Grief.
Let’s be real about it,
grief is weird. And “they”, whoever they are, say there’re seven stages of
grief. Shock and Denial, Pain and Guilt, Anger and Bargaining, Depression
Reflection and Loneliness, The Upward Turn, Reconstruction and Working Through,
and Acceptance and Hope.
Six days later, I
tend to disagree with this number. I think it should be higher. Or at least
have some sub stages.
April 9, 2015 at 4:05pm my Dad
drew a last shallow breath and then he was gone. Just like that. GONE from
physical life. Now as a believer, I believe his next breath was free of the
horrible pain, stress, misery, and sickness he’d been in for a year and nine
months. I believe with all my heart his next breath carried the perfumes of heaven, I have to, or
I’ll go insane.
But in that moment, he was
still gone from us. So, I say that the experts are overlooking some critical
parts of grief no one warns you about.
“Vice around the ribs”
There’s those first
crippling moments where you go deaf and blind. There’s a horrible ringing in
your ears that just won’t stop.
In that moment, I
couldn’t see or hear. Or breathe. As if maybe the passage of death into the
next life by someone you love has a fee. They ride your stolen breath, pushed
by your speeding heartbeats, straight into the arms of heaven. Maybe that’s the
price.
“Dehydration”
When you think you can’t
possibly cry one more tear. When your eyeballs are so full of grit they scrape
and burn from every blink. Guess what, you’ll still be able to squeeze one more
big old fat tear out. And it hurts. And it will burns. And it won’t stop. And
you need the good Puffs with lotion.
“Lack of Stimuli”
Walking out of that
room for the last time, my footsteps made no sound on the tiles. I talked to my family. Responded.
Put one foot in front of the other. Once we reached the lobby and stepped
outside, I found I had no ability to feel the wind on my skin, smell the
flowers blooming around the hospital or enjoy the awesome grill smell of the restaurants
down the street, or the sun on my face. Every voice sounded like it was traveling through water. I knew they were there, I’d thought about them earlier in the
week, heard their voices clear before, but nothing registered in that moment.
“Random moments of going crippled”
Something odd happened
to my knees. When the battering sound of his breath slowing had beat my eardrums to the
point I had to run, I’d just be walking and boom, go down. I couldn’t stand
anymore. Luckily, I didn’t fall most of time because hospitals have lots of
chairs and railings.
Now the strings have
been cut from one whole side of my life. I’m forever that broken doll on the
side that belonged to my Dad. Collapsing, flopping, and floundering for a new
normal without him to hold that side up for me.
“Inside Out”
A hole opened when he
left. A very dark place, deep inside that turned everything inside out. The
wet, raw, tender things were all ripped from their safe warm spot to be
plopped down where they’re never supposed to be. Left exposed. Bleeding. Drying
in stale hospital air that shouldn’t ever touch them and changing things that
aren’t ready to be changed. Forcing old things into new awful things. I have no
idea what those pieces will become or if they'll survive the process on the
side of light. Only time will tell.
So far, I think this
one was the worst.
Now I’m sure there will
be others that I’ll add to this list as time goes on.
So if you message me
and I don’t answer, I could be stuck in “Mute-ism” that day.
If you ask me a
question and my answer is so crazy angry you think I've lost my marbles, I apologize now for being stuck in “Rage”
that day.
Neighbors, I’ll try my
best to keep my “Breaking Things” on my side of the property line.
And if “Inability to
Stop Screaming” (which is totally possible) shows up, I’ll invest in earplugs
for you all.
My Dad was our family’s
pivot point and our true North. Without him, our normal will never be as bright
or right again. I see him in so many thing about my own boys so he does live on
in us and that is a kind of comfort. I imagine it will be a bigger one later
when I learn to live with the rawness better.
You all can’t know how
much every message, call, text and email means. Even when I don’t have the ability
to answer, please don’t stop. And thank you.
Until then,
KD
KD, Very eloquent and sad thoughts on grief. Those of us who experienced it in the past are probably tearing up with you (I am, anyway). I am very sorry for your loss. God be with you and your family.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Melissa <3 In the beginning I wasn't sure talking about it this way would actually help or hurt me. But it actually did help some. Thank you for your kind words too. That means a lot.
ReplyDeleteI'm crying right along with you, KD. Such beautiful, sad words that I'm sure only convey a small part of the reality of your loss. I have been praying for y'all and thinking of you often.
ReplyDeleteAll of that and more. My dad passed away more than a dozen years ago and grief still pops up at the most unexpected moments. I will always miss him. Always. His life marked mine in ways that I didn't fully grasp until some time had passed. Praying for you as you grieve and learn to live without his physical presence in your life. God's got us. <3
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