I officially do not like grieving. I do not understand how I
can be so at peace one day and so raw the next. I had, naively, thought that I
was done with the hard part of grieving. That I could now, after three months,
look back fondly on my life with my dad and just feel the joy of the good times
without feeling the loss in the present.
Oh foolish me of yesterday.
I have been told that you cannot hurry grief. It comes as it
comes. It has its own pace, and it will not move faster for all my willing it
to do so. Which I respect. We cannot heal from deep wounds in moments. It takes
time for the sinew of our soul to knit back together. And yet… and yet I wish
there was a fast forward button I could mash over and over and over again.
But for now, I sit with grief and grief sits with me. And I
feel. Good things. Bad things. Little things. I would like to share some of
those feelings with you.
I sat on my front porch last Sunday watching the sun rise,
reading my Bible, and praying. It was the perfect temperature. Cool enough that
the heat from my coffee radiated through me, and not so cold that my fingers or
toes were uncomfortable. I watched the horizon glow a pink orange in
anticipation of the sun. I watched the sun peak over the Cascade Mountains
burning orange and red in the haze of the distant smoke. I watched as it rose
higher and higher until it was above the smoke, glowing in white-yellow glory.
I felt peace and awe and small and close to God all at once. I felt very alive
and so very loved.
I took my bicycle on a work trip to San Diego last week. I
checked into my hotel, unpacked my bike, and rolled it out of the hotel toward
Mount Soledad. I rattled along the rutted and grooved streets of San Diego. I
rode the bike paths that dip under the roads so close you could run your hands
along the concrete above your head. I fought the head winds. And then, I
climbed. Mount Soledad Road gains roughly 800 feet of elevation in its 3-1/2
mile length. I sweated and panted and climbed as the sun blazed. I did not
think much on the climb. I suffered. Breathed. Kept pushing. I rejoiced with
every short downhill and grimaced as the climb started again on the other side.
And then it was done. I reached the top. I sat on a concrete bench and looked
down on La Jolla and the Pacific Ocean. I felt old and fat and tired. I could
feel my heart thumping in my chest. Could feel the sweat drip down my neck. But
I was at the top. And the ocean was sparkling in the late afternoon sun.
I got back on my bike, pointed it downhill, and flew. I
wasn’t old anymore. Wasn’t fat. Wasn’t tired. I was the wind, a rushing gale, a
bird experiencing the thrill of a just-on-the-edge-of-control feeling of a dive. I was
alive.
I found myself in a farmer’s market the next night. I was
wandering near the North Gate Market area looking for gifts for the family, a
tradition when I take business trips. I rounded a corner and there was the
market. I bought Samosas from a woman from Mozambique. I bought Mexican
empanadas. I sat on a metal chair and listened to a man play an Irish jig on
his guitar as the sky glowed golden, the sun saying its evening farewell. I
wondered at the beauty of this country that we live in. A people made of many
peoples. A vast and varied landscape filled with a vast and varied people. I
was lonely, sitting there. I wanted to share the moment, the food, the music,
and the sunset with my wife and kids. I wanted them to feel the vastness too.
The profound scale. I wanted to hold their hands so they would know that in
that vastness, in the dizzying scale of it all, that they are loved.
I was texting a friend and putting my bike back together in
my garage a few days later. I had on my mechanic’s apron and my black
mechanic’s and was enjoying the feeling of torquing bolts and wrenching quick
releases. I was telling my friend about the book I just read about a man who
lost his denomination due to the craziness of the times. About how it felt like
listening to the story of a man who had hurt deeply but who didn’t bear a
grudge. The story of a man morning what was lost but hopeful for what was
coming. And my friend sent me a photo of his evening plans: a book we’re
reading together, a pipe, and a roll of pipe tobacco.
Friends, I could smell the tobacco through the picture. My
dad used to smoke it when I was young. I could feel the smoothness of the
plastic. I knew that if he were to push on it slightly, that the smell of my
childhood would puff out of that little plastic bag. And it was such a nice
feeling. Being a kid again. Listening to my dad tell stories. Feeling the
lacquered surface of one of the pipes he wasn’t smoking while I twisted the
stem idly. I smiled to myself as I kept wrenching on my bike. It was a good day.
And then I woke up today, and I was raw and angry and sad
and confused. Because wasn’t I done with the grieving? Wasn’t I done with the
negative parts anyway? Will I ever be done?
Can I tell you what I want? I want to love my dad without
the pain. I want to remember without that feeling of lack, that feeling of a
space where he should be. And I don’t think I’ll get that. We don’t always get
what we want.
I thought, for a brief moment, that it would be better if
things didn’t remind me of him. That I should shelter myself from that part of
me, hide myself from the things that bring me pain. But that feels cowardly.
Feels disrespectful. And it feels unpractical. Like I might cut myself off from
the beauty of a sunrise or the radiating warmth of holding my wife’s hand or
the exhilaration of flying down a mountain on my bike or the quiet mystery of a
golden sunset. It feels as if I would need to cut myself off from the joy of
life to avoid the pain of loss.
So today, for now, I choose bravery. I choose to remember my
dad. Choose to feel the pain that comes with it. I choose coffee at sunrise and
Irish jigs at sunset and the smell of pipe tobacco and the memory of an
everything-is-okay-now hug from my dad.
I choose the messy, painful, glorious beauty of the life God
gave me.
Comments
Carole
— You Don’t Just Lose Someone Once —
You lose them over and over,
sometimes many times a day.
When the loss, momentarily forgotten,
creeps up, and attacks you from behind.
Fresh waves of grief as the realization hits home,
they are gone.
Again.
You don’t just lose someone once, you lose them every time you open your eyes to a new dawn, and as you awaken, so does your memory, so does the jolting bolt of lightning that rips into your heart, they are gone.
Again.
Losing someone is a journey, not a one-off.
There is no end to the loss, there is only a learned skill on how to stay afloat,
when it washes over.
Be kind to those who are sailing this stormy sea,
they have a journey ahead of them, and a daily shock to the system each time they realize, they are gone,
Again.
You don’t just lose someone once, you lose them every day,
for a lifetime.
© Donna Ashworth Words
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