Soaring Spirits Loss Foundation

Monday, June 7, 2010

Facing My Fears

It has been a long time since I have really shared my life with a man. Four years, ten months, and seven days to be exact. In that time I have learned to juggle life as a single parent, a single person, a sole provider, the sole tenant on my mortgage...I have become accustomed to the fact that the buck stops with me.

For the last two weeks I have been in Australia with my fiancee. We have been working out the details of his move to the United States. He is moving half way around the world to marry me. Most days I am humbled and a bit awed by this fact, but sometimes the idea of leaping back into married life causes a slight (or full blown) panic attack.

One day after a difference of opinion, I asked Michael what his Plan B was going to be. He calmly looked me in the eye and said, "I don't have one." My heart skipped a couple beats. No back up plan? So I asked him what he would do if things didn't work out between us. His answer, "I don't know." For some reason this irritated me and I insisted on discussing everything from how we will manage conflict to what time we will eat dinner and who will cook the meal. I went on for a good long time about all the reasons our relationship might not work, and then I started crying out of nowhere for reasons I could not articulate.

Sitting quietly in Michael's arms I realized that I was actually terrified. Since Phil's death I have worked very hard to avoid disappointment. In my quest to recreate my life I have become fiercely independent. By avoiding counting on people I have created the illusion that if someone else dies I can mitigate the impact their loss will have on my life. Death is the ultimate disappointment. Nothing is as I thought it would be, and the person who previously shared every part of my life is dead. The hole his death left behind took years to fill, and here I was prepared to link my future with another man. WHAT am I thinking?!

As all of this self reflection was going on, Michael just waited. He held me when I cried. He assured me that if things didn't work out between us that he would be okay. He repeated the promise that he would do his best not to die first. He laughed when I told him I had no idea why I was crying. And then I knew what I was doing, marrying a man who understands this journey though he has never walked this path. He loves me enough to stand by me while I work through the fear, the guilt, the uncertainty, and the various wounds that grief has left in it's wake and still offer a hand to hold as we walk forward into whatever the future has in store.

Widowhood has cemented in my brain the message that we only get to live once, so I am going to try to put that fear of disappointment on the back burner and make the most of the adventure that lies ahead.

This photo was taken of Michael and I on the second anniversary of our on-line introduction. We flew over the gorgeous Australian countryside in this plane while I marveled at the places life has taken me. Unimaginable and impossible are definitely not the same thing.

5 comments:

  1. I am the one who moved to another country to remarry. Not half way around the world, but I sold my house, quit my job of twenty years and uprooted a child - and though I had a vague idea of what I could do if things didn't work out, mostly I just refused to entertain the idea. Things were going to work out. And they have. Three years later and we've created a good life. Our kids are doing well and we are content.

    Congratulations on your upcoming marriage.

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  2. This post gives me hope... at a time when I desperately need it. Thank you.

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  3. You are so wonderful. Thank you for sharing this. You help me understand myself, and steps to come.
    Xoxo

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  4. Its hard to believe you can have love for another man and have him move across the other side of the world when its obvious you still love your husband so dearly.
    I have no idea what it would be like to love to people.
    Michael must really love you with all his heart if he doesn't have a plan B! is that what true love is?

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  5. I cannot imagine the man I would want to marry, though I know I want to be married again if I can find him.

    He would definitely have to be able to understand my love for Mike, and not be threatened by it, but perhaps love him with me, if that sounds weird, oh well!

    I love the picture of you two... and I love your positivity and "choose life" attitude. You inspire me.

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