(From his blogsite: MUNDANE FAITHFULNESS)
Several
years ago, one of my uncles died suddenly: it was a shock.
Yet
my shock was nothing compared to what my aunt and cousins walked.
We
flew to Oregon to be with them and help and, well, eat.
My
family gathers for meals that bleed into the next meal.
As
we ate and laughed, we also began to wrestle with loss.
All loss is grief,
and all grief is a forced
rearranging of life.
Our
time was a mix of emotion, sadness and laughter;
the
solid, predictable places of their lives had been stirred.
This
family had been rearranged in a way that could never be undone.
I
watched in sadness and helplessness,
like many of you now watch my family as we have been
rearranged by loss.
like many of you now watch my family as we have been
rearranged by loss.
One
thing they did, which at the time shocked me,
was rearrange my aunt’s house.
was rearrange my aunt’s house.
My
cousin, who is artistic and creative,
led a few in moving chairs, tables, and pictures.
led a few in moving chairs, tables, and pictures.
I
stood there, probably not helping, and wondered how they could do this.
My
sense of loss was degrees away
and my place was not to guide them in their grief.
and my place was not to guide them in their grief.
But
it seemed too soon to ME to rearrange other parts of their life.
When we watch suffering from a
different row,
we all have this desire for
people to grieve
according to our timetable.
according to our timetable.
This
moment is seared in my memory, and I am glad I have it.
And
I am so glad I kept my mouth shut!
At
almost eight months into my grief, I am rearranging more and more.
I
have moved pictures, decorative things that probably have fancy names.
In
my minimalistic thoughts, these things are clutter—
but
Kara loved it so I learned to appreciate it.
Yet
now I don’t have to love it; that sounds strange,
but I don’t have too.
but I don’t have too.
This
is not lessening my love for her
or not reminding the kids about their mom—
or not reminding the kids about their mom—
this
is living life in my present reality.
As
I have slowly moved pictures and decorative items,
I have created a routine,
I have created a routine,
which
helps me to slow down and process through removing things.
Last
week I gave a set of plates away to a friend,
but first I thought about their significance.
but first I thought about their significance.
They
were plates we bought in Boulder, Colorado,
before we moved to North Carolina;
before we moved to North Carolina;
they
were not that significant,
and practically they did not fit in the dishwasher.
and practically they did not fit in the dishwasher.
As
I moved through that, I then asked the kids if they wanted them.
They
didn’t.
I
offered them to a friend who liked them and might want them.
I
watched as they were loaded into a box and departed my house.
As
the plates left my house, I tried to process through any grief or loss
that
might have been provoked by this.
I
knew I could easily reverse it—
a
quick phone call and the plates would be returned
if
I felt too much grief or pain in their absence.
I
don’t know what ready feels like until something is actually happening.
Grief is such a mysterious
emotion,
and I have learned to make a
companion out of
this destructive stranger.
this destructive stranger.
I have learned to give grief
all the latitude it needs.
I
don’t think living frozen in time would be helpful for me.
Kara
did such a great job of pointing me to form a future without her.
Again,
I can’t grasp how she could do this.
I
see this as one of God’s graces to me.
And
since I don’t have the option of retracting,
I
move forward in grief and laugh and cry as I rearrange my life.
And
though it’s emotional and hard, it is also joy-filled and good.
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