The Uses Of Sorrow
Someone I loved once gave me
a box full of darkness.
It took me years to understand
that this, too, was a gift.”
Tomorrow marks the fifth anniversary of Matthew’s death. Five years. It’s almost impossible to wrap my head (and heart) around this indisputable fact. On the one hand, five years ago seems like an eternity, while on the other it seems like only yesterday.
We miss Matthew more than you
can know. I spend a lot of time thinking about him, wondering what he would be
doing now at the age of 26, (wondering what he IS doing now). It’s a mystery
that I hope will one day reveal itself. I’ve learned a lot about grief during
these past five years. I’ve learned that
grief brings with it great gifts, although they may not be apparent for months
or even years later. I discovered that out of this shattering loss, I am
grateful more than ever for everything that life has to offer.
I’m also very aware that my
life had been relatively easy before Matthew died. Of course there had been many
bumps and sharp curves, and ups and downs. I had lost my wonderful dad when I
was in my early 30’s, and a dear friend died five years before Matthew. Both of
these losses created huge holes in my life. But nothing prepared me for the
grief that fell upon our family five years ago. Matthew’s death brought us to our knees, and
overnight our world shifted on its axis.
I remember a father and son
came to visit us in the first week when we were sitting shiva. He had coached
Matthew in baseball, and had tragically lost his daughter (also in her 20’s) to a
brain aneurysm three years before. When they came into our house, I was struck
by how tender and fragile they seemed. I remember looking at them—three years
further ahead on the journey—and realizing then just how devastating this loss
would be. I honestly think we were still in a bit of shock that first week. I
saw that time would not erase the hole that had just been etched into my heart.
I also saw that a special connection occurs between other families who lose
children. I was now a member of a club no parent EVER wants to join.
My sorrow has made me more
aware of others’ pain and sorrow. It’s made me ponder the whys of life in much
more heartfelt ways than before. In my case, it led me to working with others
who have experienced overwhelming loss, and I now facilitate Grief Support Groups.
I am comfortable in the role of creating safe spaces for people to share their
stories in their darkest moments. I consider it an honor to sit amongst the
bereaved and “companion” them along their journeys.
Writing has also been
immensely helpful to me these past five years. I started this blog 17 months
after Matthew’s passing, and have been grateful for this forum. Not only has it
been a way to process my own grief, but I have met so many others who wrote me
with their stories. I have been truly humbled by others’ experiences. But I
think I am going to wrap up Grief & Gratitude. I will, of course, leave it
up and welcome anyone to forward it on to someone you think might benefit by
reading the words of a bereaved mom. I am also always willing to be contacted
by e-mail should someone want to “talk.” I see that as part of my new role in
life. But I don’t think I am going to continue on with the blog. I feel like I
have said what I needed to say, and I have some other writing I’d like to do. I
am grateful to all of you who have read Grief & Gratitude over the years.
Your comments and support have helped me more than you will ever know. Thank
you.
No one knows what is going to
happen tomorrow (or even in the next hour). It is the rare person who does not
experience many losses in the course of a lifetime. It’s the cost of being
human, and of loving. We don’t have control over these events, or I would
argue, many events. Life happens. It’s what you do afterwards that is in
your control. You do have a choice then as to how you move forward with your
new reality. You can let your heart, which has been broken into a million pieces,
remain on the ground with its jagged edges strewn about, cutting you and others
as you tiptoe through your new existence.
Or you can begin the hard task of putting it back together again. It
will be very different, and will never go back to how it once was. But, like a
beautiful mosaic, it will take on a new shape and have new meaning. And all those little pieces that don’t quite
fit together like they used to, will let the light in and out as you move
through the world.
Life is hard, there’s no
doubt about that. We live in a seemingly broken world. But I found out that
we are remarkably resilient beings. I learned as we make our way through our
messy, unpredictable lives that it’s the connections we make along the way that
really matter. Each of these connections, whether a brief one-time encounter at
the grocery store or a longstanding friendship, gets woven into our very
essence, making us who we are. We should all try to remember to be gentle with
one another as we laugh and cry and breathe and love our way through our time
on earth. Let’s inspire each other and lend a hand or an ear when we can. We
don’t know how long we’ve got, so we might as well treat the time we have, like
the gift it is. Namaste.