“My tongue will tell the anger of my heart, or else my heart concealing it will break.” -William Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew
Sometimes I sit down to write and my brain and fingers are at odds with one another, or more aptly, they are at odds with logic flow and topic sentences that make for poignant prose. Scattered as my thoughts may be, my fingers are dancing on the frenetic keyboards of my mind and heart, and as Shakespeare so aptly said above, I must speak my truth.
October is tough for me. That sticky wicket of a month sweeps in so quickly it always seems to issue a harsh reminder that another summer is long gone and I’m not at all in the swing of the school year rhythm, struggling several beats behind the crowd. But that busy life stuff everyone talks about ad nauseam is really just a distraction for me.
October brings me back to my 24-year-old self. It has for the last 17 years. I don’t resume the vitality of my younger self, however. I return instead to a place of deep pain, the pain of a young woman losing her father. Sometimes I try to pretend that the date doesn’t matter, but without fail, October comes and the agony of loss cuts through my heart.
I have heard the phrase, “Time heals all” uttered too often to count. I’m a highly optimistic person, but I do not believe that time actually heals the wounds of grief. The notion that the mere accumulation of time will eventually fully cushion the soul is wishful thinking that we have adopted as we attempt to trick ourselves into coping with loss. Though our bodies may betray us by physically moving forward, our hearts are not good at faking it. Death is inherently unfair and our hearts just can’t behave like bouncing rubber balls.
I talk often of my father, especially to my children. I tell them how amazing he was, how he lived small, but loved large. I don’t talk much about the last ten days of his life, however. Watching him die, knowing he was going to die, that is too difficult for me to describe.
I certainly don’t have the market cornered on grief. I know others—too many others-who have experienced far worse than the loss of a parent. Knowing how I ache 17 years after his death, gives me only a glimpse of the extraordinary torment others must feel.
There is no recipe for how to handle grief. Whether it comes suddenly or over an extended period of time, we’re never prepared. No one likes good byes so it is not surprising that final farewells are the most painful ones. Everyone wishes for more time. The human condition is hard-wired to feel regret and to wish for more. It would be pretty amazing if we could follow a bunch of neatly packaged steps and upon completion we could feel whole again, that we could fill the gaping holes in our hearts. If only.
Grief is an unfortunate and unavoidable part of life. It’s also exceedingly messy. It seems the best way to survive loss is to put waders on and walk right through the worst of the muck. I’m not sure I took my advice on that. I think I kind of walked around it, which means there is a perpetual lump in my throat every October, almost as if my 24-year-old self is watching my father slip away all over again.
I remember staring at his coffin during the wake and funeral. That image is irrevocably scarred in my mind. Intellectually, I knew he was gone. I had watched him take his last breath, after all. But I wished. God, I wished. I still do. I wish he was here.
I couldn’t speak in the final days my father slipped away. I just couldn’t. Words have always been easy for me to string together, and yet, I was unable to find the right ones to express the enormity of my emotions back then. The icy hand of death snatched my father and my words and it left me feeling disappointed that I never seized the chance to tell him how much I admired him, how grateful I was for his love, how much I loved him in return.
My father was not the life of the party or the most eloquent person around the table. He was simple. He was kind in the hugest sense of the word. He loved people. All people. He wore a perpetual smile on his face. I truly don’t think he ever showed physical disappointment with me. He was just happy to be around me and silently drink air with me. He was affectionate. He was proud of his children. He was not perfect. He tried really hard. He was unique. He was mine.
I’m grateful for all that he was, but I’d be lying if I said I was done being angry at his death. I’m angry that I don’t get the chance to sit across the table and see his smile. What a warm smile! I’m angry that I don’t get to hear his hearty belly laughs. I’m angry that I don’t get to see his eyes light up the way they always did on Christmas morning. I’m angry that he didn’t get to walk me down the aisle at my wedding or hold his grandchildren as they came into this world. I’m angry that I no longer get to see the look of awe he had every time he looked out at the Long Island Sound.
I’m angry, but I’m somehow also filled with hope and love. That must be my father working his magic, teaching me that hope is truly the only power we have in coping with grief. Even filled with holes, the heart finds a way to swell with love again. It has taken me 17 years to get here, to scratch the surface of what I buried deep inside as a young woman. It may take another 17 years or more before I feel a little less like screaming at how unfair it feels that he was plucked from Earth too soon.
Do me a favor…if you have lost someone you love, please be gentle with yourself. And if you know someone who has recently, or not so recently, lost someone they love, don’t overspeak. A simple, “I’m sorry” is enough. If you find yourself reaching for clichés, please don’t say anything at all. No cliché ever invented or yet to be invented could possibly make someone who is grieving find solace. Instead of choosing the wrong words, please do something. Bring dinner or offer to do a specific errand like grabbing the dry cleaning or watering plants. And don’t say, “I’m here if you need anything,” because you can’t possibly mean that. Those who have been jolted by loss only want one thing: To bring back the person they love.
Short of working a miracle, most of us just need some space. We deserve the right to feel distraught. We deserve the right to feel angry. Be patient with those who are grieving. It takes some of us longer than you’d expect to get in touch with what we’re thinking and feeling.
I love you, Dad. I’ll miss you always.