Thursday, January 21, 2016

Wearing Black



When did the tradition of wearing all black while in mourning end? Why?  While I don't love the idea of wearing nothing but black for an extended period of time, I do think that perhaps it would be helpful to the outside world and the sensitivity of ignorant people.  I think the tradition of wearing black helped other people realize the wearer needed extra care and understanding. Even if that behavior wasn't always offered, the grief was at least recognized and acknowledged, and when in a moment of grief, the wearer overreacted to stress or an insensitive comment at least it was well known the reason behind the outburst.

As a population now we have very little tolerance for such things. We expect people to act a certain way and respond with pleasantries when greeted. In general we do not have time for other people's problem, we have more than enough ourselves!  Empathy? What's that??? We have lost the art and skill of caring for people. We don't even know what that is supposed to look like.  Our ability to put ourselves in someone else's shoes, as a population, has more or less become a thing of the past.  And we ask a lot of stupid questions!!! Someone recently actually asked me, why the holidays were hard.  And followed it up, " I mean was it just because your son died and wasn't there?"  My "wtf" face must have said it all.   

By far one of the stupidest question has got to be, "How are you?"  What reply other than, "oh good, and you?" do people actually expect?  I get it, it's something we say without even thinking about it, but that question puts those of us who are grieving in the very awkward position of either having to be real and make the conversation completely uncomfortable or give the fake response of "oh good and you?" and shove our grief away for your comfort. 

There is nothing comfortable about death or grieving. There are no words that will fix things; no pill to magically make pain leave.  Simply acknowledging that fact is okay. "It is so good to see you! I have no idea what words to say because I know how hard it must be, but it really is good to see you". Saying something like that gives acknowledgment to the grief, then if you have time to listen, you could ask, "how are you doing?" and if you don't, don't. 

One week away from the first anniversary, none of us are okay. We are all back to not sleeping well and being more irritable and sensitive than usual. The huge gaping hole of his absence offers a glaring and terrible reminder that life will never go back. The reality of life having moved on without him hits hard.  And if you think it is hard on me, imagine how hard it must be for my 14, 12 and 11 year old. I try to be okay for them, but sometimes I can't and the sobs come anyway. My strong, protective boys don't know what to do and I can't imagine how hard it must be for them to hear me soak my pillow with tears. 

My friend, Dianna, lost her son suddenly on New Year's Eve.  I do believe that if there was a limit to the amount of grief one person should have to deal with in a lifetime, she has met her quota!! She is in "the fog" right now. I remember that well. Your brain shuts down and damage is done. You literally cannot function normally. Anger flares can happen at any moment and your filter is either completely disabled or severely malfunctioning. You feel completely crushed and broken and it is hard to even imagine how you will keep breathing, let alone survive until the next hour. "The fog" does slowly ebb away and the broken pieces of your life begin to rearrange and life slowly but surely settles into a new routine. The deep aching pain that was once raw and all consuming, sinks just below the surface, always there, but not quite so raw. It becomes a faithful companion, your loved one's permanent place of remembrance. I'm beginning to see that we are likely going to be knocked back to those first foggy days for the anniversary, but I suspect that the healing steps we have taken to this point will carry us through and we will be doing better again after.  

I have come to know and understand that grieving mothers are THE strongest people in the world.  We have to be because otherwise we would die. We want to die and yet we continue to draw breathe.  Also, by and large our journey is one taken completely alone, even when there is support right next to you, you feel completely and totally alone, with no one or no- thing having the ability to give relief from the hurt.   The hurt we endure every day is unthinkable. With the latest storm in my life, I've had to interact with many new people. People who are there to do a job and have very little concern with emotions and little if any sympathy, let alone empathy. Someone one actually told me the other day, "you have to understand, no one is going to put themselves in your shoes." I know she is right, because mostly people just don't give a shit! But as I sit and ponder that I realize it really is more that no one wants to put themselves in my shoes because then they would have to feel the pain I endure. They would, if even for a moment have to feel the weight of a heart broken into a million pieces, desperately trying to stay together and continue beating.  I'm glad they don't know that pain and I wish I didn't, but it would sure be nice if they could at least acknowledge how hard every day must be, because it is. 

Our family is going through the motions of life, from the outside we look like we are doing okay, but by evening we are all exhausted from the work it takes holding it together. Hopefully by mid-February we will all once again be able to operate without quite so much effort again. Perhaps by then sleep will once again come more easily and keeping up a good face won't take so much work. Until then maybe we'll try wearing black...or not, people will just think we've gone goth!

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Dear Jake


Dear Jake,

Well I did it! I signed up, waited 4 hours in the longest line I've ever seen and auditioned for The Voice. You know probably more than any of your brothers how much I love to sing. The bass amp and drums had you tapping your toes before you were even born. I rocked you and sang for hours every night, not to mention our daily dance and sing hour before dinner time. No wonder you loved music and theatre so much, you were bound to either love it or hate it I suppose.  Nate talked me into it, but I did it for you. Not that I didn't want to do it for myself, but it's an old dream for me. Your dream was to go to New York as soon as possible and earn your place.  I did it for you. Inspired by you. You had finally come to accept yourself for who you were and you were not afraid to put yourself out there. If you were afraid of failure or rejection, you didn't show it, even when I knew better.  That's one of the things that makes me so proud to be your mom!  You really LIVED. You were passionate about your friends, your acting, and perusing your dreams, not so much your grades or homework, but hey!  
I made friends in the line, just like you would have. We passed the time with our stories and discussed song selections and which coach we would choose if we could have our pick. I thought of you a lot and smiled a lot and I think you were there smiling too. I sang my heart out and nailed it in every way! I didn't even mind not advancing to call back. It wasn't really about that anyway... I did it for you, because I could and because I wanted to and because...well...why the heck not!!! 

Since you left I've done a lot!! I went indoor skydiving, I went to DC and sang with Ms. Fennel at one of the monuments, I went to Vegas and went sight-seeing and took some awesome pictures. We sat up close at the rodeo and saw Blake Shelton.  I changed jobs and stopped working night shifts forever.   We took Anna- Kate to New York with us and crammed as much in as we could, we saw 2 plays while we were there, we retraced our steps from our trip the year before and went to the Village  on the day the Supreme Court made a huge announcement with my friend Thomas. We had the biggest birthday party imaginable for you and even marched in the 4th of July parade.  We did a lot of ordinary things too like football games, plays and band concerts.  I got season tickets to TUTS in your honor and we took Hannah Bell with us to the first show of the season- Matilda.   Zach, Ray and I ran a 5K on Thanksgiving.  We went to Chicago and Milwaukee for Christmas we played games and hung out with family, even went to a hockey game!  Through all of it we took selfies, acted goofy and had  a lot of fun!  I know you were with us every step of the way too, because I know we all carry you with us, just like you carry us with you. It's not at all how I want it to be, but it's what we have and I'll take it. I miss you! I can't wait to see you again and hear all about what you are getting to do there.  It's ridiculously hard not having you here, but I promise to keep living until all my work here is done.

Hey bud, if you have any ideas on what we should do on the 29th, let me know. Zach and I are at a loss, nothing feels especially right.  He's not really the party planner like you are, so any help is appreciated! I love you!!

-Mom 

Thursday, January 7, 2016

A Year of Storms


2015 has come and gone. Last year on New Year’s Eve, Jake had friends over for dinner, he cooked. Not wanting to wait for my help, he attempted to recreate chic-a-chic-a boom-boom sauce from our favorite restaurant. He boiled the peppers and put them into the blender, just like he had seen me do before, but neglected to seed the peppers first. In addition he added a couple extra Serrano peppers for good measure. The result was a sauce so hot it was practically not eatable. He and I spent about an hour adding cream cheese and whatever else I could think of to cut the spiciness so we could eat the enchiladas he had planned for our meal.  We laughed and had a great night with his friends before they left for another friend’s party. He rang in 2015 surrounded by friends new and old. Ray, me and the rest of my boys were at my house with a campfire, music and blowing up gingerbread houses with black cat firecrackers. It's really one of my last vivid memories of him, which made this New Year’s Eve so very painful. I could not have anticipated how hard the stroke of midnight would be for me this year. As much as you would think I would be ready for 2015 to be over I was not!  2015 will forever be the last of my memories which include Jake living life with us. The last of a year of "this time last year" with his name still attached to the memory. Midnight came with tears and stifled sobs as I reluctantly acknowledged the passing of the year.

I'm reminded of the Bible verse from Romans 8: For we know that in all things God for the good of those who love him and have been called according to his purposes.  I was thinking a lot about this verse the other day as I was being battered by yet another storm that has recently hit our family. I know beyond any doubt that good will come from our current storm, just as it has from the one that took Jake, but sometimes in the midst of it that is not always easy to see. I thought of Joseph, rejected by his brothers, beaten and thrown into a cistern, brought out only to be sold into slavery and forced to travel on foot through the desert to Egypt. Once he was there things looked promising briefly until he caught the eye of his master’s wife and was falsely accused of having a relationship with her and promptly thrown back into a dark pit, this time a prison. Storm after storm Joseph endured his predicament. I have felt that way this year. It felt like just one thing after another would hit and I get knocked down all over again. And when it wasn't me enduring another storm it was my loved ones. It would be easy to fall into despair. I am tired and worn. The words of the Tenth Avenue North song feel fitting more often than I care to admit..."my heart is heavy from the work it takes to keep on breathing."

Lamentations 3:21-23 says, "Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the Lords great love, we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning, great is your faithfulness". And so at the cusp of despair, I am continually brought back by the reminders of all the good I have seen even in this past year.  As I reflect back on the year I am grateful for so many things. I have managed to not only to continue to draw breathe but to really live.  God was so very faithful even beginning in the hospital to show me moments of good and his abundant love, peace and faithfulness in everything.

In this year, we traveled more than we have in our entire lives taking 2 family trips and 1 school trip to DC, Zach had the honor of laying a wreath at the tomb of the unknown soldier, we went indoor skydiving, to the Houston Rodeo, saw a couple plays, made a couple trips to Galveston. Ray and I made it through what could possibly be the hardest test of any relationship, not without some bumps along the way, but we made it.  I am beyond blessed to have such a truly amazing, supportive and thoughtful man in my life! I prayed for God's best for me and I truly see that answered in Ray. My family and friends have been such a blessing! I can honestly say I have some amazing friends, without whom I would not have made it through. 

It's not been an easy process, it's not likely to get any easier any time soon.  The line of storms seem to be continuing into 2016. It's not been a great start to the year to be honest, but I know God has it under control. His faithfulness endures to all generations and I don't even have to look long to know that to be true.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Just another day...but not really

There are no words to describe the most horrible ache of missing your child.  11 months have passed like a breath. The boys and I have done so much this year. I think I have been trying to live for Jake in every outing, trip and gathering. I want so much for him to be able to experience this all with us. My mind refuses to accept the reality of death, instead I see him, as I believe he is, ALIVE. So very much alive, but just barely out of reach and just out of sight. Like he is waiting off stage for his next scene.
So, I sit on the floor in the kitchen, once again overcome with the most horrific ache that I fear will never fully leave until I see him again. I don't want to keep breathing and yet I continue to draw breathe. Everything feels so fucking hard and nothing, at least at this moment, feels easy. I want so badly for the pain to end, but at the same time I couldn't bear to not feel this because that might mean I've forgotten. I wish someone could take it for just a few minutes, but it's mine alone to bear. I would not wish this on anyone.

I feel naked and cut open, it might as well have been just 3 hours ago that he left instead it's 11 months, 3 hours and about 30 mins.  O God I miss him!

Not everyday is like this. This morning I started off the day like it was any other day, but it's not...

Sunday, December 13, 2015

O Come, O Come Emmanuel

On what must have been the most spectacular starry night in all of history, a multitude of angels appeared to a handful of humble shepherds and over whelmed them with glory as they proclaimed, " Peace on earth and good will to men." Some thirty years later, Jesus, his eyes fixed on the cross, gathered his disciples for what would be his last instructions to them before his betrayal and ultimately his death.  In a quiet, candle-lit upper room he tells them as much as he knows they can bear about what is about to happen, knowing they haven't got a clue at that moment. He concludes it all by saying, "I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart I have overcome the world." (John 16:33)

 That is not the typical cheerful, baby Jesus, Christmas message we often hear, but sometimes Christmas sucks!  Sometimes the holidays are just another horrible and painful reminder that life is hard and full of trouble. I know I am not the only one feeling that way this Chritmas and as I was about to post a picture with those words attached to a simple Facebook post, I realized it was more than a simple post and felt another blog entry coming.

It's Christmas, well really it's Advent. That time on the church calendar after All Saints Day and before Christmas Eve, more or less anyway, I am by no means an expert. The season of advent has always been my favorite because it's also the time of year that we reflect on looking forward to Christ's second coming. Which even before Jake left, was my favorite thing to talk about at church and Bible study.  It's a time we reflect on the longing and expectation of  God's people before the very first Chritmas and Christ's first advent, coming, and when He will come again at His second advent. It's a season of rich tradition in the church I grew up in with advent wreaths and candles. Chrismon's on the tree at church and weekly soup suppers before mid-week Advent service. Also my favorite Christmas song, "O Come, O Come Emmanuel."  I have beautiful, rich memories of singing it over the years, in both public and private worship.

Susan and I were talking the other day and joking or rather trying to make light of the aweful circumstances of the last year for each of us. She joked that perhaps she somehow missed Joseph's personal instructions for storing up provisions in their 7 years of plenty for their now mid seven years of lean ( Genesis 41-43) and I joked that I felt as if I was enduring my own personal desert exile (Exodus 15-Joshua 3). We joke and make light, but it truely has been aweful. I would really like to be able to write about it more. Writing helps, blogging helps a lot.  It makes a difference knowing that my story is helping other people and touching other people's lives. It helps me too, to read other people's stories because in their struggle I know I am not alone.

The last 48 hours have been a nightmare, but I can't tell you why.  I live in a suburb of Houston that occupies a sliver of land bordered on two sides by a river, feeding into a lake that creates a natural boundary. We have 2 main roads in and out connecting to the highway the creates the third side of our  community. Most people who live here joke that we live in a little bubble. If you don't know someone, you probably know someone who does. It's a small town! After being a part of the community for more than 16 years now, it feels even smaller. That was a beautiful gift in the days immmeditely following Jake's death. The rally of support from the community was amazing! That being said it makes it impossible for me to write about some of the more personal events in our lives. I don't have the protection of aminimity. The last 48 hours have been pretty bad, but for the sake of those involved I remain silent on the details. I know, however, that I am not alone because in the last month alone, I have seen various other people in my life experience job-loss, miscarriage, a marriage coming to an end, the death of a 6-week old baby to SIDS, car accidents, personal failures, the anniversaries of death, illness and hospital admissions...I'm sure the list could go on.

Honestly, I would like nothing more than to lay in bed, with the covers over my head until it all goes away.  I was bearly holding it all together just dealing with this being the first Christmas without Jake and the first anniversary looming so close. So once again I find myself crying out, "how am I suppose to do this!?!" Along with a string of other not so nice words...

And so I hear again, " in this world you will have trouble..." To be perfectly honest I'd really like to say, could I please check that one off the list of lessons learned, God? Okay! I get it!!  Instead I find myself, in the wee hours of the morning, pressing in once again. Trying hard to understand, trying to allow God to work and explain. Trying hard to find something to hang onto...

Once again I find myself staring at the words from John 16:33, but this time my eyes drawn to the beginning of the verse, I somehow missed before. Jesus said, "I have told you these things so that IN ME you may have peace (because) in this world you will have trouble..." And elsewhere in John, I feel God pointing out, "The man who loves his life will lose it, while the man who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life (John12:25).  As well the words of John 16:20-22, "...you will weep and mourn...you will grieve, but your grief will turn to joy. A woman giving birth to a child has pain because her time has come; but when her baby is born she forgets the anguish because of her joy that a child is born into the world.  So with you: Now is your time of grief, but I will see you again and you will rejoice and no one will take away you joy."

So I sit and listen as wind and rain batter against my window, seeming to match the storms of my last couple days. Pushing in, an odd peace surrounds me as I hear the voice of my most beloved friend speaking those words personalized for me..."sweet friend, you will weep and mourn; you will grieve, but your grief will turn to joy. A woman giving birth to a child has pain because her time has come; you know full well and you have seen it with your own eyes, that when her baby is born she forgets immediately the anguish because of her joy at seeing her baby placed on her chest.  Her tears of anguish turn at once to tears of joy! And so it is with you: now is the time of your grief, but I will see you again and you will rejoice and no one will be able to take away your joy."

And once again my heart swells and I can sing, O Come, O Come Emmanuel


Tuesday, December 8, 2015

It's Different


This past weekend we were invited over to our close family friend’s house to decorate Christmas cookies and gingerbread houses. It's one of their traditions and last year Jake and Zach spent that day with them, so this year they invited me and the three boys to join them.  Nate was invited over to his friend’s house to hang out, play basketball and go to a movie. I can't imagine any 11 year old boy who wouldn't have chosen the same when faced with the option of decorating over basketball and a movie, so we were minus one...well minus two.

Our gingerbread houses were the pre-baked, assemble yourself kind. All except for Zach, who claimed the pre-assembled house and started decorating. The rest of us began the arduous process of getting the house assembled with nothing but frosting. I had been looking at Pinterest for days coming up with a plan and used three kits to make a mansion of a gingerbread house. It took about 45 mins for us to abandon the self-assembled house for the kids. They had them about a quarter to half decorated and one by one they all fell. My mansion was coming together well, so a paused in my decorating and ran to the grocery store for three more pre-assembled houses for the kids and a few more items for the mansion.

Another hour of work and all the houses looked fantastic. The winners determined, we began photographing our work. One by one we lined them up with the creator proudly standing behind their masterpiece. Then as a final photo we lined them all up for a group shot. My girlfriend's husband was called in from outside light-decorating to snap the group shot and as we were waiting for him, I noticed the center section of the mansion roof slowly sagging and beginning to cave it. We frantically posed for the picture, trying to capture the moment before it fell. The final moments of the mansions demise capture forever in our picture with "please hurry" smiles plastered to our faces.  It was truly a priceless moment, which my girlfriend joked would become a blog piece for sure!!


Yep...didn't snap the picture quite fast enough
 

Nothing has worked out quite right this year, despite our efforts to make things as normal as possible. Even making those gingerbread houses was bittersweet and terribly hard. Zach and Morgan, my friend’s oldest daughter, had a rough time. I think we were all going through the motions. If not for the awesome comic relief of toppling roofs, I think we would have had a much different feeling leaving that day. Thank God for falling roofs and laughter. 

Pie is usually my major contribution for Thanksgiving. Jake used to say my apple pie was like heaven on a plate. It was hard making it this year, but NOT making it would have been even harder. I had to work a full day on Wednesday, when I normally would have made pie, so I started the process that night and figure I would finish in the morning and have it ready fresh out of the oven the next afternoon. Because the apples were going to sit in the refrigerator overnight, I used a squeeze of lemon on them to help prevent browning. I must have over done it or something else went horribly wrong because the pie was terrible this year!!  It was embarrassing how bad it tasted.  Not heaven on a plate by any stretch of imagination!

Thanksgiving in general was difficult. It was the boys’ year to be with their dad, which meant I was most likely going to be alone. As it turned out, Ray (my boyfriend of now a year and a half) was able to spend most of the day with me and Zach wanted to stay home.  Thanksgiving morning there was a 5K Turkey Trot in our community hosted by another family who has recently lost their youngest to cancer. Jake and their daughter had been in church and school together since about kindergarten and Ben is friends with many of the kids who started the organization hosting the event.  Honestly the thought of our first Thanksgiving without Jake was very overwhelming and the thought of spending the morning with another family who understood that sounded oddly comforting.  I underestimated, however the impact of it being so many people from the old church and when we arrived that morning I felt very out of place and uncomfortable. To add insult to injury, Zach, Ray and I had a very tense encounter with one of the leaders from the old church. He came over and hugged the friend I was standing with, looked with distain at Zach, Ray and I and then turned and walked away without saying a word. I think my friend was embarrassed by his behavior and I was hurt to say the least. The morning wasn't quite what I had hoped but we finished the race running and it was nice to see and hug another mom who really does understand. 

Our house is decorated. The tree is up. Christmas has begun, but nothing is quite right. None of it. The boys and I decided to get away for Christmas this year. I had been a little worried that maybe we should stay here and do our normal things, but as time goes on, I'm so glad we decided to change things up. We need it to be different because it IS different. Nothing is quite right and it never will be again and denying that and pushing through can only carry us so far. 

The countdown has begun to the one year anniversary. I felt it right away in November, but the boys are feeling it now to. They don't verbalized it, but they are not making it though the school days well again and we are back to sleepless nights once more.   Unfortunately our last memories of Jake are of doing Christmas and New Year’s things. It's as if every activity has a "this time last year" attached to it. This time last year everything was still okay. He was here decorating gingerbread houses and hanging out with friends. Making THE hottest enchilada sauce I have ever tasted and getting ready to get his drivers permit. This time last year... it's the last time we will be able to say that. From here on out our memories and photos move on without him. He forever 15, when Ben and Nate were still shorter than me with round, baby faces. The countdown has begun and yet in the midst of that we are still able to enjoy new memories and laugh and for that I am thankful!  Christmas is very different but it's still Christmas.
I'm praying for snow on our vacation, enough to be able to go sledding and maybe build a snowman. The boys have never seen anything more than Texas snow and that hardly counts.  I'm looking forward to our different Christmas and thankful we are able to get away. I'm thankful for friends who invite us into their traditions and cards and encouraging comments, they really do help and mean a lot. I'm thankful for all the prayers...we still need them. In fact if you feel so lead please pray for the boys, for their teachers to be understanding, for clear thought and super natural wisdom during finals. Pray for safe travel, for moments of laughter and joy in the weeks to come, and for snow. 

My mansion before it's untimely demise
 

Sunday, December 6, 2015

I'm Okay, Just Busy...


I haven't been able to write in a while. Not just for the blog, but even in my personal journal. I have been super busy. Busy with the new job, busy with the boys schedule, just busy!  Several people told me early on after Jake died that I needed to stay busy. Actually they didn't tell me that directly, but that was a prevailing theme in reading between lines and comments made to those close to me. "She just needs to get back to work, that will really help."  And to some degree it has. The busy doesn't leave time in the day to sit and cry and the busy mixed with grief makes me drop into bed every night exhausted...hence not much time for writing.

People are uncomfortable with grief. There is no immediate fix so they don't know what to say.  Getting back to work and keeping busy is comfortable because then you have "normal" things to talk about. That way when someone asks, "How's everything going?" you can give the "normal" response of, "oh, it's okay, just busy!"

What becomes challenging with that is that nothing is quite normal and glossing over the huge gaping hole of grief doesn't make it go away. It's doubly hard when you get busy. There is this tension between needing to participate in life and also leaving time to heal. 

Disclaimer for those of you who are squeamish about medical type things, I am a nurse and we talk about disgusting things over lunch, so forgive me.  The weekend before Jake died, I went alone on a hike at one of the state parks near our house. I had a very peaceful walk and spent time journaling and talking to God. I actually wrote a poem that day which I had no way of knowing would foreshadow the events about to unfold in my life. Somewhere along that walk I got a small splinter in my foot.  That splinter bothered me for a couple months before I realized it was not a splinter but a planter wart. By the time I made the realization, I was without health insurance and decided to just use over the counter methods to treat it on my own. By October it was causing quite a bit of pain and I decided I should probably just get it taken care of, so I made the appointment and went in. Because I had let it go so long, the root was deep and the hole made to remove it was quite deep. Being the self-treating nurse that I am, I carefully took care of my foot and the hole to make sure I kept it clean. It healed nicely, from my observation, but at about a month, the pain was still there and I worried that perhaps the wart was coming back. The pain was so bad I was having a hard time taking my shoe on and off, so once again, instead of heading straight to the doctor, began the process of self-diagnosis. The hole had scabbed over and looked to me like healthy skin, but it was tender to touch and slightly swollen. I soaked my foot in hot water, probed a little deeper and found that under a thin film of new skin, was infection. I'll spare you the details, but after another week of careful tending and a follow-up doctor appointment, my foot is much better.  Although the outside of my foot looked healed the inside was still doing it's healing work and needed a hole still present to release the excess fluid cells produce when they are in the healing mode.

Being busy is good. And God has blessed me with people who have allowed me to be a mess of grief in their presence. I still need to be a mess every once in a while.  I'm still doing the healing work of grief and that looks messy sometimes. As the calendar turned to November I felt like I was seeing a train wreak coming from a distance. Having Thanksgiving, Christmas and the one year anniversary all so close together is very overwhelming! Also my life is not pretty.  It's not always easy to filter out conflicts with my ex-husband and his family or the hurts from having my old church family no longer welcomes me. I find it challenging to write, knowing things may be painful to hear, but in order to do this healing work I need to release those things occasionally. I hope in doing so every so often, it may help me in my healing, but also help others who may have messy issues mixed with grief in their own lives. So going forward, please forgive me if there are times when it's hard to read or feels uncomfortable, I really don't intend to hurt anyone. 

I'll end this post with the poem God inspired me to write the Sunday before Jake left...
Stillness fills my soul
Sounds of creation break my solitude,
if only for a moment, reminders
I am not alone

Sunshine surrounds me like a comfy blanket,
warming my spirit
Though death and decay leave behind
their undeniable mark, life abounds

And the promise of Spring

(1/25/15)