Showing posts with label tragedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tragedy. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2023

John Michael

Grief has this way of sneaking up on you. There is nothing linear about it. In the weeks after I started taking baby steps out in to the world again, I would find myself confused by the world around me. How did it go on? Didn't anyone know I just lost my Mom? I was viewing all things through glass. Nothing was clear. I wasn't an active participant. In the days following her funeral, my body was depleted. She gave out on me and I finally let myself succumb to the sickness and all I wanted was for her white Prius to pull up with a home made soup delivery. It didn't matter what kind, all of her soups were winners, and I never took the time to learn how. I always assumed we had more time. . .and then we didn't.

My birthday was six days after she passed away. I woke up to the smell of smoke which I automatically assumed was her barbecue. It flickered comfort for a second. I also hadn't listened to my voice mails, hoping I had one of her singing Happy Birthday to me. I always tried to answer those calls. If she wasn't the first call of the day, I was disappointed. I had come to expect the woman who brought me into the world, would also sing and welcome me to the gift of another year first and foremost. I cried my eyes out when the very first message I played was her singing. While family and friends showed up that night to celebrate, it is a blur. 

Twenty-four days later, I would venture out to a friend's house to celebrate with an intimate dinner with five of my friends from church. I had Ernie drop me off that night. Driving took energy I didn't want to waste. I remember I walked through her door, and the candles were lit, the food smelled delicious, the environment was warm and calming. I had an instant feeling of relief instead of anxiety. This felt almost normal. I felt so loved. My friends were arriving. There were hugs and check ins with each other, and then my phone rang. It had barely been a few minutes since I was dropped off, but my husband was calling, so I answered it.

He told me that he didn't want me to worry, and immediately my heart dropped. My voice raised. My friend's voices got quiet as everyone watched me. I remember that clearly. I think someone put their hands on my back. All I know is my hands were on my mouth, as my husband told me my 44-year-old brother who had taken his boys on a hunting trip had been in an accident. I was trying to remember to breathe. I wanted to go home, but he told me I was in the best place and to stay and pray. We did. I remember clearly thinking, "There is no way God would do this to my family." I then called my sister in law who was crying, but who also told me my brother was moving and talking, and I know I felt some peace. He was going to be okay. I just knew it. We sat around the table, I tried to eat. We talked a bit...about what I can not even remember. But then the hosts face changed as she noticed someone coming up to the door. She asked if we were expecting anyone.

It was my husband, and I knew in my heart before he even said, "We had to go." I don't remember if I crumpled under the weight of his words, but even today it still feels like it, so I expect I did. I could not cry. My friends cried for me. I could not breathe. I fell apart. I could not comprehend that this could even happen. How in only twenty-four days did my life as I knew it, cease to exist?  My brother, my first friend.  Polar opposites, but the only one who shared our growing up experience with me. Simply gone.




Tuesday, December 18, 2012

December 18, 2012

It's difficult to get on here and write about life as usual.  Because there is not a whole lot about it that seems usual to me right now.  On Friday twenty elementary children were shot and killed along with six adults.  These children were the age of my Bubba.  Sweet, innocent souls taken from their mommies and daddies far too soon at the hands of a troubled young man.  Malls, theaters, schools-it seems as if nowhere is truly a safe place any more.

Thankfully, my Emmanuel, is my saving place.  He is with us.  All the time, through the tragic and mundane, God is with us.  This was the message we received at the Living Nativity we walk through every year.  We walked and witnessed the recounting of Jesus' birth story.  We experienced the wonder and the awe of the greatest gift to mankind.  God with us. No matter what kind of a year we've had, the troubles, the triumphs, the peace, the pain--there is peace in knowing our Lord, Jesus Christ.

And maybe it's because I taught the Diary of Anne Frank for six years at the high school level, but I keep thinking of Anne's quote. . .“It's really a wonder that I haven't dropped all my ideals, because they seem so absurd and impossible to carry out. Yet I keep them, because in spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.”


And I do too.  Wasn't it just shown directly to my family HERE?  How can I not?  People all over the world are reeling and mourning and doing for the people in Connecticut.  Love does.  It is an action.  It is an action that is required so that people believe in the goodness of others again.  My prayer is that my own family and circle of friends continue to find ways to serve, to love, to do.  Maybe we are idealistic. . .but maybe we will be life changers because we hang on to the right ones.  I can live with that!


In between awards assemblies, school, living nativity walking, dinners with friends, and doctors appointments Lene performed in her third high school performance.  The Nutcracker.  They started practicing the weekend of Ernie's accident and with the help of family and friends--we were able to get her to all her rehearsals and the week long performance.  Rehearsal for Little Mermaid starts Friday. . .never a dull moment: )
We would like to say a huge thank you to all the friends and families who came out to see her.  This year many of the above students are going to New York to experience Broadway first hand. These shows will help pay the way for many of them.  So all support is especially appreciated!!  We were also able to attend Lene's Beginner Band concert last night.  They played a whopping five notes!!  It was so sweet to listen to them and all their blunders.  Band is not something I see in my daughter's near future--this concert is the first time I've heard her pick up her instrument.  She does not practice at home, and I'm okay with that.  It's not a battle I will fight--I'm glad she tried it and I will be fine when she is done with it.


And that my friends is our week in review.  I'm thinking to capitalize on the silence and to truly enjoy the last days of Ernie and I being home together, I probably won't post again until after the holiday.  Then I can send ourt book off to be made--I can not wait for that!  This blog--our little family history is such a gift to live with the ones He chose for me.  Be blessed!!!