Showing posts with label support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label support. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2013

On healing after child loss...

Well August has come & gone. The birthday month for both my girls, whom we lost in their first years of life. Usually, at this time of year, I post stuff about them & what it's like living with the pain. I try to be positive, I do all the things that seem to work, etc... but not this time. I don't know why. Maybe I'm just tired of doing all the same things AGAIN, maybe I'm just tired of giving it my energy, or maybe I'm just tired.

But the pain has reared its ugly head more this year. Cheyenne was supposed to celebrate turning 18, going off to college, voting for the first time, & all that comes with being a new adult. Emily was going to be 12. Ahhhh adolescence! No comment there. Given the sheer beauty of this child, I'm sure the boys would have been running away from the point of a shotgun about now. Her porcelain skin, jet black hair, & eyelashes that could sweep a floor would be irresistible to any smart young boy.

As for me, I just put my head in fantasy. I spent hours watching marathon runs of Merlin, took David to the pool, ...well, ok, I dragged him to the pool kicking & screaming something about wanting to stay home & play minecraft all day. As usual, the school year began with a week of teachers' inservice. Day three was Cheyenne's birthday, the first of two in one week. I woke to the alarm, sat up & the fountain of tears came rushing in ...no, they came exploding in! I could not stop. All the way to work, sitting in my office, sitting through meetings. I called my department chair, Cindy, to say I would be late to the meeting, not sure if I could be around anyone. She lovingly said come anyway, we will hold you.

Thank God for Cindy.

I got it out of my system, & by the time we had finished the workday, been to the cemetery to do flowers, & gone to eat, I was way better. The next birthday, for Emily was much easier. I had a classroom full of students who politely sat through the first of what will be many moving stories I share with them to teach them that love never dies. It stays with you for ever. I spent that day not teaching theatre, but teaching faith. That's right, I taught about FAITH in a public school. DEAL WITH IT!
Did you know that Shakespeare lost a son? He understands.

The last several years I thought I was healed enough to start talking to the public, ideas of Ted Talks have been floating through my head, starting a support group at the school for the teenagers who have lost their family members, etc... I was HEALING!

I revisited my old support group with a friend who brought her neighbors, newly bereaved, to the meeting. When it was my turn to talk I lost it. After 14 yrs I found myself a total inconsolable mess. I guess I am not healed yet. What was I thinking? I have been self-medicating my grief with hobbies out the ying-yang, staying so busy that I won't have to feel the pain. I chose (smartly) when to let it out... because I was in control ...yeah, right. Whatever.

As a theatre teacher (long hours all year) & a mom of a 7 yr old boy, I have plenty to keep me busy, but now I know it is time to step back, face the music, & deal with the pain. I'm still not sure how I will do this, but I have to. Never once in all these years, not even when it was happening... and it happened TWICE, did I ever question God's plan. Never once have I said "why". One thing I am proud to say is that I have an unusually strong relationship with the creator of the universe, not influenced by religion, but by my own relationship with God. What I say & do each day is between Him & me, no one else, & I know that my God will hold me through it all just as I held my children through it all: with LOVE, COMPASSION, & SUPPORT. ...even when I'm wrong.

I was recently given a great gift from a student & her mom. It is the memoirs of Barbara Bush, signed with a beautiful note... 

She & the former President have also lost a child. Their sweet beauty, Robin, was 3 yrs old, as was Cheyenne. I remember after we lost Cheyenne, our first of the two, as we attended the Astros games, with seats just a couple sections down from the Bush family, I would spend more time watching the First Lady as she kept scores on all the players than I spent watching the game. I would just sit there & think to myself "If she can do all the things she has done, so can I!" God put everyone together on this planet so we could commune, support, and provide as needed for one another. Religion is irrelevant, but FAITH, good, positive, living-in-the-light kind of faith, is essential for success & happiness. My daughters came to this mortal world for their own reasons, their own impact on the universe. And so did I. Just as they would both be leaving the nest at 18, I must let them go, always keeping them in my heart & my soul. In a letter to his mom, President Bush said:
                "But she is still with us. We need her, & yet we have her. We can't touch her, & yet we can feel her. We hope she will stay in our house for a long, long time."

Well said, Mr. President!

My girls live on, celebrating their birthdays, and continuing to teach us how to live in the light.


So I will continue, adjusting each moment to make room for more time to face the music. I will spend more time in meditation, and in faith. Love will get me there.


Sunday, July 3, 2011

LOTR, Celebration, & Grief...strange combination?

This week's topic for Focus 52 is celebration. I was stuck. I didn't want to do the traditional Independence Day celebration stuff, done that already. Then I stumbled upon this article in Variety about the 10 year anniversary of the release of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. WHAT?! That's right, I'm a Tolkien fan & I have reason to celebrate. The article discusses the topic of longevity in the films. The writer, a film critic, writes very honestly. I like that. But there is more...

I read the books as a school girl, but not IN school (don't even get me started on why we don't require it in our schools). However, as an adult I have outlived two of my children & the grief of living without them is not pleasant. This is where the books/movies comes in...

LOTR & the prequel, The Hobbit, deal with themes that are universal & timeless. For each reader/viewer they touch a sensitive spot in  their own unique ways. For me it was a guide through my healing as a bereaved parent. I can't even begin to list all the quotes, concepts, & examples of courage & strength that these stories gave me but I will try.

Early in my bereavement I was given a very lengthy dissertation someone had written for school which compared the burden of the one ring that Frodo carried with the burden of grief that we bereaved parents carry. It was stunning. It was right on. It was speaking to me. Frodo was changing because of this ring, an evil force, that he carried on a journey (& trust me, it IS a journey). He needed to get rid of the ring, destroy it in the very place where it was created or it would consume him forever.

Frodo's trusty sidekick, Samwise Gamgee, was not named SamWISE for nothing. He is always there, helping Frodo carry his burden.  "I can't carry the ring, but I can carry you!" "Let it go!" "You have to destroy it!" and so many more moments from Sam. My personal favorite: "Look Mr. Frodo! There is light and beauty up there that no shadow can touch."

When Frodo said "I wish this ring had never come to me." Gandalf the wizard taught Frodo "That is not for us to decide. All we have to do is decide is what to do with the time we are given".

Boramir, a soldier of Gondor who tried to take the ring for himself but fell upon the moment he got one tiny taste of its evil said to Aragorn: "Forgive me, I did not see".

In a final scene, Frodo wrote: "How do you pick up the threads of an old life? How do you go on, when in your heart, you begin to understand, there is no going back?" ... "There are some things that time cannot mend. Some hurts that go too deep… that have taken hold."


I am a collector of all things Tolkien. I have t-shirts, jewelry, props, costumes, and I'm even making a huge applique quilt to celebrate a great piece of literature & film. All that said, I will leave you with some images, and more quotes to inspire you & help you celebrate the destruction of the burden of grief.


I love you all & thanks you for supporting my blog by reading & commenting. It gives me strength like Sam gave Frodo.


In memory & celebration of my beautiful girls, Cheyenne & Emily


Quotes...
Aragorn, book III: "His grief will not forget; but it will not darken his heart, it will teach him wisdom."


Merry & Aragorn, book III: On missing Pippin... "No, not a pipe. I don't think I'll smoke again... I shant ever be able to smoke again without thinking of him and that day when he rode up and was so polite." "Smoke then, and think of him!"


Galadriel: "Even the smallest person can change the course of the future".


Gandalf: "For the journey does not end here. Death is just another path, one we all must take. The grey rain curtain rolls back & all turns to silver glass. And then you see it...white shores & beyond. A far green country into the swift sunrise."