It’s been 364 days, 20 hours and 5 minutes since my Mom
died. May 22, 2012 at 2:25 pm she
breathed her last after a long year of hospitalizations for a broken hip, breast
cancer and congestive heart failure.
There are no words to express what it is like to watch someone you love
die – particularly a death where they are drowning in their own fluids. It is a
pain that cannot be articulated, especially when that person is your mother. It has left me with heartache that I believe I
have not fully engaged in as of yet; a grief that will take a lifetime to
process and why wouldn’t it?
Heidi was the woman whose womb I grew in; the woman whose
nurturing hands tended to me when I was sick or mercilessly teased at school;
and the woman whose own traumatized childhood set the context for my own. She was the person I most adored and sometimes
resented. One smile from my mother
could make me feel so deeply loved and I never doubted her joy when I walked
into the room – it would explode from behind those beautiful baby blues
piercing deep into my soul. You see my
mom delighted in the personhood of all people, and she was never happier than
to sit listening to another’s story.
Those that knew her adored her; her hospitality and servant hearted
nature was a gift touching many.
Like all mother daughter relationships ours was deeply complicated. I am the first born and with it came all her
adoration as well as every one of her unreasonable and at times impossible
expectations that follow the trailblazer of subsequent sibs. The responsibility for her emotional
well-being landed smack dab on me and I spent my entire life trying to fill a
hole left by her traumatized past unsuccessfully. My mother received more of my time than other
adult children give to their parents; yet even when present I felt like I could
never be present enough. There was
something about our dynamic that made me feel like she wanted to consume my
being back into her own. The ensuing
outcome was that I never felt like I could be enough, do enough or love her
enough.
I once heard someone once say that when those you love pass
you only remember the good. I’m so glad
that is true of their experience; but it really isn’t mine. My nature screams for authenticity and truth;
and I cannot face this experience without speaking honestly about the good, the
bad and the ugly. The grief over the
loss of my mother is a mixed bag that contains sorrow I can’t yet get close to
and relief that I no longer have to bear the responsibility for my Mommy’s
pain. Those who have lost parents know the heaviness
that descends over everything, the exhaustion one feels even after twelve hours
of sleep and the loss of part of yourself that was mirrored by one who was your
foundational relationship. No matter
your age, you have lost a part of yourself and you don’t fully know who you are
without them.
This journey has been complicated by having to watch my Dad
grieve the loss of his life-mate of fifty years….to him – the loss of his life.
I watched my father age right before my
eyes, listened to him promise her he would search the stars when he passes; and
come home to countless swollen and puffy eyes knowing he had spent the entire
day in loneliness and sorrow. A part of me wonders if the full weight of my
Mom’s loss will hit me when my Father passes.
Nonetheless, I have promised
myself not to borrow trouble from tomorrow; and to stay present today
navigating the waves of grief when they consume me.
This week has been heavy – but, light has begun to find its
way back into our lives. The constant
heaviness is lifting and energies are beginning to return. I find myself noticing both the best and
worst of my mother’s characteristics within myself; embracing the good as a gift
that says she is still with me; and working to relinquish those that did not
serve her. Today I grieve her
passing, but I also hold onto the hope of resurrection, in my character, in my
relationships and in my tomorrows. And
maybe, just maybe; when it’s my turn to close earth’s chapter, I will see those love filled baby blues again.