First you cry, that’s what they say…unless you’re stunned into silent disbelief, in which case you walk around still living and breathing in a world that turned strange in an all too familiar direction overnight while you were sleeping…and you keep doing this – living while dead…and then ten days in, you’re spending possibly the last warm evening of the season outside with your husband…and he starts telling you things he’s never told you before about how life changing it was for him to love and care for your former mother-in-law for the last six years of her life, and how important it became to him that she not be afraid…and like that, you find yourself back with your dad in the nursing home while he slides deeper into dementia and can’t find the handholds, and he knows what’s happening, sometimes, and he’s afraid…and you’re there to reassure him and encourage him back to peace…and when he’s dying, and he knows it, and he’s afraid…you’re there to warm his chest with your hands and remind him about love and forgiveness, and to let him go…and to stay right there until the fear of the unknown leaves his eyes and his agonized lungs call it a life and end the struggle.
That might be when you finally cry, because maybe the enormity of what has transpired has funneled down to this one fact: you can’t BE THERE for everyone you love when it’s their turn in the barrel and shit gets real, and they are justifiably afraid. But you’re going to wish you could be…so much.
Now that you’ve kicked DENIAL’s ass, you can slope right on down the road into ANGER, wherein you make it clear to one and all that their opinion is not your reality. In addition, it’s where you figure out who really loves you, because they so have their work cut out for them, by which we mean how long can you watch somebody implode, and still maintain radio silence?
“The truth will set you free, but first it will piss you off.” ~Gloria Steinem
There’s no point in BARGAINING, what’s done is done, and you hope to skip the DEPRESSION stage because you have to wonder if you’d come back.
So what about ACCEPTANCE, then, the accepted final stage of grief and loss? Not happening. You can accept that it happened, but not that it’s normal, and you know that means you’ll be at odds with about half your family and acquaintances for the duration, whatever it turns out to be. Your friends will be right where they’ve always been – in your corner and ready to defend you from pain and harm – but some of the relationships in your life will be and already are fraught with tension and division.
Borrowing generously from Amanda Diebert’s moving blog piece called “Dear Trump Supporter who says they love me” …
“A man actively promised to dismantle and harm my family. To destabilize the security of my child. To harm relatives and friends and you still voted for him.
“Those other reasons matter more to you than my life and my family. It was on the line and you chose. That is the reality.
“And I know, I know that makes you really angry that I actually said it. That I won’t let you off the hook. We have a long history and you’ve made it clear I’m supposed to apologize for making you feel guilty with all my social media posts about my sadness and my anger. I should get over it already. Your guy won and you are such a nice person and how dare I…
“First of all, you love me? Stop telling me how to grieve.
“Yeah, I know that’s not WHY you voted for him {his racism, misogyny, homophobia, et.al.}, but again, it didn’t stop you. Actively applauding someone who is doing wrong does make you culpable.
“I’m tired. ……. I do not have to apologize for you hurting me.
“You hurt me and now you are telling me I am not allowed to be sad or scared or angry.
“At the very least you allowed me to be hurt by someone else while you condoned that abuse with a ‘yes’ vote. You gave it your stamp of approval and now you are telling me my pain doesn’t exist.
“That is not love.
“I keep being told (by the people who harmed me) that I need to be a model example of ‘we go high.’
“…this is a long road. It’ll take a while, but you said you love me and you didn’t mean to hurt me.
“So let me heal while you do the work to show that you recognize the pain you caused and are working to minimize its impact.
“If you don’t want to do that work: okay.
“By ‘okay’ I do not mean I forgive you or that we are cool. I mean, you have made a decision and I will react to it accordingly. Notice I didn’t say respect it. A blatant disregard for the well being of others is not worthy of respect. But I will acknowledge this is a choice you made and I will walk away.
“Also, yeah, I do judge you for this. I’m being super honest about that, just in case you thought I might try to gaslight you too.”
You can read Amanda’s blog piece here: You Say You Love Me
I relate to everything she wrote – she’s a woman and she describes the pain of people who are my world. Nothing in the days, weeks, and months ahead will be easy, and much of it won’t be pretty. But I vow never to accept those things as “the new normal.” That kind of acceptance is a bridge too far.
Nov 25, 2016 @ 08:36:06
Judy, Awesome work. Thank you. I forwarded this to people who care.
Michael
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Nov 25, 2016 @ 12:14:34
Thank you, Michael, I appreciate both.
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Nov 21, 2016 @ 06:23:40
That came from somewhere deep inside; a sincere look at life from your perspective. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
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Nov 21, 2016 @ 10:04:14
Thank you for “seeing” me, Maureen – that’s why we’re friends. ❤️
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