We write about widowhood as we live it. Together we examine the good, the bad, and the ugly parts of life as a widowed person. The views expressed here are those held by each individual author. We take no credit for their brillance; we just provide them with a forum for expressing their widowed journey in words that are uniquely their own.
Friday, October 2, 2009
renovated reactions
On the day our daughter, Liv, first started preschool, my husband, Jeff, and I dropped her off together. We helped her off with her coat. We put her shoes on the mat. Then, we stared expectantly at her wondering (possibly hoping) if she would start to cry and demand that we stay. She didn't. In fact, Liv told us with thirteen year old form, "You can go NOW." Jeff and I left feeling excited, rather sad and comforted with the comraderie of parenthood. Both our cellphones sat on the table anticipating an urgent call to come retrieve our distraught daughter while we sat in a coffee shop waiting for her two hours of separation from us to be over.
Our son, Briar, started preschool a few weeks ago. So much has changed in the four years since Liv embarked upon her preschool journey. Jeff is gone. Instead of him, I sat with Liv in a coffee shop while we waited for the two hours to pass. No phone on the table. No nervousness. No dramatic sighs of "He's getting so BIG!" We just enjoyed having a cup of tea and talking.
We had arrived at his 'school' with his snack in his hand, introduced him to the teacher, snapped a picture or two, exchanged hugs and kisses and left. I was gone before the majority of other mothers had finished applying lipstick marks and other ministrations upon their budding schoolers. I didn't join the little group outside daubing their own tears and remarking that they can't believe this day had arrived.
I know that my lack of drama and tears could be misunderstood as 'second child syndrome'. That nothing is so vivid or surprising after the first child has done it. But that was not the reason for my possibly seeming apathetic attitude.
Firstly, for now, I have come to a place where those types of emotions are a frivolous luxury that I am unable to afford anymore. If I start thinking of how Briar has grown, what Jeff and I would do to celebrate this milestone or how life 'could' or 'may' have been, I eventually wind up at a place where I realize that his father will never witness this day and end up rocking and moaning in the parking lot.
Secondly, I have larger fish to fry. I know Briar is safe and will spend my time worrying about how to afford the skating lessons he wants or the dance shoes his sister desires. And I can't and won't allow myself the painful thoughts that we seem to love to taunt ourselves with before a true tragedy has occurred.
I wonder if my little ones are missing out. If they will ever wonder if I care as much as the other mommies. I so do. I love them so intensely. I just don't have as much silly, frothy emotion to spill up anymore. Now when I cry, it is huge sobbing painful jolts. Tangible pain and sorrow.
But my children have also gained a parent who tries to waste as little time possible bemoaning what that we've lost. Instead, she'd prefer to open her eyes to what remains around us and the bit of wonder that is left. Otherwise, there isn't a point to carry out these small yet pivotal moments.
Maybe that's hiding or suppressing. Maybe it's coping. Who knows? I am just doing what seems to fit at this moment.
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I think it's living and you're doing a great job! I agree that having experienced great tragedy puts all the other little stuff into perspective. I like to think it's made us wiser and better able to prioritize, though I'm still a work in progress. Have a great weekend, Jackie!
ReplyDeleteDebbie
Hear, hear, Jackie. I'm right there with you. I like how you said it: " I just don't have as much silly, frothy emotion to spill up anymore." I call them "luxury problems," courtesy of a friend of mine who attended AA meetings for years. At one point she switched to a different meeting in a different part of town, on the fringes of the most affluent suburb in Portland (and consequently the richest town in all of Oregon too). And she told me how she got so sick of listening to these rich housewives' "luxury problems" and how to other people they'd never get to be 'problems.' The description has always stuck with me...and it gets applied in my own head (and when venting at support group at times) with some of the luxury 'difficulties' that nonwidowed people get to "enjoy."
ReplyDeleteThanks for this one, Jackie. And I'm glad that Briar's first day of preschool wasn't awful for you. =) Hugs!
Well said, Jackie. I wondered what was wrong with me that I wasn't all teary when Jacob started Kindergarten this fall. You put into words exactly the reasons. XOXO
ReplyDeleteGo, big boy Briar!