I plan this
week’s meals, make a grocery list and finish my coffee.
I put on
galoshes and drive to the store, 10 miles in the rain.
I check the eggs, weigh
the apples, and decide against salmon. Maybe next week.
It’s a day
like any other day. Only sadder.
After I put away
the groceries
and drive 14 miles to the gym, I
work up a
sweat and wait for the endorphins to kick in.
They don’t
always, despite the hype.
I get home and
pull the condolence cards out of the mailbox.
Reading
through them makes me feel better and
Worse at the same time.
Worse at the same time.
So I cry.
I cry and
wonder how my daughter-in-law is and
what my grandchildren are doing.
what my grandchildren are doing.
I cry like I’ve
done nearly every day for the past
41 days since
my son took his last breath,
Since I felt
his skin grow cool under my hand,
Since I
kissed his forehead for each of his grandparents, his uncles, his aunts,
I cry like I’ve
done nearly every day for the past
41 days since
I finally let go of hope.
Crying is
now part of my daily routine.
I take time
for it.
It’s a day
like any other day, only sadder.
And dinner still
needs to be made.
Jennifer - I can't begin to feel your sadness. I send prayers and hugs to you and Rex.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Kathy. <3
DeleteSending love and hugs to you guys, Jennifer. Thank you for writing this honest piece. xoxo
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words.
DeleteAnd there will be many more days of tears. But one day you'll realize you didn't cry that day, or that you woke up and your first thought was about something other than your son. Or that you laughed a lot that day. And you might feel guilty about that, though you know shouldn't. For us, 12 years later it's still not easy at times, but it is .... different. Not so oppressively gloomy every day. But damn it's hard.
ReplyDeleteGrace's (and Spencer's) dad
Different is a good way to describe it. Thank you for the encouragement, I fear I will always need it. And I cannot believe it's been 12 years already for you, Lisa and Spencer.
Delete