Introductions and Intentions

There is Nothing Wonderful about being a Widow

I will start by repeating: there is nothing wonderful about being a widow. The " wonder " in the blog title refers to the awestru...

Friday, November 30, 2018

When I Knew he was Gone

I prepared to go to the viewing as if I were going on a date. There was something soothing about the ritual of washed hair, pinned back with little clips above my ears; shaved legs; putting on a dress. The motions were a buoy in a sea of sadness, giving me something to focus on aside from conserving tears for the deluge that I knew was coming. And, after four days of feeling totally disconnected from my physical anchor of a husband, there truly was a thread of excitement in finally getting to know exactly where he was - or at least, where his body was.

Someone had suggested that I write Matt a letter, to be cremated with his body. I remembered to do that at the last minute; I would leave it with him at the viewing. It was easier than I thought it would be to write the letter. Matt always had a way with words, and I could feel that skill with me as I tried to sum up my thoughts. It was mostly thank you. He had taught me so much about taking nothing for granted, living from the heart, and truly finding joy in all things. I folded the letter several times and tucked it the same place I had stored my wedding vows – in the crease between my breasts, up against my heart.

At the funeral home, there was a wait in the lobby. I sat sunken into a large and overly soft couch, wondering how I would ever get out of it. No one else had wanted the viewing. They were there for me - the funeral home staff, the friends and family that surrounded me. The fact that I could say “I want a viewing,” and people showed up to make it happen, for me, was an intoxicatingly powerful manifestation.

While waiting, I felt the heaviness of the event in the thick carpet, the gaudy gold picture frames, and the fake flowers. It was awful, we all agreed. But how do you make this kind of thing not awful?

And then they were ready for us, well, for me, to see Matt. My friend, Laurel, helped me get up from the couch, wrapping her arm around my waist as I stood. My other friend, Amanda, came and stood on my other side, also wrapping her arm around me. Together, we walked down a long narrow hall with thick red carpet; morning light coming through the bank of windows to my left. It was around 10:00am, about the same time that Matt had crashed, four days before.

I wasn’t even through the doorway of the small room when I caught sight of him. A cry of anguish - of love, recognition… and separation - escaped me and Laurel and Amanda were lost to me. All I knew was the floor and the sensorily saturating sight of my husband. He looked like him at first glance. Ruddy skin, golden-brown hair, course over his visible right arm. The royal blue button-down shirt I had picked out for him.

The sob came hard and fast, pouring my sorrow into the plush carpet as I crouched below the casket.

And then it was gone. The initial impact of seeing him faded, and I felt lighter than I had in days; my head cleared, momentarily relieved from the deluge of tears. I dared a glance up at him, and saw his right elbow, forearm and hand. There were several small scratches and scrapes on his hand, and one on his elbow, but I was surprised it wasn’t worse, considering the impact of the accident. His chin was stubbly. I could feel that familiar scratchiness under my hands, even though they were on the carpet. I felt meager, crouching below the casket and venturing a look at this man I had known more intimately than anyone else in my life.

His face was at peace. But hollow. The eyes were sunken and the lips dry.

Matt was not here.

He is no longer in that body.

Laurel and Amanda left me to be on my own. I knelt on the floor, inches below Matt’s furry arm, just visible over the edge of the casket. I mostly spent my time daring myself to touch him; compelled to connect with my husband, but afraid that physical contact would somehow infect me with a pain, the reality of loss, that I would not recover from. I couldn’t do it. How intimate could I get with death? Not touching intimate. Not then.

Feeling somewhat defeated for not being able to overcome the taboo of death, I hollowly followed the expected protocol and sat on the bench across the room. I was surprised at how content I felt to be so near my husband’s body. He was not stuck anymore. I felt it. I sat stunned, freed of the torment of the last few days, the thought that my husband’s soul had been in shock as much as I was. And now, a shimmer of peace.

I spoke to Matt for a few minutes, feeling bolstered by the gift of gab he had flaunted in this life. The room felt like a conduit space; the density of the walls made me feel protected from the outside world, and yet there was an open feeling above me, allowing me to imagine my words traveling directly to Matt’s consciousness. Matt had been so grateful for everything in his life, and all I could muster was a reflection of his gratitude. I thanked him for our beautiful son, for the fun three years we had had together, and for teaching me so much about open-hearted connection with everyone around me. I didn’t get a response of any kind, but I felt like he heard me.

But it was still a lifeless body in front of me, and at some point, I needed to move from the hard and too-narrow bench to whatever was next. I must have opened the door. Laurel and Amanda jumped to attention. I ended up on another bench, in the hallway outside the room. I didn’t remember noticing it was there on my way in, but I was grateful it was there. I sat heavily, physically exhausted. Grieving is hard work. Pastor James asked permission to go in; the only other person who visited Matt.

I had forgotten about my letter… or perhaps had protected myself from the intimate finality of tucking it into Matt’s shirt pocket. I gave the letter to James, asking him to deliver my message. I was only slightly self-conscious that this was the second time I was pulling something out of my cleavage in front of our pastor; he had performed our wedding ceremony as well. James and the letter disappeared behind the closing door. I trusted him implicitly to do the right thing with it.

The bench was uncomfortable, so we went back to the lobby. I grabbed Matt’s brother, Darren’s, arm and pulled him onto the couch next to me. Needed that Wilson DNA close to me.

Then I thought of the urn kit my landlord had given to me that morning, and wanted to show Darren.

The funeral guy had already stashed the box somewhere, and I asked if it was possible to see it again. Of course; it was brought forth. There was that power of asking and receiving again, that I had noticed when we arrived at the funeral home. After taking my everything from me, it was like the universe was apologizing, at my beck and call in these little requests.

I showed Darren the dark wood box and he remarked kindly how beautiful it was, identifying the lighter inlay as birds-eye maple. Birds. Hello, Matt.

Then I pointed out the stationary that was part of the urn kit - Thank you cards came with the urn, how strange! Fancy ones with golden lettering. Was I really expected to send a thank you card to everyone who showed up with condolences?? The thought was overwhelming.

“Not nearly enough of them,” I said, gauging the thin package of cards and envelopes. Matt knew a lot of people.

“Not really Matt’s style of thank you card,” Darren replied.

“I’m not really sure what Matt’s style of thank you card would be,” I responded, truly pondering it.

“Post-It Note,”  Darren said, without hesitation.

Hilarity ensued. Oh, my god, what a strange sensation to laugh, deeply. Frantically, because it was so funny, so Matt, and so wonderful to dive into the familiarity of his informal persona. And because it was a release of so much that was pressure-cooking in my cracked crucible of a heart. There was relief in knowing that my body even remembered how to laugh; it was physiologic to an extent, like a sneeze that just happens and we are along for the ride. My body had gotten me through shock and four days of grieving and pain. And to know that it could still find pleasure in a laugh, in the darkest moment of my life, felt like hope.

That wave subsided and we sunk back into reality. We discussed a few more details about reception ideas. Pastor James returned from his visit with Matt’s body. I briefly wondered what his time in there had been like, but felt too exhausted to ask.

I reclined on the couch because my stomach was hurting from being hunched over for days.

If Amanda hadn’t asked me if I wanted to get out of there, I might still be sunk into that couch. The next unknown steps loomed, and I relied on those around me to move me forward. My husband was not stuck anymore; there was relief in knowing that, bodily. But what came next was a frightening mystery, a monster in the closet of my heart, with the doors ripped off.

Sunday, November 4, 2018

I Will Always Come Back

I had a long day the other day, starting with a birth call at 3:30am. I crept out the front door that my dad had just crept in, and relished in the exhilarating freshness of the early morning air. The baby was born at 5am - quick! I finished postpartum care around 8am, and had four appointments left in my day. I decided to push through and stay with it; rescheduling everything was more trouble than powering through a long day. I did sneak in a nap in our extra exam room at the birth center; broken as sleep usually is during the daytime, especially ‘downtown’ with street noise and such.

When I finally got home around 4:30pm, I was bleary-eyed, but doing ok. Jack seemed ok too, but toward bedtime, he started deteriorating in mood and manageability. It was a sloppy finish to the day, wrangling him into bed with the most patience I could muster, and also fighting fiercely for a reasonable bedtime. For us both.

Something about his mood and energy sunk in a little deeper the next morning. During our usual morning snuggle when he wakes up, I said that it had been a long day of work for me yesterday, huh? And I had left unexpectedly, so his preschool drop-off was with Grandad instead of me, as he has been expecting.

Then I decided to dig a little deeper. I asked him if he remembered when Dada Matt didn’t come back. He said yes. My heart blipped a little; sorrow, amazement, awe… Jack was 15 months old when Matt died; just starting to get stable on his chubby little legs. Saying a few words.

He had been absolutely in love with his Dada. If I was home with Jack, and Matt came back from wherever he was, Jack would start wiggling like a puppy, kicking his legs and shrieking with excitement until Matt picked him up and gave him his usual warm hello in his kind, deep voice.

Undoubtedly, Jack had noticed his absence. And noticed that I sat, incapacitated with grief, for much of the months to follow. In fact, Jack got his worst sickness ever a week or two after Matt died. There were about 24 hours during which I thought he had whooping cough. My body would tense with his when he coughed and wheezed, terror for his safety paralyzing me, imagining my worst fear of having to bring him to the hospital; or worse. When I wasn’t paralyzed, I would will his lungs not to wheeze, and somehow managed to bring myself back to the present moment, during which were not in the ER, and my baby was alive.

Jack cleared that sickness just fine. But I know that the lungs are said to be where we process sadness. My poor, fatherless baby…

Now he is more than twice the age he was when Matt died; three years and a month old.

During that conversation about Dada Matt not coming back, I also asked Jack if that makes him nervous that I wouldn’t come back. Again, he said yes. Deep breath.

I told him that even though I have to leave unexpectedly sometimes for a birth and I don’t always get to say goodbye, that I will always come back.

I have confidence in saying this, because even if the worst thing possible ever happened and I couldn’t really come back because I was dead, I know my soul would still return to him and assure him that I loved him and that we would be ok. Like Matt did for me.

Then Jack saw a toy on the floor and our conversation was over.

A day or two later, I realized that my end of the conversation with Jack felt incomplete. Again during our post-wakeup snuggle, his body warm and toasty from being under the blankets, I brought Jack to my chest and asked if he remembered our conversation about Dada Matt from the other day. He said yes.

I told Jack that I wanted to say more… that Dada Matt would absolutely have come back if he could have. He had had an accident and his body wasn’t working anymore. I told Jack that he hadn’t done anything to make Dada Matt not come back. That he loved being Jack’s dad. Loved him so much, that his soul hangs out with us and watches us and helps us.

Tears snuck out the corners of my eyes as I lay on my back, my three-year-old laid against the length of me, his head on my chest, his body completely relaxed. I cradled his head, his silky blonde hair smooth through my fingers. I felt him open, soaking up my words; the truth of that love pouring out of my heart and words and eyes. Any line that had separated his body from mine was, for that moment, erased.

“Dada Matt was so happy to be your dada,” I whispered fiercely. "And I am so happy and so proud to be your mommy. I just wanted you to know that.”

“I know that,” he said, softly but surely.