We who have suffered a loss do get weary, the grief makes us weary and with all the turmoil going on in the world, sometimes it is more than we can bear. With the holidays here it brings memories of happier times and those damn Christmas Carols playing "I'll Be Home for Christmas" and the like, it's hard to get through some days. As the saying goes "life goes on". No one mentions if that's a good thing. It goes on, but it is never the same for us.
Okay, so how do we try to lighten our load, so to speak? Here are a few ways I am finding to bring some peace back into my heart. One way is spiritually, not the "Long Island Medium" kind but the belief that God is always with us and if we ask for his help he will give us what we seek. For a lot of us guilt is a block to finding inner peace. We must forgive ourselves for a myriad of choices we have made in the past. Now I know that this is no small task, but once we eliminate the demons that drive our feelings, we can move ahead to tackle what lies ahead.
For me it was the realization that my time here is finite and I want to enjoy the time I have left and maybe make a difference in someones life, even if I don't understand what is happening at the moment. A smile or a hello to a stranger is a small thing, but if we are so wrapped up in our grief or guilt, we will not have time to notice what is going on around us.
So here is my advice, and as always you can take it or leave it, but cut yourself some slack. In this busy holiday season take time for yourself. I know radical, huh? Read the Bible, do some things that bring you joy. Call your grand kids or your best friend just to see how they are, and listen. Enjoy some solitude. Read the signs that people and the Lord are giving you. Love yourself.
My favorite scripture is the following: "For I know well the plans I have in mind for you, says the Lord, plans for your welfare, not for woe! plans to give you a future full of hope. When you call me, when you go to pray to me, I will listen to you. When you look for me, you will find me. Yes, when you seek me with all your heart you will find me with you, says the Lord." Jeremiah 29:14
I hope it brings you the same peace it does for me. I wish you all a very Merry and Blessed Christmas and pray that you find the Peace of Christ in your life.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Ghosts of Christmas Past
Dear Sam
This will be our third Christmas without you. I miss your larger than life personality trying to make the season bright for all, especially me. The years you would dress up as Santa Claus and visit Max and Addie every Christmas Eve. It was even magical for me. When the kids moved to Vegas they still flew home for the holidays and we spent Christmas morning together. So many happy memories.
I came across a video this morning while looking through pictures from Christmas 2005. The kids were unwrapping their presents and that was the year we wrapped each present and then put the presents in a big box and wrapped it. They really loved that, so exciting for them. Even though we lived in Washington state and Andy lived in Chicago and Max and Addie lived in Kalamazoo we still managed to make Christmas special and you were a big part of that. The video focused on the kids and I wish you were in the video more, but I heard your voice and I was back there all those years ago. Oh did I enjoy that.
Each year seems harder than the last without you. The longer you are gone, the more I miss you. The older I get the more I need you. It is hard getting older, so much change, I must believe in myself as you believed in me. That is a tall order and find myself lacking the desire most days.
On a bright note Max had his senior picture taken with the trombone you bought him and is playing songs out of your trumpet songbooks. I am going to get a concert when I am down there for Christmas. I know you will be there too. Please ask our Lord to help me when I have days like this, I look forward to the day I can be with you again.
Friday, November 14, 2014
The Dead Husbands Club
Not exactly a club we want to be members of. Our husbands are gone, and here we sit, wondering what the hell happened. I must confess, when left on my own, the question still bothers me. What the hell happened? Don't want to be a member but I am. More and more through life, I find that it doesn't matter what I want, I must take it as it comes.
As you can maybe tell, I am wallowing in self pity today. Maybe it is a good thing I am alone, because I don't know of too many people who want to be with me when I am like this. Honey came over to the couch as I was sobbing and tried to make me feel better with a nuzzle, such a sweet girl. I just cried harder.
Today I am angry that Sam left me here, alone and missing him more than I ever thought possible. I feel as if the grief is insurmountable today. My therapist tells me there will be days like this. That does not make it any less painful. I guess it is normal, but I don't want to be normal, I want my husband back. I am a child today. I want my way. So much pain..so much pain.
As you can maybe tell, I am wallowing in self pity today. Maybe it is a good thing I am alone, because I don't know of too many people who want to be with me when I am like this. Honey came over to the couch as I was sobbing and tried to make me feel better with a nuzzle, such a sweet girl. I just cried harder.
Today I am angry that Sam left me here, alone and missing him more than I ever thought possible. I feel as if the grief is insurmountable today. My therapist tells me there will be days like this. That does not make it any less painful. I guess it is normal, but I don't want to be normal, I want my husband back. I am a child today. I want my way. So much pain..so much pain.
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
HELLO WORLD
"Hello world, my old friend, it's good to see you again" from one of my favorite songs by Lady Antebellum. It talks about cell phones ringing, traffic jams, distractions we all experience. Lot's of things and people vie for our attention, on a daily basis and we don't take time to look outside ourselves to what is going on. It is very easy to get wrapped up in our schedules and obligations to the point there is little time for anything else. Yes we can stop and smell the roses, but is it possible to even find them? I think it is safe to say we often times do not know where to look. Too busy...
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Lighten Your Load
The last few days have proven to be somewhat of a challenge and eye opening as well. Seeing as it has only been a scant five months since I moved back, I have started to go through the pile of boxes in my garage which take up half of it. Due time, don't you think?
I find it difficult to go through the boxes, as there are reminders of my previous lives (that's right, lives) contained in each one. So I tried to break them down into categories. Andy's childhood, Sam, Max, and Addie. Now normally one would think what, a box each maybe? Well......Sam has around five boxes, Andy three, Max and Addie...OMG. Oh and I can't forget about me, I try, but to no avail.
Any who, I start to take a razor knife to the boxes and cut them into bite size chunks (don't worry, no running on the treadmill backwards stories), and put the packing paper in the recycle bin. Then I begin opening the boxes that are still full of God knows what. BOOKS! My lord do I have books. One medium box full of Jim Harrison, a lot David Baldacci paperbacks, Paulo Coehlo, fortunately I do have a place for them. Then I open two boxes of vinyl albums from the 1970's - 1980's. Then there are the four or five boxes of cassette tapes and cd's. Good God Almighty, I need an organizer of some kind. So I start pitching. The first thing of note to go was the copper punch type picture, I made in Pauline Raynor's 5th grade Science class of a baby fawn. I hauled that thing across the country and from house to house since then. Time to purge.
I have not yet subscribed to my Son Andy's method of moving (100 yard dumpster in the driveway) but am starting to appreciate what he does.
Sunday, September 14, 2014
"What Becomes Of The Broken Hearted?"
Today's post is the first of what I hope become essays on grief, that might help someone experiencing it. Grief is explained by some as a process, certain steps that everyone goes through. If there is one thing I have experienced during this time, it is that there are different kinds of grief and loss. It cannot be categorized by steps experienced in certain order.
There is little difference whether you know it is coming or not. The result is the same, you are alone. Maybe not at first, as right after it happens you are inundated with food, flowers and friendship. Of course at this stage you are numb and feel as if all of this is a bad dream, so you can't take it all in. I must caution not to get rid of all their stuff right away, suggesting that if you have help, let them pack it up and put it away for a while. Reality comes calling after everyone goes home and you are left with all the reminders of your former life. The person you shared everything with is gone. You still talk to them, ask them what they think and desperately look for signs that they are with you. And they are. All that energy cannot just simply disappear over night.
Even though you don't feel like it, it's important to stay in touch with friends, but always be prepared to leave in a hurry, as at first it is hard. I had to call my friends at times and ask them to come over and just sit with me for a while. It helped beyond belief. I an m so blessed. Visiting a grief counselor also did me a lot of good and the girls at Blessed Sacrament in Allegan were an absolute God-send.
It didn't happen overnight. Sam has been gone not quite 2 1/2 years and I still have a long way to go, but what I am saying is it does get better, God brings new people into your life to help fill the void, not take their place, but to enrich your life. Give you reasons to see you are really blessed and be able to pay it forward in some way. I am much more spiritual than before and try to appreciate what I have and not just sad over what I have lost.
I believe grief is something we never truly get over. As I read in a Jim Harrison book once, "A lifetime is not long enough to get over it."
There is little difference whether you know it is coming or not. The result is the same, you are alone. Maybe not at first, as right after it happens you are inundated with food, flowers and friendship. Of course at this stage you are numb and feel as if all of this is a bad dream, so you can't take it all in. I must caution not to get rid of all their stuff right away, suggesting that if you have help, let them pack it up and put it away for a while. Reality comes calling after everyone goes home and you are left with all the reminders of your former life. The person you shared everything with is gone. You still talk to them, ask them what they think and desperately look for signs that they are with you. And they are. All that energy cannot just simply disappear over night.
Even though you don't feel like it, it's important to stay in touch with friends, but always be prepared to leave in a hurry, as at first it is hard. I had to call my friends at times and ask them to come over and just sit with me for a while. It helped beyond belief. I an m so blessed. Visiting a grief counselor also did me a lot of good and the girls at Blessed Sacrament in Allegan were an absolute God-send.
It didn't happen overnight. Sam has been gone not quite 2 1/2 years and I still have a long way to go, but what I am saying is it does get better, God brings new people into your life to help fill the void, not take their place, but to enrich your life. Give you reasons to see you are really blessed and be able to pay it forward in some way. I am much more spiritual than before and try to appreciate what I have and not just sad over what I have lost.
I believe grief is something we never truly get over. As I read in a Jim Harrison book once, "A lifetime is not long enough to get over it."
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
The Sheriff of Tiny-Town
This is Waylon the dog, aka The Sheriff of Tiny-town. That's what Sam always called him when he tried to act like he was head dog in charge. I could just imagine him with a little cowboy hat on coming into the bar under the swinging saloon doors. Now you're really in trouble people.
This will be a short post as I want to remember Sam on the second anniversary of the day he left us, which is tomorrow, but I don't feel much like writing.
What I wanted to tell you all is that I am now remembering the good times. Every once in a while I hear him talking about the sheriff of tiny-town, or his morning mouth feeling like someone had been walking through it in little tiny barn boots, or his maladies as "just part of the wonderful world of being me". Or how something exciting was "Spazmagorikal"
It has been so long that I only remembered the last couple of years of his life and his struggle to stay here. His illness consuming us and becoming our life. It helps going through all of our old pictures and seeing Halloween Parties where is dressed as the Big Bad Wolf, or the scariest of all The Devil, with red cape, horns and fingernails, Yikes!
One of the hardest parts of losing him is the time that has passed. Two years since I heard his sweet voice or felt the touch of his hands. He is alive in my heart, and always will be, and there is never a minute when I don't think about him.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
MARG AND ME
When I awoke this morning it was to the news that my dear friend Marg Groetsema had passed the night before. Marg is the first person to befriend me when we arrived in Vancouver the Fall of 2004. Fortunately she and her Husband Dale lived just down the street from us and Dale worked with Sam at Boise, Inc. We never lost touch throughout the years for which I am grateful.
She was so supportive of me during some of my hair-brained business ventures. Always showing up to make sure I wasn't alone when nobody showed up at one of my jewelry parties, candle parties, etc.
I was blessed because she thought I was funny. One of the best stories I have is when I first moved in and she would have me down for coffee and it would always be so strong, I mean really strong, almost undrinkable. She told me I was welcome to make the coffee the way I liked it if I wanted to. Like a dummy, I thought she didn't know how to make coffee. Never dawning on me that she liked her coffee EXTRA STRONG.
Marg and I had a date at Starbucks on 192nd Ave every week. That is where we shared all our news, including her Leukemia diagnosis. It seems to me she always had a Toffee Nut latte, but I always had the flavor of the season. What was the most fun was stopping over at the Pay-less Shoe Store after coffee and looking at all the new shoes that were out. There was seldom a time that we walked out of there without any shoes. What fun. I never felt like a stranger when Marg was around.
I am writing this through tears, knowing I will never get to see her again, happy that I did get to tell her how much I loved her and hug her one last time when I was there to visit the end of February.
Today I pray that God will wrap his loving arms around her, and comfort Dale and Maria as they mourn the loss of their Wife and Mother. Here's to you Marg, thank you for all the great memories and the love you shared with all of us. We are truly blessed for having had you in our lives.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Oh What A Beautiful Morning
I am fully convinced that God puts us where we need to be all the time. I have been pissing and moaning this entire time in Atlanta. The traffic, the people, the expense, among other things. On the brighter side, I have spent more time with my Grand Kids in six months than I did the whole time I lived in Allegan, MI. The restaurants here are great, and I get treated to dinners and lunches and brunches a lot by my Family. And I missed the worst Winter Michigan has seen in fifty years.
Most of you know that I have been feeling like this move was a mistake on my part. But had I not come down here I would be up north kicking myself for not going. So let's call it a learning experience. Yes, right.......an expensive learning experience, but I cannot let that stand in my way. Not now, not when I am trying to re-invent myself. Sounds like a big job, but it must be done, because my life has changed and I am no longer Sam Bond's wife. I am his widow. A moniker I could due without, but it is what it is. I need to look ahead and try to imagine my life without my husband, because up to now I have just been reacting to his death. I must consciously plan a life without him. He would be the first one to tell me this, so I will go with it.
Today I woke up and the birds were singing and the sun was shining and I felt better than I have in a while, especially since the time change. When I took the dogs out, I realized it was going to be really warm so I got myself around to walk. I felt like taking a different route and I think that changed my attitude also. As I was walking it dawned on me that I was exactly where I belonged today. That this past six months HAD been a learning experience. Once again I had to go through this to appreciate everyone and everything in my life and exactly where I fit into what had temporarily been a puzzle to me. I feel like the darkness is starting to lift, and I must make it a point to keep all this in mind and keep moving forward with my new life.
So boys and girls I am on my way back to Kalamazoo, MI, where the majority of my family and friends reside. Where I am most comfortable, where my roots are, where my heart is. It is where I will spend the majority of my time, and as it stands now, I am welcome to visit the kids in Atlanta anytime I would like and stay with them. To me that is the best of both worlds.
Look out Kalamazoo, T Bond is coming home!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)