I look back on the twenty years since Rich died and I
realize one thing is absolutely true:
you can experience losses of family members and friends and go to lots
of funerals. None of it prepares you for
the almost paralyzing agony of losing your soulmate, your spouse, your life’s
partner.
I had one really tough year as a kid. I lost two grandparents and my favorite
uncle. What was especially hard was that
I had to break the news to my parents.
They are deaf. We’d moved from the
family in Long Island all the way down to Baltimore, MD. It was a necessary move; my father was laid
off in NY and there was just no other printing work for him. Anyway, for the longest time we didn’t have
a telephone because we couldn’t afford it. Telegrams always meant bad news.
My mother’s father passed first. We went to Long Island,
and I was happier about seeing my grandmother, aunt, uncle, and cousins than I
was sad about my grandfather. I hate to
say this, but I really didn’t feel much of anything about my grandfather’s
passing. My mother cried and that upset
me. My grandfather was a stern cold man
and I was always afraid of him. I stayed
out of his way and I don’t think I ever talked to him without my grandmother
being there.
This was the first time I’d been to a wake. I was 10.
I hung out in the lobby with my cousins and brother. They were around the same age, and we probably
got to fooling around too much. My
grandmother came out and asked if I wanted to see my grandfather. I didn’t, not really, but I didn’t want to
tell her no so I held her hand and walked into the viewing room.
We walked up to the casket and I looked at my
grandfather. He didn’t look real. My grandmother touched his hand but I drew
back. It was more than not wanting to
touch him. As I stood there, looking at
his face, I thought I saw his chest rise and then fall. I nearly jumped right out of my skin. Could he be alive and just in a deep
sleep? I was scared.
I went back out into the lobby and pulled my cousin Anne
aside. She was older than me, 12, and I
told her what I’d seen. Anne shook her
head and explained all dead bodies do that when you stare at them long enough. It was an “optical delusion” or
something. I still worried about
it. What if my grandfather got up and
came home?
I think I must have shared some of my worry with my parents
because they didn’t let me go to the next two wakes. My father’s mother died. She’d had a series of strokes that practically
incapacitated her but she kept fighting back.
The last one killed her, though. Once
again, we got the dreaded telegram and had to go to a pay phone. It really sucked because we had only enough
change for 3 minutes of time … just enough time for me to get the details from
my Aunt Bea (Dad’s sister).
Again, the most distressing part was having to tell my
father that his mother died. I didn’t
remember her well because we didn’t see her as often. All I remembered of her was that she’d sit
and rock in her chair all day. When I
would go to hug or kiss her I was frightened by a thin black moustache. Grandmas weren’t supposed to have
moustaches. That was for Grandpas.
My brother and I were the youngest of the cousins and so we
waited out in a comfortably furnished room alone. It was boring. My father’s family was very typically
Irish. There were lots of aunts and
uncles and hundreds of cousins. The
trouble was that they were all a generation older than us. My first cousins on my dad’s side of the
family are the same age he is and the cousins-once-removed were either
having their own kids or were of an age that they didn’t come to the wake. Maybe they were in school.
When we gathered back at my grandparents’ apartment in the Bronx, one of my aunts gave me a beautiful doll and told
me that Grandma Molly (that’s what we called her) wanted me to have it because
she’d loved me so much. I was really
surprised and I felt guilty. Here this
grandma had been loving me and I didn’t know it. I probably didn’t love her enough back! I named the doll “Molly” but I didn’t play
with her because I felt bad when I did.
I tried to miss her more than I did.
Except for being the bearer of bad tidings, I wasn’t too
traumatized. Then came the third
telegram. I’m not quite sure what
happened to my Uncle John, the uncle I loved best. Some members of the family said he had a
heart attack. My father said he died of
a broken heart. Other members of the
family said he killed himself because he couldn’t handle the loss of my
grandmother. I just remember that this
time, when Aunt Bea gave me the news I went right into hysterics.
He couldn’t be dead.
But he was.
My parents managed to calm me down enough so that I could
tell them what happened. When we went to
NY, I told them I wanted to see Uncle John.
They wouldn’t let me. I was
furious. My dad explained they didn’t
want me to see my uncle dead. They were
afraid it would upset me and they’d rather I remember my uncle alive.
Nowadays, there is talk of needing “closure”. You see the body and you know without a doubt
the loved one is gone. I didn’t get to
say a final goodbye to my uncle. For a
long time, I was angry about it. Now, at
my age, I am glad my parents protected me from that. My very last memory of my grandparents are of
their dead bodies lying unnaturally stiff in boxes. Sometimes, though, you can’t be protected.
I have never seen a body that looked real. In a way, that has helped me deal with the
wake and the service itself. I can
always kid myself. That’s not
him. That’s not her. It’s a very strange kind of detachment or
dissociation. In this case, it’s as if
none of this is happening. It can’t be
because that person in the box is not him, not her. I’d been to the wakes of friends and I found
it wasn’t so difficult to deal with it.
I met Rich in 1983 and we began dating in October. He asked me over to his house to meet his
parents a month later, the middle of November.
One week later, his mother was killed in a car accident. Rich had never been to a funeral before. He couldn’t handle it. We went in one time to view his mother’s body
and he dissolved in tears. Afterwards,
he couldn’t go back into the room. “That’s
not my mother,” he kept saying.
I comforted him was supportive – even while I was
emotionally distancing myself from all the grief and emotion the other family
members were experiencing. I did that to
help me cope with it all. I don’t know
that I ever went back and processed it thoroughly. That’s a drawback to disengaging from your
feelings. If you don’t go back to figure
out what happened you can set yourself up for a real crash and burn later.
None of these experiences really touched me … not until Rich
died. Even then, I detached from my feelings
and went on auto-pilot right from the time Rich said he was having atrial
fibrillation again to just hours later, acting as if I was giving him CPR to
shield my son from the knowledge that his father was already gone.
I began to write to Rich the day he died. I wrote to help me sort things out. It just seemed absolutely incredible that he
was really gone. How could he? We were supposed to spend the rest of our
lives together! “How can I live without
you after I’ve been loving you so long…” (that’s Michael Bolton). Who was I going to confide everything to now? Who was going to read my mind or let me read
his so that we’d come out with the exact same thing? Who was going to hold me and love me?
Much of the time, I just felt numb. I joined an online widow support group within
a few weeks after Rich died. I told
myself it would help me. I posted a
couple of times and learned that my numbness was normal. Usually the numbness would “wear off” at
about the “three months anniversary”.
Anniversary! I was very relieved
to have that board. It was almost like a
lifeline. I went there everyday, almost
round the clock.
My numbness took longer to wear off. Other widow/ers from dysfunctional families
confided to me that the invisible shield we put up against hurt insulated us so
well that it usually took longer for the numbness to wear off. Once it did wear off, I was in trouble. I was very very angry and had a hard time not
showing it. People at work wondered what
was the matter with me. “You seemed fine
during the summer,” one person said.
Well, duh, I was still in shock!
The anger scared me so badly (I would fantasize about
wrecking the car, throwing things, breaking things) that I contacted a
bereavement counselor for help. I went
for individual therapy and joined a bereavement group as well. I signed the kids up for bereavement
support.
Things got worse before they got better. I couldn’t work my regular schedule and cut
back drastically on my hours. I withdrew
from everyone, my family and friends especially. I’d agree to go out and then change my mind. I missed Rich terribly. I didn’t act self destructively because I
couldn’t do that to my kids. It was a
rough ride, really rough.
I guess the turning point was making a decision to go to Florida with the kids no
matter what over the spring break. I’d
always been afraid to drive over bridges.
I’d get these seriously horrible panic attacks and so Rich always took
the bridges for me.
Now Rich wasn’t here anymore. I told myself, what did I have to be afraid
of? I’d survived the very worst thing
that could happen to me. What was
driving over a bridge?
The same was true for just about anything that came up after
that. So what? It was nothing compared to Rich’s death.
You get a whole new perspective on things. Worries that seemed a big deal before become
insignificant.
I am not afraid of death anymore either. I don’t want to go before my kids are all
grown up … but I know that Rich and my other loved ones are there waiting for
me.