Sunday, February 17, 2013

The Out of Darkness Walk



I am participating in this year’s Out of Darkness Walk sponsored by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. For the last couple of years I have followed the Foundation’s work on Facebook, and with this year’s walk coming to my home town, it just seems like its time to DO THIS THING.

It will be a 16 – 18 mile walk through Washington, DC, timed to begin at dusk and end at daylight. I love the imagery. The Foundation raises money to support research and we all know that research around mental illness is not just going to magically happen. And it is obvious – too painfully obvious – that there is untold research to be done. The topics of mental illness and suicide must come out of the darkness so that they can be studied in the light of day.

For me, the walk itself will not be the most challenging piece of this walk. More challenging for sure is the fund raising. Fund raising means revisiting and telling my story in ways that I have not been comfortable before. As you know, I don’t even use my real name in writing this blog. So this is a massive leap for me. Perhaps this is just the challenge I need as I continue, with life long commitment, to put a new sense of self together.

As new as this feels, I have been overwhelmed with the support I have received and reminded of how love surrounds us all. As a society, it seems we have gotten to the point that we know that something must be done to support those impacted in any way by mental illness. I am encouraged.

If you would like to join me in this walk – either in person or by donating – I urge you to visit the site. Even a brief skimming of AFSP’s webpages is a testament to the fact that, even as we grieve, we are not alone.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

The New Year

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I am getting to know 2013 very slowly.  The path ahead is unclear.   I don’t see the doors or the windows or even the cracks.  I am not just sprinting in to it with abandon.

In 2012 I: lost 50 pounds (oh yes, I did); made great strides toward my masters degree which I will finish in May; chaired a local government commission; nursed my dad for a couple of months after his traffic accident (moving half way across the country to manage that); taught summer school and subbed during the school year; and travelled an insane amount.  I am preparing myself for SOMETHING.  A piece of me would really like to know what that SOMETHING is.

But another piece of me is cautious about the what the future brings.  The anniversary of my mother’s death is this week.   My daughter will be dead four years in February. I have no illusions.  I know beyond anyone’s telling of it that this new year is as likely to bring heart wrenching challenge as it is to offer life-affirming opportunity. 

The New Year, despite my ritual of welcoming it from the warmth of flannel sheets and comfortable PJs, offers neither security nor control.

So the best I can muster is cautious optimism.  Optimism because I have worked really hard to remain open to new opportunities and all of the good that the world offers everyday.  But caution seems like a reasonable approach when the path ahead can best be described as murky.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Practicing Christmas Spirit: Devastating Loss

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I  subbed in a  kindergarten classroom this week. I am a mother who left her child’s body in a school. I am the parent of a child who suffered with mental illness and know how nearly impossible the diseases can be to correctly deal with. I am in public schools almost daily and the prospect of a school shooting is always in the back of my mind. My sister lives not far from Newtown, CT and her kids were in lockdown yesterday.
 
 
The Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, while not a personal loss for me, has left me in tears with fresh wounds and raw emotions.
 
It is Christmas.  I had planned to bake cookies today, and to finish decorating our tree.  If only to force myself to break away from the TV coverage, I followed through with the plan.  
 
The cookies, from my Great Grandmother’s recipe, were a life-long favorite of my mother’s, so I was making them partially to honor both of them.  As I rolled out the dough and cut the cookies out, re-living fun childhood Christmases doing the exact same thing and fragile from the coverage of the school shooting, my personal losses were tangibly present.  As I cried over the growing pile of baked trees, stars and snowmen, the smell alone was more pain that I wanted to bear.
 
And then decorating the tree.  Good God, what was I thinking.  Every ornament a memory.  Baby’s First Christmas, given to me by my Dad’s mom.  Molly’s arts and crafts ornaments.  Fond memories from vacations.  Some millennium  ornaments.   A New York skyline ornament that includes the Twin Towers.  Some incredible hand made pieces that my mom crafted.   I wouldn’t part with one of them; but I cried as I hung them on the tree.  Each one, initially selected to cement joyful memories, proclaimed a  loss.
 
Today I mourned.  For myself.  For the families in CT.  For all of us who are dealing with devastating pain.  And I reminded myself of a bitter Christmas reality: there is always loss in this holiday.  Surely, the Biblical stories don’t shy away from pain (see Matthew 2: 16 – 18 for an example.)  But in our time, too, we know that the peace and hope of the Christmas season exists squarely in the darkness and challenge of our own lives. 
 
The past comes to live in the present through memories, recipes and ornaments.  It’s not enough.  I want my child back.  But today in particular, I am convinced that mourning and celebrating are part and parcel of the same thing: an awareness that our short lives will hold both devastating loss and unspeakable joy.  The peace comes, sometimes, from recognizing the one in the other.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Practicing Chirstmas Spirit: Playing Hooky

 
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I am playing hooky tomorrow.  I took myself out of substitute teacher circulation and will not be going to work.  This is a somewhat remarkable occasion; whatever else I am,  I am not a hooky playing kind of person.  I don’t know that I cut even one class in high school.  (But if I had, it would have been PE…..)
 
So, tomorrow is mine.  The plan is to do the final gift shopping, maybe even throwing in a gift or two for myself.  It’s the middle of the week, and I am hoping the stores and the parking lots won’t be gorged full and the store personnel will still be holding on to at least a sliver of holiday spirit.  If there is time, I’ll wrap presents too and maybe even have some hot chocolate (with Bailey’s!) by the fire.
 
But mostly, I will enjoy a brief sense of minor control over my own life.  When death has touched my life, it has been sudden and unexpected.  I know what it is to have life spiral out of control in an instant and I have been taught – brutally – that in most ways I am not in charge of things.  This second half of my life will surely have me practicing adjusting the sails more than futilely attempting to direct the wind. 
 
But that doesn’t mean I don’t control ANTHING!   Yes, the list of things over which I am powerless is infinite.  But tomorrow is a day to remind myself that there are a few things (like how I spend some of my time and how I take care of myself) that I can (and should!) control.  Let the hooky playing begin! 

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Practicing Christmas Spirit: Planting Bulbs

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When Molly died, a friend came to the house and planted literally 100s of bulbs as a memorial to her, and every year, he gives us more bulbs to add to the collection.  This year we added purple hyacinth.

Planting the bulbs is a bittersweet task: kneeling on the ground, burying the bulbs, hoping a miraculous transformation will take place in just a few months.  It’s also usually brutally cold this time of year, but the earth is spongy today in a springy sort of way that contradicts the fact that it is December in a part of the world that really should be frozen.

So, this morning, I planted bulbs.  And I immersed myself in memories of Molly and Mom and looked forward to the flowers that will bloom in the spring.  If the holidays celebrate hope and miracles and the idea that somehow God is always with us, then planting something – anything – expresses a holiday truth with candor seldom found in the carols, the cookies or the gift wrapped boxes.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Practicing Christmas Spirit: The Blog

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Those of you who have visited this blog before may notice that I have been playing around with the template.  Oh yes.  The template.   It is a victory of sorts to have a clue about the word means.  Since I am writing mostly about the holidays for the next few weeks, I wanted my blog to take on a festive feel, and it turns out that the way to change the feel of the blog is through the  - say it with me – template.
 
When in doubt, Google.  That is my theory.  I have asked Google everything.  I have asked it why my daughter took her life.  I have asked it when my cousin, who is on life support right now, will die.  Having proven itself reliable in so many ways, I occasionally forget that Google is not a fortune teller or even a child’s Magic 8 Ball.
 
Turns out, though, that Google is quite reliable when it comes to blogger templates.  I was able to read about them and successfully download a few; I  even applied a couple of templates to my blog as a test, but for the most part, I found my downloaded attempts too “custey” or sentimental. 


I am not trying to cultivate a Christmas spirit of elves and Ho HO HOs (although I will make room for all of that if the occasion presents itself.)  No, I am looking for the grungier side of the holidays; the “light in the darkness” side where the light is surely – but barely – peeking through.
 
So, here’s to the holiday spirit that is just getting by – floundering a bit.  And here is to tending even the most fragile light. 

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Practicing Christmas Spirit: Fixing the Watch

 
 
I have undeveloped consumer taste so I am not the best present giver.  Generally my gift giving strategy tends to boil down to a) something I would like; or b) something I think the other person should like.  This is not to be confused with carefully selected items based on observation of the receiver’s habits, recent purchases, style, etc…
 
Using my gift-giving strategy, I gave my mother an Anne Klein watch one year for Christmas.  Came in a box.  Included several discs to change the color on the perimeter of the face.  Was a name brand.  (I think.  Isn’t Anne Klein sort of a fashion statement?)
 
My mother, trust me, did not like it.   She wore it most every time she saw me, though, and it was in her drawer when my sister and I went through her things after she died.  The watch battery was drained, and the navy colored fashion disc was missing, but otherwise, it was in good shape.  So I claimed it back – not unlike the way you can claim gifts back in some of those dreadful office party Secret Santa games.
 
Now that the watch is mine, I understand why Mom didn’t love it.  It’s too big for one thing.   And without the navy disc, it has limited fashion use.  But in my quest to cultivate holiday spirit, I went out today had the watch battery replaced.
 
Love it.  Yes, it’s a little awkward because of the size.  But my mother used it it symbolize her love for me, and now that it is working and in tip-top shape, I won’t be able to look at it without reflecting on my love for her.
 
I’ll wear the red disc on Christmas.  Mom would like that.