From Sharon’s Blog
Some of my friends have suggested that I see a therapist. Recently, after a bout of arrhythmia I was evaluated at the Washing
ton Hospital Center and the psychiatrist there, who saw me for only ten minutes, also suggested I start taking an antidepressant SSRI, and gave me the name of a colleague who could see me.
Maybe, quite possibly, I do need to see someone. The tests indicate that my heart is basically sound, I was reassured. Yet I puzzled over the issue of her referral.
All my life, when I have been struggling with problems, significant problems, I have looked outside myself for answers. I have read books. I have talked with my friends. I have googled what could be googled before there was a google.
But this time, I don’t think this is what I need to do. I believe that I need to turn my search inward.
The truth is there cannot be anything much more devastating to me than to have lost my husband so suddenly, while we were both still quite in the fullness of our lives.
I see now how everything about me was so fastened to him and it was from our connection that I experienced meaning in my life.
We observed our friends, our children, the political process, the beauty of each day, even the despair that comes from defeat or tragedy, from the aperture of our relationship. There was a unity of perspective and experience.
But now I am one again. A lot of who I became in the relationship was unconsciously driven–what we ate, what we accumulated, the way we spent our money, the friends we made, the cultural pleasures we shared–and Lewis, more than I, was much more aware of his choosing and the need to simplify and separate the wheat from the chaff in our lives.
Now that he is gone, the choices are mine alone. The friends I make and keep. The books I will keep and the ones I will throw away. His belongings: where will they go, to whom will they be given? Do I keep the house or sell it? The boat?
Do I try to see more of the world or stay here near my sons, their families, the grandchildren? Some of both?
One thing is for certain. I am more conscious and grateful in my work with my clients. To have the opportunity to share in the depth, struggles and triumphs of their lives is a rare privilege. And without their understanding and support these weeks I cannot imagine how I could have kept going…
And my friends: how fortunate I am to have them. Lewis and I were so fortunate to have made such good friends. My awareness of their kindness, goodness and generosity grows with each passing day.
Meanwhile, everything in my life is re-examined. I am on trial, sitting in the witness stand, pondering in the jury box, standing in judicial robes pronouncing myself verdicts, and then watching from the seats in the court room and writing and reading my daily news, sometimes just a twitter. I am given more days to live but what am I to do with myself?
I remember once being moved so much by a sermon of a chaplain in Huntington, West Virginia. The chaplain worked with young students at the university and observed that when each student came there it was as if they had to sort through every value they had accepted in their childhood and examine each one and then decide for themselves what they wanted to keep and what they wanted to modify or discard. He compared it to a cloak one would wear and there would be symbols or badges covering the cloak and each student wearer decides which figures would continue to worn and kept in their emerging identity. One at a time.
I have to do something similar while I am at the same time losing what has been my comfort zone and I know all too well that I cannot be sure at all what number of days may lie ahead.
To turn inward at this time is challenging. It is easy to glide, to let time pass and pretend or imagine that little has really changed. Some part of me wants this bargain with reality. And as a therapist I know that I help create my own reality and that often in life the best answer to any dilemma is to do nothing. To let things be. So I weigh these paths and choices in my mind. A kind of to be or not to be sort of thing.
Often my loss breaks through and I find myself feeling as if I am broken and beyond repair. I ache in every possible way. Everything I touch, see, smell, or hear reminds me of what is gone, of him. I rebel, moan and lament. I mourn and mourn some more. I am in a blind and altered state and I have missed the fullness that is left, the love that surrounds me. The happiness of my grandchildren. The morning air. The delight and mess of my pets.
I readjust myself and just as quickly, almost, the experience is reversed and everything I touch, see, smell, or hear seems all the more significant, precious and irreplaceable.
My awareness softens and I can see more easily the whole of my life again.
One thing is for certain. I must simplify and redraw the lines of my identity so that I am ME and not what WE were.
And while I am doing that I must deal with the task of reducing the stuff that was his and ours determining what to keep, what to sell or give away, and what I can discard forever not just put in a box somewhere.
I am just getting started. I have a ways to go and a certain zest for the journey, tears and all.
Yesterday I talked with my office manager, Betty, about my decision. I told her I thought I would continue without professional advice or medication.
I asked her opinion. She says she thinks that I am OK and that she would be worried if I weren’t struggling like this. She has assured me that if she sees that I am really faltering she will let me know. She reassured me.
Her reassurance helped. So do the words of others. And so do writers and poets.
Take these poems for instance:
Poems by Rainer Maria Rilke
Ich liebe meines Wesens Dunkelstunden
I love the dark hours of my being. |
Dich wundert nicht des Sturmes Wucht
You are not surprised at the force of the storm— Through the empty branches the sky remains. |
Hard to Do
Text below from Sharon’s Blog
It seems impossible, but we must take these steps. Slow steps. Halting steps. Uncertain and anguished steps. Lonely steps. Fearful steps.
Today is one.
When Lewis died my family and I had lots of very fast and unimaginable decisions to make. And we made them the best we could.
I go back over those first hours, the moment the deputy came to the door, the whirlwind and aching heartbreak of the emergency room, the urgent need to find answers to how and when the tragedy occured, and, finally, the desperation and despair and slow relinquishment of our disbelief. The reality.
How others sometimes do this alone, I do not know, because it would seem to me that without my family and friends I would have never been able to survive these days and nights. Even with their love and presence, there were certainly many nights and days it did not seem to me that I could or would survive another second.
Decisions were made, for right or wrong, better or worse: trying to discern what is fitting to do and trying to keep him in perspective with each choice.
I have painstakingly prepared for today and its finality.
I searched around the region for a fitting monument, one that would express his love of nature, his disdain for pompous display, his strength, and (most especially) the enduring reality of our mutual love of one another.
I realized that it would one day be my memorial as well and that some day hence our children would again wrestle with these realities, and I wanted to make it easier for them when that difficult day inevitably appears on their horizon again.
I hope I have succeeded in my quest.
The stone is large and unspectacular, but beautiful in form and function. The stonecutters have done their work and polished and then etched our names onto its western face. The setting is quiet and among some tall trees on a gentle downward slope toward the top of the hill at our local cemetary. I go by Mt. Rest every day as I drive the short distance between our home and office in town.
It is an old graveyard and some few of our friends are also memorialized there.
A friend who is a bagpiper has been rehearsing to play an old favorite gospel hymn, Just A Closer Walk With Thee, one that I remember hearing Lewis sing when we were younger and sharing our favorites.
A lot of well-known musicians have performed it:
Red Foley, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Louie Armstrong, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Johnnie Cash, Merle Haggard, The Oak Ridge Boys, Willie Nelson, Anne Murray, Randy Travis, and many more. Quite recently the Boston Community Choir sang it at Ted Kennedy’s memorial service and then a jazz ensemble played it plaintively at the funeral service for Walter Cronkite. That is where I heard it and decided to include it in Lewis’ graveside service.
A few friends and our family will be gathered there. A few of his clients who did not know about or were unable to make his memorial service have also been invited as guests should they decided to join us. Our “family” minister Sandy will say the biddings, prayers and final words. Another good friend, an Episcopalian and chaplain, will also be there to help us with our Anglican proprieties should we need it.
And then we will bury his remains under the trees, the sky, on this tiny outcropping in the midst of a marvelous and mysterious universe where we have had an opportunity to join and share our lives together.
And afterwards we will break bread together in the home Lewis and I shared.
I thank God for him. I have been blessed. We were blessed together.
And I loved him so.
May his remains rest in peace and may his joy be fulfilled in the spiritual realm that lies beyond our earthly comprehension.