Two years ago today, we landed in NC. I took a crazy, yet calculated, jump - no job, no house, no school for Jacob - just hoping we could carve out a new space for us in this world that wasn't a constant reminder of everything we had lost.
Pachans Take NC
Wednesday, August 28, 2024
The Veil is Thin
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
Thoughts of Joe, Mom, and Dad...I expect those this time of year. I expect to dwell on the family I have lost. But I lost someone else last year, my friend Tony. Tony and I met over 15 years ago. We ran in the same circle of San Francisco clubbers and Reggae on the River goers. We were always up for a good time! It was a super fun and crazy phase of my life. He lived with one of my best friends, so I saw him once or twice a week for a period of 3-ish years. We stayed in contact over the years, long after our clubbing days had ended, but eventually contact became less frequent. Then I got a call last year that he had died. I was devastated when I heard, but if I'm super honest, up until the other night, it had been a while since I thought about his death.
Last week I had a dream about Tony, a very vivid dream. In the dream Tony and I were laughing and hugging, dancing, just having a fun time like we used to, clearly at a party of some kind (no surprise there). It seemed like we were dancing for hours, but then Tony got this weird look on his face, like something was causing him pain...and he just collapsed. I went down with him and caught his head in my hands. I started crying and screaming, "Please don't leave. Please don't leave." He looked up at me and said, "I'll never leave you; I'll always be with you." Then I woke up...
I was sweating and breathing like I had just run a mile, stuck in that brief space where your dream feels more real than the world you woke up to. I tried to make sense of it...then it dawned on me. Hadn't Tony died around this time last year?
I reached out to a mutual friend of ours who confirmed that Tony had in fact died one year earlier...exactly one year! I don't believe much in coincidences, but I do believe in visitation dreams. I believe it is possible for those who have passed on to find their way back to us. I know that to be true in my heart. But there's lots I still don't understand...
I don't know why Tony visited me the other night. Maybe he was just checking in or trying to remind me of the fun times we used to have. I don't claim to know the rules of the afterlife, but more than once over the past couple years a friend has reached out to say that Joe appeared to them in a dream, and told them to pass on a message to me. Why can't Joe visit me directly? I don't know, any more than I know why Tony chose me for his visitation this time. But man was it good to see him!
Then when I got in my car that day to go to work, I turned on the radio, switched through a station or two until I stopped on a familiar song, one that Tony used to sing, "Baby come back. You can blame it all on me. I was wrong, and I just can't live without you." I just smiled. The veil is thin my friends, very thin.
Miss you Tony. Hope you are
dancing and singing up there watching down on all of us. Catch you on flip side
my friend.
The Invisible Finish Line?
Monday, April 24, 2023
There is a piece of popular advice out there for widows/bereaved:
Because here's the kicker...freezing in place after loss, won't protect you from suffering another one. Please read that again.
Five months after Joe died, my dad was diagnosed with cancer, and I was thrown right back into the depths of being a primary caregiver. No hunkering down, no holding back, no putting off major decisions would have kept me safe from that. Life is going to happen, whether we're rested and ready or not.
I must have missed the memo from the elusive "Department of Socially Acceptable Grieving;" the one that dictates the proper timeline for all this stuff:
I imagine those memos would go something like this...
First Notice: "Your husband just died. Sorry, that must suck. Don't move, don't breathe, don't make any big decisions. Just stay home and don't come out until you're done being sad."
Second Notice - "One year
has passed since your husband's death. Congratulations! You have grieved
sufficiently. You're done! Feel free to commence living. You can
stop being so sad now. Maybe
go on a date."
Third Notice One Week Later: "You
should have received a Second Notice in the mail alerting you to the end of your grieving period. You
are now past the appropriate deadline. Everything happens for a reason. Buck up!"
Yeah....
You can't win. So, to hell with it.
There is no invisible finish line, over which your
grief magically dissipates. There is no one moment that will make you
want to live again. You just wake up, put one foot in front of the other,
breathe in and out, and do your best. Some days your best will be getting
out of bed; other days you will be able to experience real joy and laughter
without the immediate guilt that your person isn't there to experience it with you, and that will be a good day.
Here's to more good days. Go out and grab them!
Three years is three years too long
Sunday, March 12, 2023
I suppose this is my version of “How it started. How it’s going.”
Today it’s been three years since you took your last breath. Three years and I am still left with the desire to retreat to the life we shared together. But like returning to a town reduced to rubble in the aftermath of war, that world doesn’t exist anymore; there’s nothing to go back to. I reach out for you, hoping to meet you somewhere only I would know to go, to find you dancing in the stars…but I can’t get to you. Love should be able to take me to you, but it doesn’t.
It was real wasn’t it? You were here. We were us. I was still the me that existed in your eyes…adored and loved beyond measure. She is gone and someone new is emerging.The pendulum swings back and forth, pushing me to move forward, then pulling me back.
So where does this leave us now my love? I hold onto faith that we continue to exist between here and there, where time can’t hold us hostage. One blink, and we’ll be us again forever. But I promise to live until then, to laugh with our son, to experience new people and places, to have new adventures. I know you expect that of me, so I promise to do my very best not to disappoint you.
I continue to love you without end JoJo. I always will.