I never know how to respond when people say this to me.
Even when it's slightly modified, like in Emma Thompson's adaptation of Sense and Sensibility when Mrs. Jenning's son-in-law says to Elinor when Marianne was sick: "I'm more sorry than words can say."
When people say that to me, my first and only thought is: Well, me too. I'm sorry he died, too. I'm devastated. Adrift.
People never know what to say to grieving ones, but grieving ones don't either.
I went shopping with my mom during my first visit to Oregon after Rob died. We were at a consignment shop to pick up some maternity clothes for me, because I'd already started showing.
I ran into a girl I'd gone to high school with, also pregnant, also with her mom. She chatted happily about her family and her plans and even mentioned her husband. I plastered a fake smile on, chuckled and said, "Me, too." I left as soon as I could and hoped I never ran into her again.
I couldn't tell her about Rob. It would've terrified her -- people think widowhood is somehow contagious. Or probably it's just the sudden realization that everyone's mortal and the same thing could happen to them. People don't want a reminder of that having lunch with them. Besides, she wouldn't have known what to say, and I hate putting people in that position -- where their eyes widen, and fear and sadness and grief pool in them and their mouth opens and closes like a caught fish flapping on the shore.
I didn't want to do that to her. It would've ruined her day. So I laughed instead, and waved good-bye.
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Stages of Grief -- Checkoroony
No one
asked any of us to identify the body like they do in the movies. No one asked
if Rob had any distinguishing marks on his body, like the blue triangle and eye
of Ra on his left shoulder blade. Wouldn’t they automatically ask that of
everyone? What about the long scar down his belly from the surgery he had when
he was four hours old? Wouldn’t they want to make sure they had the right guy
before putting his death notice in the paper? So maybe he didn’t really die.
Maybe it was someone else.
That
was denial, part two.
Most
people I’ve talked to believed Elizabeth Kuebler-Ross’ five stages of grief
were linear, one happened after another – denial, anger, bargaining,
depression, acceptance – though this is not the way she herself said it would
work.
If
those crappy stages weren’t enough, there are more. More that she didn’t talk
about. Like, shock and guilt.
Despite
the non-linear approach Kuebler-Ross intended, I still saw the stages as a
checklist of sorts. It didn’t matter in what order they happened for me, I was
just ready to start crossing them off my list. The faster I could do that, the
faster I’d feel better. And that was something I desperately wanted to be in
control of. I was in control of nothing else, so this would be my thing. This I
would rule over. And I was ready to get down to work.
So,
denial. Ok, that happened briefly for me when the troopers came to the house.
My first words were: Are you kidding? But that only lasted a few moments really.
This
is great. I cross
the first one off my list.
Shock,
I think, lasted about three or four months. It took awhile to come up for air
and to settle into some semblance of a routine. Check. (But remember, this wasn’t one of
the original five stages. This one was thrown in for free.)
I never
did bargaining. I don’t have much to say about that. I do know what it is
though, and I watched out for it, but it didn’t make any recognizable
appearance. For all intents and purposes – check.
Sadness.
(Or it’s alter-ego, depression.) Sadness permeates everything for years. Sorry
to be so crass and blatant, but there it is. It isn’t the sadness of sobbing
and heartsickness. That took me around a year or so to pass through. But good
days bled through them all. So in the midst of the pain, joy would show up, too.
But the
sadness that lasts for years is more elegant. It shadows your thoughts and
activities like the dappled sunshine that survives through a canopy of trees
above a summer deck. Soft, nostalgic. Tender, even.
The
anger was tricky and I’ll tell you why in a little bit. First, I gave myself a
freebie. Before I even started crossing them off, I checked off anger. I
wouldn’t do that. I’d never been raised with anger displayed in obvious ways.
Good Christian girls didn’t get angry. They worked things out calmly. Or in my
case, just avoided all confrontation.
Growing
up, my parents never displayed anger. Sure, there were disappointments and
disagreements – maybe even disgust sometimes – but never raised voices. Never
slamming doors (except among outraged siblings once in awhile), and never ever
ever any physical anger, hitting or throwing plates against the walls or at
each other.
I
wasn’t mad at Rob for dying. I was sad he died. I was lonely because he died. I
didn’t blame him for dying. He fell asleep. It was an accident.
Irritatingly
enough, denial resurfaced for a small time.
But
then Fernanda and Lena went to see the body at the funeral home before the
wake. So that ended the denial bit. Again. The shitty part was: I did the work
again, but I didn’t get to check it off the list again.
And
then I wondered about the way he died. The troopers said he fell asleep while
driving. But that sounded so unlike him. He’d pull over to the side of the road
to sleep, even with the threat of a commanding officer at formation bearing
down on him. So why wouldn’t he have done that on that night? Maybe he
didn’t fall asleep, maybe he had an aneurism, I speculated. But the autopsy didn’t show one.
Guilt
is another bonus grief stage. Most of my guilt stemmed from not making him stay
home and sleep. He could’ve gotten up after a few hours of rest and made it to
formation by six that morning. And I asked him to stay, but he said, “No.” And
that was that.
I knew
I really couldn’t make him do anything. He was an adult who made up his own
mind. I left it there; no more dwelling.
And
acceptance. Well that was dumb. Of course I accepted his death. He was gone,
wasn’t he? It was almost an insult to my intelligence. Fucking check.
So, I’m
done right? Checkoroony.
Yeah.
Right.
Remember
that anger I was telling you about? Well, four years later after I was “done”
grieving it showed up. Surprise!
I was
angry at Rob for dying. I was angry at him for working a 24 hour shift and not
having any sleep. I was angry at his National Guard unit for proposing the 24
hour work shift. I was angry that I wasn’t going to have any more of his
children. I was angry that we never got to go to France and Germany together. I
was angry that he wouldn’t be there for the kids to do daddy things with. And I
was angry that he was gone and I might never have the same intense love that he
showered on me from anyone else.
Whew.
The
most important thing to remember after that, for me, was that it was ok to
feel this anger.
It was normal and right and safe, and I wasn’t a bad person for feeling it.
Double
whew.
Somewhere
in those four years I was at a certification training for bereavement
facilitation led by Alan Wolfelt, PhD. He spoke several times during that week
and I learned something that has given me peace ever since. And now I give it
to you.
Grief
is cyclical. You can check off whatever stages you want, but you’ll most likely
revisit them. And that’s normal. You aren’t delayed, or dwelling on the death.
This is supposed to happen. Not forever mind you. And it’s not eternally on
your mind, or anything. Maybe six months – or four years -- will go by and
you’ll feel this overwhelming anger or sadness and wonder what’s wrong with
you. Nothing. Grief is cyclical. It’s not a tidy inked line on the paper, it’s
a big ball of yarn that’s been tangled up by the new puppy.
Something
else I learned from Dr. Wolfelt helped me feel much less crazy in those first
few years. He described something called “grief bursts.” Boy, was I relieved
when I knew what these were. I’d had one and thought I was delusional.
I was
driving to the mountains with my roommate, Susan, for a day of snowshoeing. We
were listening to an India Arie CD in my rig and the song “Beautiful” came on. In the
middle of it I burst into tears. I had no idea why. It was actually fairly
terrifying. I had no trigger: we hadn’t heard the song together before he died,
Susan and I hadn’t been talking about him, it wasn’t a random anniversary of
ours or his. Nothing to warn me. Just an overwhelming sense of him, and my
sadness that he wasn’t there.
Susan
and I dissected the possible causes for the outburst for a long time. The most
plausible to me was that I was wearing Rob’s flannel coat and there must have
been some residual smell of him in the fibers and the heater warmed it up
enough to smell them. His smell being enough to trigger the tears.
But the
truth is, it doesn’t matter. There doesn’t need to be a reason. In fact that’s
pretty much the definition of a grief burst. You randomly burst out with
emotion related to your grief for no apparent reason. It’s just there suddenly and then
fades just as quickly. Done.
But it
certainly creeped me out when I experienced it. Not to mention I was again
discouraged that I wasn’t yet “over” this irritating grief. So, to learn that
grief bursts were normal was a huge relief and had solidified for me that the
stages of grief weren’t tasks that need to be checked off.
Grief
lingers, but not in an irritating-younger-sibling-tagging-along way, or a flu
that lingers on and on and on. It’s a sweet grief. Like the favorite special
sweater of his you saved and bring out every year for Samhain*.
*Sambain
is celebrated as the Celtic New Year. It’s more commonly referred to as
Halloween, or the eve of the Day of the Dead. Our family celebrates this
holiday with an altar decorated with things our ancestors, friends or close
family members who’ve died once owned, or liked. A camera, pencil sharpener,
dog tags, a watch, or an empty carton of cigarettes. Camels. (And we sometimes wear clothes
that once belonged to them, as well.)
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