When It's Hard to Breathe.
Lately I've been finding it hard to breathe. Pregnancy issues... no. Moving related... no. It's grief. I feel like it's swallowing me whole. Everynight for the past week or so I have dreamt about my sister. And there's always a wedding. Someone's wedding. It changes everynight. So sometimes I literally have to stop and take deep breaths. I cried a lot today. I cried over what could have been and what I have lost. I cried over my brother-in-law. I cried for my family. I cried that I am once again having a child that my sister won't meet, hug or snuggle on this side of earth. My throat is sore from all the supressed tears.
Her birthday is next Friday. She would have been 25.
The pain is so deep. I don't think someone could ever understand until they've tasted death. Until it happens to you it doesn't make sense. Sometimes I wonder if this is how it feels for normal people at the end of their life. You start to experience the loss of others. But maybe it doesn't matter because by then your life is long and you're ready to go home. Maybe then those you lose have had a long time. Not that it's ever great to lose someone. I guess tragic & sudden losses are a different experience.
I'm reading Till We Have Faces (C.S. Lewis) again. The last time I read it was shortly before Libby passed. It was one of her favorite books and I'm glad that I can sit and enjoy a book that she loved. It makes me feel closer to her somehow.
My plans for the 7th include: eating some ice-cream, letting go of some balloons for Libby & Sam, watching Return to Me and bawling my eyes out, and working on a scrapbook page of her. Any other suggestions would be appreciated.
"Parting is all we know of heaven and all we need of hell." ~ Emily Dickinson
She was no longer wrestling with the grief, but could sit down with it as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her thoughts. ~George Eliot
While we are mourning the loss of our friend, others are rejoicing to meet him behind the veil. ~John Taylor
Comments
It's funny how I can feel we are friends even through a blog. Sometimes I just want to reach out and give you a big hug!
Love you, girl! Sharon Elisabeth
going back to highschool days: Don't even think about wearing any make-up! and make sure your shoes match before you leave the house :)
Remember that it's okay to have a cat if you're allergice to feathers... Cats don't have feathers!
Buy a pretty ornament at Target to put on your tree.
Where comfy pj pants all day with fuzzy slippers. Laugh uncontrollably at absolutely nothing.
Tell your precious little ones a few funny stories about their Aunt Libby and then tell them how much you love her and how much she would have loved them and how she is looking down and seeing them and loving them and waiting for the day when we will all be together again.
Then, don't forget to laugh some more and to do all the things Sharon said :)
I love you Jennifer Leigh Napier!!
Add to the list to give the Turtle Girl a call ;)
I'm tempted to feel slightly frustrated/resentful that I am packing and moving during this time because I don't feel like I have the mental and emotional energy right now but I know God is going to sustain me...maybe with the help of some Trader Joes' mac n'cheese (which Kelsey got me addicted to.)
Erin- I am so sorry for you friend who lost her child. The book I recommended, I'm shooting off the top of my head because I don't have it with me (it's packed) is What Can I Do?: Ideas and Suggestions for Those who have experienced loss by Barbara Glanz. I will also ask for my mom for ideas on books on child bereavement. There were some she found helpful over time. A Grace Disguised by Jerry Sitser really helped me. He lost 2 or 3 children, his wife, and his mother in one accident. It was awful. Let me suggest though not giving her books right now. Comfort food is wonderful when grieving. Bottled water. Warm Blankets. Flowers. Cards. Home-made bread. A plant. Little notes of care. Does she have any other children? Maybe offer to baby-sit so she can have some alone time if she does. Being there for someone can mean so much. I highly recommend Barbara's book though. It gives great ideas and lots of valuable insight on grieving people. Blessings on you friend.
Shar
We love you all so much and hope you will feel all the love that is coming your way.
faf
Oh, and "Return to Me" is definitely a good movie to weep with.
Love you!
I think of you every time I watch that.
I feel so stupid when I have nothing 'encouraging' to say when you're grieving... kinda like when Sally Field's character breaks down and her friends tell her that her hair's holdin' up 'just fine'.
I always mark Libby's birthday on the calander... it's still her birthday.
Iremember the time at caregroup when she accidently through Hammies dentures in the toilet! I can still hear her screaming with embarrasment... and giggling in the bathroom with about 5 other girls.
I try to imagine your pain so often... I don't pretend to know what you're feeling, but I love you and am praying for you.
love, your brother,
john meade