotel? I'm convinced, it's because we aren't surrounded by our own crap! You don't have to see it, deal with it, make any decisions about it. You can have a great time because your mind is free! And then when you come home, there's all your crap again. Waiting for you. Is this why Jesus asked his disciples to give up all their possessions? I can only imagine that the purpose was to allow for focus and to build faith. We don't have to be attached to our things to live life. I don't think we have to give up our possessions, either. But I do believe if they distract you from what is important, then it should go. <br />
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It's time to clear the crap out. I've been putting off these decisions for a long time, because it is a hard thing to do when you don't feel like you can trust yourself. My grief created a mess in my mind- and voila! It also appeared in my living space. That is not a coincidence. <br />
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Right now I am ultra-motivated to de-clutter and live simply. My focus is coming back. It's taken a lot of time and work. I've been in this season of Winter, a period of waiting and stillness, forced to reflect and reevaluate. Since R died and my perspective on life completely changed, some of the thoughts I've wrestled with are: <em>What do I want to do with my life? What is my purpose? What m I supposed to do?! Never mind that. What does God want me to do with my life? What is God's purpose for me? </em><br />
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There have been so many different influences God put into my life to help me think it through. For instance, I attended a new member class at my church, learning and discussing the basis of the Lutheran faith. I was baptized Lutheran as an infant. My Dad is a Lutheran minister. Did I really need that class? YES. In every class or study I've attended, there is something new to learn. I could take that class ten more times and learn something new each time. I came to some realizations during that class. I have been in this confusing place, looking for a job, and also trying to figure out if I should go back to Nursing school. It was absorbing my brain. I started to question if I was really trusting God or if my god had become this worry/obsession over what I would do next with my life...<br />
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Oops. Yep. When God tells you to let go, he really means <strong>let go</strong> (Trust in The Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways submit to him and he will make your paths straight. Proverbs 3:5-6). I like to sing "Let it Go," (Yes, from Frozen) to remind myself in a humorous way, because really, I cannot get through every day without humor. <br />
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I processed through how to tell my son that things are just things, and we can't take them with us when we die. I know he might feel like I don't care about his toys and his feelings about his toys. So my plan is to remind him that Daddy didn't take any of his toys with him when he went to Heaven. And why is that? Because what Jesus wants us to care about is loving each other, not our things. We can take love and a happy soul with us to Heaven, but we cannot take our things. S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-4816066056296507432015-06-28T13:59:00.001-04:002015-06-28T13:59:27.709-04:00A Ton of BricksGrief can come on so unexpectedly and hit like a ton of bricks, right in the heart. <br />
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This morning my son and I finally became members of the church we have been attending for 2 years. I was very happy during the service feeling very welcomed. It was a gorgeous day outside and we drove home with the windows down, music turned up. <br />
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I started to make our lunch and heartache grew and grew in my chest. I kept preparing lunch, but felt like I was on the verge of tears. <em>What is wrong with me? </em>My son grabbed his plate and went into the living room to eat in front of the TV. I didn't bother to protest.<em> </em>I started to eat my sandwich and about half way through the heartache became too much and the tears rolled down my face. <em>Why am I crying? Why am I hurting so bad? What is going on with me? Am I lonely? I'm happy for this thing that has happened, but have no one to celebrate with? Was it a trigger? </em>I grab a box of tissues and go curl up in my bed. <em>Here we go again...</em><br />
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Then I thought- the last time I joined a church, R and I did this together. He actually converted from Catholicism to Lutheranism which was one of the most loving things anyone has ever done for me. And now he's gone. That person that loved me <em>that much,</em> is gone. I know he still loves me from Heaven. But all I can think is that I need love - right now. I need to be loved. I need to know that I am special to someone and cherished. I want to have that again. I want to share my life with someone. Just a couple of months ago I had resigned myself to the fact that I may be single for the rest of my life (...all the single ladies put your hands up...). It'll just be me and my son, and I'll try to give him as many wonderful experiences as I can. But I don't think I am made for that. How could God put so much love in me only to have no where to go with it? I NEED to give it away. NEED to. Have to. I can't keep it all to myself. <br />
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-24908009804871232662015-06-11T13:58:00.001-04:002015-06-11T13:58:25.299-04:00How I Got Through<iframe allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="270" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/GXI0B4iMLuU" width="480"></iframe><br /><br />
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No one has ever had the nerve to ask me how I have gotten and still get through this horrible thing that happened. My faith alone was the one rope I had to hold onto. I felt so isolated because no one understood what it was like for me, and many people were afraid to ask. Rather than being angry at God, I relied upon him to enfold me in his love. He was there holding me when no one else was able to. Watch this video- the lyrics say it all. He can get you through anything!S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-85801939804722703752015-05-17T22:35:00.000-04:002015-05-17T22:35:58.111-04:00Tomorrow Would Be His 41st<div data-redactor="1">
I wanted to throw him a big party for his 40th, but he was 38 when he took his life. </div>
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I still look back often and can't believe it happened. Just about everyday I ask myself, <em>how did this happen? How did I get here?</em></div>
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He was a gifted guitar player, a strong Judo player, loved animals to the point of rescuing wild birds :-)</div>
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Was kind, wanted to give back, cared about family, liked to have fun (which I have learned is a very big deal). He was fiercely loyal and I always loved that quality about him. Robert was FUNNY. In a good way, not in a dirty jokes or sarcastic kind of way, but like an intelligent sort of humor- like you hear on NPR during their games shows, or just a simple play on words that makes you feel like a giggly 12 year old. We laughed together many times at the beavis & butthead kind of jokes, mostly because we were laughing at ourselves. :-) Those are the times I miss the most- laughing together. I can hear his laugh so clearly. It was an honest belly laugh. My son has the same kind of laugh when something is REALLY funny, ever since he was a little baby. I feel like we carry that on in our relationship, even if it is different now, that part of it is still the same. I tell those funny, silly jokes to my son now. And then I tell him how Daddy would have thought that was funny. :-) </div>
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Today we had a small purple butterfly playing with our puppy that stuck around for quite a while, putting itself into harrowing danger- the jaws and paws of a puppy!! I thought that is one tough damn butterfly and I thought, it's R. He's here trying to play with all of us. You might think that sounds crazy, but look around on the Alliance of Hope forums; plenty of people believe their loved ones come to them for a "visit" in the form of an animal. </div>
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If you knew R, please take some time tomorrow to say hello and happy birthday to him :-)</div>
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My son and I will be honoring him in many different ways. </div>
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-81884882622544573272015-03-26T09:14:00.000-04:002015-06-19T15:34:17.225-04:00Go ahead. Watch me. <div align="left" class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
There are those people out there who like to read my blog and then complain that I act like "a victim." Let's go ahead and define "victim" behavior from a credible source. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/morty-lefkoe/victim-mentality_b_794628.html?" target="_blank">victim-mentality</a></div>
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If after reading this article you still think I am operating with a victim mentality, then you need to work on your reading comprehension skills and/or understand the purpose of this blog. The purpose is not to bitch and complain. It is to fling wide open the doors of my very personal journey, to let others know that they are not alone. </div>
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-1900037569225095272015-02-18T23:07:00.000-05:002015-02-18T23:07:11.712-05:00The Waves Keep ComingMy son's birthday was a couple of weeks ago. It's always a hard time for me, watching the festivities go on without R. Suddenly I am tearing up at the smallest things. I know he is watching, but he is not here with us. I feel bad for my son, not having his Daddy there. It was a whirlwind of a week with all the grandparents coming to visit and two parties, plus a party at school... after the PARTY party, on Saturday, I think I just hit my breaking point. Sunday, I was so depressed. I had a good cry that night, you know the kind where the pain in your chest will not go away; actual heartache. I cried myself to sleep. There have been many nights like that for me- I cry until I fall asleep. And when I get up in the morning tissues tumble onto the ground and I discover them in the pillows, etc... My tears are like parts of me that I leave around. Finding tissues that I unknowingly stuffed into the covers or the pillows is like finding little pieces of me that died. I cried this and that out, and here it is in this tissue. But the next day is always better and I can pick up those little pieces of me and throw them away. Gone. Moving on to a happier place. Having a good cry like that leaves me feeling raw and honest. Nothing anyone could do is more painful than that, so I don't feel scared of anything. <em>You can't hurt me, I've already been though hell, you see.</em> S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-7508173863556730672015-01-14T15:16:00.005-05:002015-01-14T15:16:54.609-05:00A Piece From My Journal<b style="font-weight: normal;"><div dir="ltr" id="docs-internal-guid-7ccaccd9-ea11-e415-5ebe-e873e92da21b" style="line-height: 1.15; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt;">
<span style="background-color: transparent; color: black; font-family: Arial; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline;">This was written a couple of days after the first anniversary of R's death. A memorial service was given, which felt just like another funeral. </span></div>
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<span style="background-color: transparent; color: black; font-family: Arial; font-size: 16px; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; vertical-align: baseline;">"I spent the entire service crying on Saturday. I felt like a freak of nature, it just wouldn’t stop. My son hasn’t seen me cry once yet, except for the funeral. But now he has. He looked at me so curiously and put a little finger to my cheek, let a tear roll onto it and said, 'I catched a tear Mommy' in the sweetest little voice. He was trying to help me with my crying." </span></div>
<br /></b><br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-17357193233916491872015-01-12T12:41:00.000-05:002015-01-12T12:41:26.531-05:00UndignifiedIt's been a while. <br />
I thought for sure I would feel compelled to blog over the holidays, but I was sick most of the time, so I wasn't compelled to do much of anything. I went to the cemetery, drove by our old house. Thought about Christmas's we spent there, and the last one we spent there together. Those are good memories now. Not as painful as they used to be. <br />
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I'm about to call someone out. Believe me, this is ALL part of the process of grief and the aftermath of suicide. Please note: I am Christian woman, but I also believe God invented swear words for us to have an outlet. Shit is about to get real.<br />
<br />
This is what I came across this morning, which motivated me to write...I logged in to R's Facebook account because I have read that if you don't log in every so often, your page will be shut down. I don't want that to happen to his page because I know he still has many visitors, and I want people to be able to go there, just as I do. I looked at his list of friends and saw one named, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/sarah.spicer.1675/media_set?set=a.10102184661662363.3375125.5204678&type=3" target="_blank">"Sarah Elizabeth"</a>. This is the strange girl who tattooed a copy of my husband's tattoo, my husband's initial's and my son's initial's just below her breast, a few days after he died.<br />
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I thought she meant well, watching my son for me while I was making funeral plans. But I was wrong. She was trying to insert herself into my role. She had to make herself part of "the drama" so that she could feel important. But the thing is, she wasn't important. After R died, she had the nerve to call herself his best friend (to my face)- which was a direct insult to me and my marriage. What kind of person does that? Answer: a narcissist. She thought herself more important to my husband than I was, despite only having known him for a year and a half. Imagine: your husband just died unexpectedly and this one cries to you about how she lost "her best friend." <em>Excuse me?</em><br />
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Her former name on Facebook was Sarah Spicer. But, when I reported her for having pictures of my son on her FB page without my permission, I guess she had to come up with a new page. Let it be known that this is a sick woman who wanted to be in my shoes. She still has photos of my son on her new Facebook page. In fact one of the album's names is "BENJI- Love of my life." <em>Excuse me? No, you cannot have my son- because he's MY son.</em> <br />
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<a href="https://www.facebook.com/sarah.spicer.1675/media_set?set=a.10102184661662363.3375125.5204678&type=3" target="_blank">Her photo album</a><br />
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I'm fairly sure she is anonymously following my blog. <br />
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She never will have the chance to be more important than I was to R. He called me his best friend. He chose me. I was his wife. We had a beautiful child together. We will always have a bond, even though he is not physically here; and no one can take that away from my son and I. <br />
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-78386548521015311602014-11-05T09:38:00.000-05:002014-11-05T09:38:00.020-05:00A Wise Man<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-68766093966341693772014-10-12T13:41:00.002-04:002014-10-12T13:44:01.859-04:00Birthday FlowersThe past couple of weeks has been stressful. I have read that loved ones who have passed on may try to get in touch with you around your Birthday. In the last two weeks I have experienced tugging on my shirt while laying in bed (no one else in the room), and R has come to visit me in my dreams at least twice. He walked up to me from no where, kissed me like we were old friends, and then we sat down in plush chairs across from each other and chatted. It felt so real. I had another dream of the same type, where we talked. There was no distress in the dream, just peacefulness. That makes me think that he is trying to tell me he is comfortable and ok where he is. <br />
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After waking from those dreams, I was reminded of his tradition of sending me flowers each birthday and valentine's day. It was a very sweet gesture that I loved. What girl doesn't love pretty flowers? That is a special memory; one of the good ones. It's made me miss him. I don't like to admit it, because I feel like it would hurt my fiancé's feelings, but this is my honest forum. It's perfectly normal for me to miss him. Sometimes I feel like I have moved on. I have moved on, but I will never be "moved on." The hard reality is that it just doesn't go away. It's here forever and I have to get used to living with it. It's been two years- that may seem like a long time, but it doesn't feel that way. <br />
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I've been feeling a bit depressed the last couple of weeks, too, and there are several things going on in my daily life that would bring stress to any normal person. But, I had an epiphany the other day that part of my irritability may be due to my upcoming birthday (today). This is my third birthday since he died. I am turning 38, the age R was when he killed himself. I cannot imagine not living beyond this year to the next. He was so young; I still can't believe this happened. How could he end his life so young? <br />
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I have done a lot of reading about After Death Communication (ADC) and it doesn't feel far-fetched to me. However, it has been said that to experience it, you have to have an open mind to the concept.<br />
<a href="http://www.after-death.com/" target="_blank">After Death Communication Project</a><br />
<br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-46596928753461891942014-09-06T17:18:00.000-04:002014-09-06T17:18:35.956-04:00The WavesI'm trying to figure out how to put into words what I have been through tonight, today, the last week, the last month... It's all tied together. <br />
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My son and I moved into a house with my fiancé last month. Last month happens to be the anniversary of you-know-what. So naturally this would screw up any plans I have to be normal. I thought I could trick myself. I think that's called Denial. I refused to think that any emotional state I was going through had anything to do with R's death. I have been a mess. I have been angry as hell. I don't like the surprise factor. Tonight I sat on the floor of my son's bedroom, waiting for him to fall asleep. I tend to meditate when doing this; except tonight I started to think about R, and the tears just came flowing out from the deep. I felt afraid that I was going to lose him somehow. Or that he was going to leave me all over again. I've been arguing a lot with my fiancé and think that what I am really afraid of is that HE is going to leave me, too. Am I trying to make it so? Am I so used to grieving, that I am afraid to let it all go and move on? I spoke to R in my mind, and I felt that he spoke back to me, "go to him," And in my mind I said back "okay," as a child would do while crying, snot running down my face. So I did. And what a small miracle happened- we calmly talked things out.<br />
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Lesson learned- <em>stop being so damned angry, Sarah</em>.<br />
It's hard. There is a lot to be angry about. <br />
I am dealing with the loss of Nursing School. I don't get to finish unless I start all over again at a lower level. Who wants to do that after 4 years of hard work? The problem is that I cannot handle the intensity right now. It's a very difficult thing for me to accept that I will not be able to finish something that I wanted so badly. I cannot ignore my son to go stick my nose in books. He needs me and I need him. <br />
<br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-14006011094145290032014-08-12T16:22:00.000-04:002014-08-12T16:27:51.527-04:00Let's Talk About It: On Robin Williams' Death<span style="font-family: Georgia, "Times New Roman", serif;">When I found out how he killed himself last evening it was like a kick in the gut. Why? Here come all of the questions that happen with suicide. What happened? Why? Was there a note explaining? On and on...</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Georgia, "Times New Roman", serif;">It seems like the entire world is sad today, the day after. I have been sad thinking about how much personal agony Robin must have been in. I just cannot get over it. I am shocked. However, my faith is strong. I know that through this God will make something positive for the greater good. I say <em>Thank you, Robin for your joy. We never wanted to you leave us this way. But out of this something good will come, I promise.</em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia, "Times New Roman", serif;"><em></em></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia, "Times New Roman", serif;"> This is horribly tragic and is so similar to my husband's death, that it automatically takes me back there. R killed himself on a Monday, too Same manner. August 6, only 5 days earlier is the anniversary of R's death. Every time August 11th comes around, I will be thinking of Robin Williams and his family, too. I am heartbroken for his kids, just like I am for mine. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/200329196655910/photos/a.268323446523151.62187.200329196655910/782164741805683/?type=1&theater" target="_blank">Left Behind</a> are his family and friends, and a massive audience. Today is Tuesday, and I still vividly remember what I was doing on August 7, 2012. I went to see R's body in the medical examiner's office, because I had not been at the hospital the night before where he was declared dead. I had to feel his skin and know that he was gone. It just all felt like a bad dream. Then my family drove me over to the funeral home where I had to plan. I picked out a casket, flowers, a "package." R and I had never talked about what he would want in the way of a memorial; so I did the best I could. I tried to pick what I thought he would like. Do you want to have a viewing? Do you want to have a funeral? On separate days? When? What time? How long? Where? What do you want to have happen during the service? Who do you want to Eulogize? There were so many questions to answer and decisions to make it seemed nearly impossible to get through it all. It was extremely difficult to do all that while in shock.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;">Suicide is a complicated kind of grief and I hate that anyone else has to live with it. I am trying to reach as many people as I can so that we can support each other. We don't ask for mental illness ,just like people don't ask for cancer. Over the last ten years there has been a big hoo0-rah for patients fighting cancer and survivors, which is awesome. How about mental illness? Let's do the same. Let's have a big push to de-stigmatize and support each other. All kinds of ideas are zipping through my mind right now. Fundraisers. There are some great organizations out there for the prevention of Suicide. <a href="http://www.afsp.org/" target="_blank">American Foundation for Suicide Prevention</a></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;">And for friends and families left behind: <a href="http://www.allianceofhope.org/" target="_blank">Alliance of Hope for Suicide Survivors</a></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;">If you feel that you are in crisis, in danger of hurting yourself, you can call or even CHAT ONLINE with a counselor on the <a href="http://www.suicidepreventionlifeline.org/" target="_blank">Suicide Prevention Lifeline</a></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-91003133400246152812014-08-06T21:58:00.002-04:002014-08-06T21:58:41.990-04:00Take a Look at My Published Article<a href="http://www.xojane.com/it-happened-to-me/it-happened-to-me-my-husband-killed-himself" target="_blank">http://www.xojane.com/it-happened-to-me</a><br />
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Take a look and let me know what you think!<br />
Thanks,<br />
S.S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-34838422362528130502014-07-20T22:53:00.001-04:002014-07-20T22:53:13.744-04:00That time of yearHow was I to know you only had two weeks and three days more of your life? I'm still mad at you. It was a stupid impulsive thing you did. You might as well have done it right in front of us, for the ripple effect it has had. I've been under a tremendous amount of stress the last 2 years. How could you just give up like that? You were an athlete- athletes don't give up damnit! Your anniversary is on a Wednesday. Thanks for pre-occupying my brain space in advance. August 6 will never be the same again. It will be a day we struggle through every year. S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-66974839001344949002014-07-14T22:25:00.000-04:002014-07-14T22:25:23.264-04:00Panic <span style="font-family: Georgia, "Times New Roman", serif;">I never thought this would happen to me. I thought I was on too much anti-depressant medication. But it's true. You can still have a panic attack while on plenty of medication... Here's how it happened to me: </span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;">Before resolving an argument we (my fiancé and I) go to dinner with my son and my parents. Behind the wheel I am steaming while keeping a straight face (I'm German, it's what we do). From the back seat my son is chatting on and asking questions he may or may not get answers to. I take my time getting out of the car because I don't want to look my fiancé in the face. My head is swirling. I sit gingerly at the orange-topped pizza joint table. "What would you like to drink?" says the waitress expectantly. I look at her blankly- "water," is all I can eek out. <em>Don't make me talk. I can't speak right now</em>. My stomach is twisting and turning. I try my best to interact with my son. But I am so trapped in my thoughts, my weak smile is a pathetic attempt. The drinks and the plates come. I can't eat. They go to the pizza buffet together and I sit blankly, my insides revving up swirling faster and faster. <em>I feel like everyone is staring at me.</em> They come back to the table and not long after, tears roll down my hot cheeks. I must leave. <em>This is so embarrassing. I don't want my son to see me this way</em>. I go outside and around the corner of the building because I know that people won't be staring me in the face as they walk in the door to the restaurant over there. I am numb and yet I feel like I am going to explode. I feel the need to shake the living hell out of my hands to get this feeling out. But it won't come out. I'm breathing heavily, I can't catch my breath. And then I realize: this is exactly how I felt the evening that R died. I felt panicked and paralyzed. I didn't know what to do. My head was swirling with too many thoughts at once. I remember my stomach like a brick for days after, and wringing my hands. I cried and cried, feeling mad at myself for having a breakdown during dinner. But I didn't know at the time that I was having a panic attack and I couldn't help these physical reactions. The parallel makes total sense to me now: We argue (R and I used to a lot), I get anxious because I don't like to argue, I come home to a life changing surprise (R has killed himself), deep down I am afraid this will happen again. So I take some Ativan that the doctor has given me to keep on hand, I notice at almost the exact time we arrived home that day to find him dead. It takes a good half hour to start working on me. Enough so that I can eat a little. Even so, suddenly I break down again. Crying- just not able to stop it. The kind where you cannot breathe. I would have wept openly if I had not been in a restaurant. I pulled and tugged at my shirt as if it was suffocating me. <em>Deep breaths. I need deep breaths, but I am afraid of what kind of guttural sound will come out of me if I try to do that. I don't know what's wrong with me!!!</em> Thank God my fiancé recognized what was happening and came to my side to help me. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;">With that behind me- now my questions are: why haven't I had one of these before? It's been almost 2 years since R died. Why was this the first time? And I thought I had made more progress than this? Does this mean I have regressed? Will this keep happening to me over and over again now? Is this normal for someone who has experienced what I have? </span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: Georgia;">The 2 year anniversary is coming up. I am wondering what to do. Last year there was a "life celebration" in his honor, but for me it was like going through the funeral all over again. I am glad I don't have to do that again. We will do something to honor his life. I just have to think of how to do it.</span>S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-40849488726062350352014-06-29T10:00:00.000-04:002014-06-29T10:00:54.743-04:00Finding ThingsRemember those boxes that I had? Yep. Still have them. Still not unpacked. <div>
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Most of them are on our bottom floor which doubles as a playroom for my son and the cats. A couple of weeks ago I started looking through one as he was playing. I came across the framed portrait of our son that R left his note on. I was rifling through the box and when I saw what it was, I froze. I didn't even want to touch it. I stopped and stared at it for a while feeling sick to my stomach. Here come the flashbacks: walking into the sunny playroom, <i>why is the big Elmo doll on the floor with our son's picture leaning on it? What is this note? </i></div>
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<i>"I'm sorry.</i></div>
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<i> I love you, B. </i></div>
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<i>Love, Daddy."</i></div>
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<i>What the hell does that mean? </i></div>
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I thought for sure he was off on a bike ride or sitting in the garage getting high. No. He was hanging in my garage with his Black Belt from Judo, that he worked so hard for, tightened around his neck. </div>
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Tell me: what do I do with this picture and frame? Throw the whole thing away? Take the picture out and throw the frame away? Only problem is I know whenever I see that picture, no matter what frame it's in, I will be brought back to that moment. Every single thing in those boxes has a memory attached to it and the thought of going through all those items is daunting. I usually end up putting things back into the box and closing it. </div>
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Last night I happened to be looking through another box. <i>What's in this box? </i>I can tell what room in our charming little house it was packed from by looking at the things that are in it. <i>The living room. Photo albums.</i> I see the small album from the bed & breakfast we stayed at on our honeymoon. I start flipping through the pictures and suddenly he is there, staring me right in the face. <i>Whoa.</i> <i>There he is. Alive. With color in his face. And happy. Now he's dead. The last time I saw him he was laying in a casket looking sunken and sallow. You had a whole life ahead of you, why did you do that? </i>My stomach turning, I close it and put it back in the box. </div>
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I want to go through all of these boxes and be done with it. Just like my grief. I want to be done with it. The thing is, this will never go away. I just learn how to live on with it. BUT, the boxes and all the things that are in them CAN go away. And when I figure out what to do with them it will be a big burden off my back. I have to be kind to myself. Cut myself some slack. Nothing ever has to be done before I am ready to deal with it. </div>
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S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-36139489490077656222014-06-01T22:38:00.001-04:002020-04-07T18:29:36.212-04:00Blankie<em>I want my Blankie </em>I say to myself as I am getting into to bed. It's been a rough night. My son seems to be all confused and angry inside and he is taking it out on me. His defiant behavior has me stumped. My frustration level is low, just like his, and I become so angry but am determined not to take it out on him. This is not his fault. I think about how this would not be happening if R had not decided to kill himself. That doesn't mean there would not have been other problems, but it just seems so unfair that a boy so little must carry such a big burden. I did the best that I could. I made him get into the bath where I knew he would start calming down after he angrily splashed and soaked the rest of the bathroom with water. <em>Fine. At least the bathroom's meant to get wet. </em>After bath, I have him draw a picture of what he is feeling right now. He draws himself as sad and me as angry. So, I start crying and have to leave the room. My little one follows me and says, "Mommy, I'm sorry. Will you forgive me?" <br />
I look at him crying not to completely breakdown and squeak out "yes." Then he hugs me for a while. What a sweet boy I have. <br />
It's not his fault that I am crying, I get overwhelmed sometimes and at that moment the only thing that will clear the air is a good cry. I was having all sorts of flashbacks while all this was going on and by the end of the night I was drained. And now that its' time for me to go to bed, I am wanting something to hold on to. Something soft, cuddly, something that won't kick me in the middle of the night. S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2552981920692169029.post-52342293980824023912014-05-27T22:53:00.000-04:002014-05-27T22:53:41.927-04:00Dreams and NightmaresLast night I had a dream, I would characterize it as a nightmare. In fact, I had a series of nightmares last night that were so wacky I thought for sure I would remember all of them today. I only remember two. The first was of R and me fighting, except he wasn't speaking at all. It was just me doing all the yelling. I took off my engagement ring and threw it at him. I felt betrayed somehow. I feel betrayed by him now, so that is not so far from reality. I have read in some books that when you dream about a deceased loved one, what is really happening is they are trying to get in touch with you. If that is true, was he just letting me yell at him so I could get it out? Is he so otherworldly and wise now that it is beyond me to understand why he would be okay with that? I believe a little bit of everything. I believe in science, which says that our brains are sorting through things when we dream. I suppose I must admit that I am still sorting through this in my mind. And I also believe in the supernatural, because God himself is supernatural, and therefore his universe must contain some of these things. Where would miracles come from if he were not? Lately I have been thinking about how much time has passed since R's death and how it has almost been 2 years. It feels like it has taken an eternity and yet it has gone by quickly. His birthday was last week; it would have been his 40th. I really cannot believe that it has been this long. It is always close by, because I have flashbacks. They seem to escalate around these "anniversaries." Today I was in an office supply store minding my own business when I heard a song on the radio that came out just about the same time as his death. I immediately and involuntarily felt sick to my stomach. <em>I want to throw-up</em>, I thought. <em>God, make it stop,...ugh I just want to throw up. </em>It stunned me a bit, so I stood there in the middle of the aisle staring at a bunch of leather pad-folios. I don't want to think about it. I know I am supposed to let the thoughts come and let it pass, but it is so hard. It's a horrible thing to think about. I realize now that especially in the first year I was doing a lot of this behavior called "avoidance." It is exactly what it sounds like, which is to avoid anything that reminds a person of the trauma or death. I know that is why I tried so hard to continue with nursing school. It was a brilliant way to avoid dealing with the whole thing. I put it off and put if off- but eventually it breaks through. You cannot avoid for too long before it comes busting through to the surface. I thought I had beat this avoidance behavior by forcing myself to go to therapy when I knew I really needed it. But, I STILL find myself doing it now and then. I just have to remind myself that this is not going to ruin me. <br />
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After my last blog entry, I was proud in realizing that I have made some progress in my grief work. The fact that I was able to recognize it is a big deal. Usually when I have a breakdown or a crying spell, whatever you want to call it, it is difficult for me to go on with the rest of the day. But, this time I was able to pick myself up after an hour or two and get my ass out the door. I went to Sam's, walked around kind of confused, in a dream-like state with my eyes burning from the crying and dried sodium all over my face. I looked at other people and wondered if they were dealing with the same thing I was; or was it just me? Am I the only one?S.- Young Widowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13444712092693309184noreply@blogger.com0