Filling in for Janine today...she will be back next week! I wrote this post about the way my kids and I became a real team after Phil died. We still have each other's backs :)
Our family
received an amazing, unexpected Christmas gift of a very cool new TV.
This weekend we went about shifting, rebuilding, figuring out cable
connections, and placing the new gadget in the place of our old big
screen. Somehow amidst the chaos, the daunting task of moving the old
machine out to the garage ended up happening when the kids and I were
home alone.
As I
stood looking at the old television, I remembered the day Phil and I
brought it home. He we so excited. We bought the new big screen as a
part of the house remodel that we did the year before he died. After
months of scraping ceilings, removing wall paper, redoing floors, and
repainting walls the house was finally ready for new electronics. Phil
and I made a deal; I could do whatever I wanted with the home decor as
long as he got to choose the new TV. Boy did he take advantage of that
deal....his set of choice was huge. So moving it out of the house was no
small feat.
I
called the kids into the room and said, "We need to move this TV out to
the garage." They looked at me, then looked at the monster set, and then
we started discussing how to make the move. As we stood in our living
room together brainstorming what to do I realized how many times over
the past five years the four of us have needed to work as a team.
Because we've been here before, the four of us, facing a task that
usually is done by two adults collaborating, deciding, and then acting.
But when Phil died I needed my kids to step up when one set of arms was
not enough. I needed help when the plumbing overflowed, or the fence
fell down, or the shingles were flying off of the roof in the rain. When
I couldn't call out, "Honey!!" I instead called "Kids!" One or more of
them would come to my aid, and somehow between us we solved all kinds of
everyday problems. This seemed especially true during the holiday
season when decorating, buying presents, purchasing and transporting a
tree, hanging lights, and just making it through the hustle and bustle
was so much harder in our single parent home. Whenever I reached the end
of my rope, I counted on the only other hands in the house to tie a
knot for me.
Grief
has definitely stolen a portion of my children's innocence. They make
statements now and then that cut me to the quick with their honest
observations of life in the aftermath of loss. More than once I have
wished I didn't have to count on them to be older, wiser, and sometimes
braver than their years might suggest. The scars that grief has left on
my kids are visible, and life changing, but as we took that huge
television over the last step of our porch and smoothly delivered it
into our garage I realized what a good team we have become since death
walked into our lives. We are resourceful. We can count on each other.
We know our team's strengths and weaknesses. We believe that we can
solve problems together. Everyone has a voice. I would like to say that
all of this was true before Phil died, and maybe it was, but we didn't
know for sure until we were tested.
So
this weekend, as we walked out of the garage high-fiving and celebrating
another challenging task completed, we spontaneously started
singing....we will, we will ROCK you! Five minutes later my daughter
walked through the kitchen still humming the tune and I thought to
myself...yes, yes we will.
:) ... we sing that same song. Its good to be bale to count on your team ...
ReplyDeleteLovely team you have. My team still struggles, we always seem to be having someone injured, not always physically, on the sidelines. Hope we are up and running like yours.
ReplyDeleteWelcome! Its hard to count your blessings when you are in our shoes, you are very lucky to have such great kids!
ReplyDeleteMichele,
ReplyDeleteThanks for another great post. I feel your strength and that of your team, and it helps.
My kids are inconsistently present in my life. I know they have their own lives to live, BUT I still need help with so many tasks that can't be achieved alone.
I have learned that alone doesn't always mean lonely. It sometimes means solitude and peacefulness. But when I need help, alone sucks.
I'm so glad that your kids are there for you and each other. You give so much to so many you truly deserve all the help and support they give you. Well done Mamma!
-r