Sun 1 Jul 2007
Remembering to breathe
Posted by sandi under Uncategorized
[2] Comments
You see, sometimes it seems that you can just sail through bad times. You can work on being present and grateful, and you can say prayers and keep reminding yourself of how wonderful it is that things aren’t actually WORSE than they are ( “Wow, wouldn’t it have been truly terrible if I’d had a broken leg while all this was going on!”)…and somehow you’ll slip through unscathed.
And then you don’t.
It turns out that my mother died after five weeks of knowing she had cancer, and I talked to her on the phone every day of that five weeks, and then sat by her bedside all through her last hours–and you would have thought I had explained it all to myself enough times so that I really knew it was true, and yet still twice this weekend I have started toward the phone to call her up and tell her something, and been blind-sided by the realization that I couldn’t.
First I wanted to tell her about the snake skin that has recently appeared on the porch ledge RIGHT NEAR THE SPOT WHERE I USUALLY SIT TO WORK ON MY LAPTOP (okay, it’s on the other side of the screen, but still). She hated snakes as much as I do, but somehow, in her later years she had become sort of blase about them, even “live-and-let-live” about them, and I needed to hear her try to reassure me that a garter snake skin doesn’t mean my life is in mortal danger, and that I shouldn’t put the house on the market.
Then later I wanted to make banana pudding–the kind she loved, with the layers of vanilla wafers and bananas and meringue–and I wondered why the pudding doesn’t melt and turn to liquid again when you put the it in the oven to brown the meringue. So maybe you don’t brown the meringue? Or maybe it was whipped cream that goes on the top and not meringue after all? Why wasn’t I paying attention to these things?
Both times this happened I felt almost a dizzying feeling of grief, of the OH MY GOD, I DON’T HAVE MY MOTHER ANYMORE variety. And yet…and yet…most of the days I feel fine, perfectly fine. My mother was 76 years old, after all. She’d had a full, fun life, she never worried about anything, and then for five weeks this spring she was ill and she died the way she wanted to, and she did not suffer, and people who loved her were with her…and what could be so truly terrible about that? I talk about her easily with other people. I can even talk about her final days and final hours. I describe the funny/sad things that happened. I tell people about the trip I made to her old home town after she died, the way I found the house where she grew up and stood outside on the lawn, looking at it and remembering being there when I was a small child.
It’s only later, when I’m alone, that I’m consumed with wishing that I had thought to make that trip to Starke when she was still alive, with her by my side. Wouldn’t that have been something, walking down those little streets and seeing places I’d not seen in so many years, and hearing her tell me about the people who lived in those houses? Maybe she could have answered some questions, like who WAS Aunt Piney, anyway? And Aunt Scooty? And who gives people names like Piney and Scooty? I know they weren’t really relatives, so why do I have these names engraved in my brain pan?
It’s as if my mind is constantly whirring in the background, filing its memories with this new knowledge that she’s gone. It’s work, this grieving and sorting and reassessing and rethinking.
It will recede, I know that. I have had many losses, and I know how they become background noise after a while. I know how the sadness is sharp for a long time, and then takes its place as a dull ache that lives just underneath your main thoughts. I know that I will be okay, that I AM okay.
This weekend my children all came home, and we sat and looked at the old photographs and told stories. People have sent us flowers and brought dinners over, and we sat on the back porch in the candlelight and laughed and ate banana pudding and key lime pie that tasted like shaving cream, and pizza that tasted like garlic and olive oil. I didn’t point out the snake skin on the other side of the screen. I didn’t point out that the pudding should have had meringue.
I just smiled at them in the candlelight and loved hearing their memories of their grandmother, before those memories fade away, too. And I thought about how much she would have wanted us to laugh. And to forgive ourselves for anything we didn’t get to do while she was still alive. She didn’t believe in worrying about the past.











July 3rd, 2007 at 1:49 pm
I think it’s a closure thing you need, Sandi. You would think that after 34 years, I would have found closure with my own mom dying, but it hasn’t happened. That bond…that incredible bond…is still there and it’s really really hard to comprehend why you can’t just call her up and ask her these things. It’s freaking hard. That’s why I’ve been concerned about you. It’s not really until the aftermath when all this stuff sinks in. And it’s the aftermath that seems to go on like forever. I like to think my mother is still with me, but it’s not the same, you know? It’s not the physical same. And it’s the physical same, or lack thereof, that kills you. I think it’s too early for you to find closure just yet. You’re still in mourning. After a few months, years, go by, go back to the places where you and she did go and that’s where you’re going to find closure. At least, that’s what I think. I’ll let you know if I find that closure myself after I get back from California in September. You know, it’s really weird. It’s like not only am I going back to my childhood, I’m going back to the place where my mother was happiest and the place where I feel my mother’s spirit lingers and that’s the reason why I really need to go. So, my friend, you’re not alone and I can bet you that there are hundreds and thousands women out there just like you and just like me who feel they need some type of closure after someone so close to you dies. No, it doesn’t overwhelm you to the point where you can’t even function, but it’s those little things like you describe above that brings everything to a head. But, maybe that’s a part of life we don’t understand and we want to understand it, but we don’t know how. We feel that once we find closure, that’s when we accept that our mother has really really passed away and isn’t coming back and I think that’s what keeps a lot of people from finding that closure. Maybe they don’t want to find it because they are not through exploring the different questions that come up like how to make banana pudding or who was Aunt Piney. It’s hard, hon, believe me, I know. I went to make spaghetti a year or so after she died, HER spaghetti, and I had no idea what she did but mine never tasted the same. I found later a piece of paper with her spaghetti recipe. By then I was over the initial pain and at that point, I could smile because that’s when I knew she was still here guiding me, teaching me and just being here with me. That’s what is going to get you through this grieving process. But, later, go to where she used to go and see if you can pick up on feelings, senses and just go to think if nothing else. Love ya, hon, and you know I’m here for you.
July 6th, 2007 at 10:46 am
I’m thinking about you Sandi and you were absolutely right on with the apartment lady – good for you! Sometimes tough times tell us how we need to take care of ourselves and stand up to people.
I see some similarities between your experience with your mother’s death and my grandmother’s last summer. I had submitted her name to a prayer group to pray for those who have gone before us and I felt her presence afterwards as if she were thanking me.
I’ll keep checking back to see how you’re doing and will keep you in my prayers, too.