handling the shattered nutcase
I'm not there yet. Still got a ways to go before the World can pass through me without pain.
Julia talked of toes mashed and unreasonable expectations of accommodating thoughtless acquaintances. Tash spoke of awful, awkward silences and evasions within her own family. It broke my heart to read their words. I've experienced shades of each in various circumstances. Facebook is a series of landmines of super-happy-family-ness I can barely handle. Farmer's markets bombard me with babies and moms and dads with kids on shoulders.
There is no way for them to know what it does when they tell me that he's ten months old, and he's keeping her up every night. I look the toddler in the eye and shatter, but you'd never know it by looking at me.
I'm shattered all the time. I don't have to hide it here.
Thankfully, family and friends have been extremely supportive and understanding. I don't feel rushed in my grief. I don't feel like a total nutcase that must be gently handled. They take us face front and let us tell them--as well as we can-- exactly how we feel and what we need.
Often what we need is space and compassion. But not too much space. If I don't get enough attention I start to freak out. Sometimes I feel the disappearing act I'm trying to pull on my grief is working too well.
And not too much compassion, cause seriously, what the fuck? I can handle it, whatever it is. Obviously I can handle anything because otherwise I'd be long gone by now.
Of course, I'm terrified of what else is out there that needs to be Handled, so be careful with me, okay?
Email, instant messages, txts, posts on messages boards, comments to our blogs, they give me strength. They give me a web of words and understanding that transcends time and space.
We Skyped into a birthday party for our friend out in SF. It was mesmerizing to see the faces of our friends that I can usually only hear in my mind as I read their various written missives or enjoy as their disembodied voices over the phone. This was their presence in a powerful, almost magical way.
Through the digital transformations and subtle human cues I was able to pick up that they loved us so much, and missed us a million times over. We toasted beers through the cameras, but the hugs didn't quite connect. Too many square edges on the MacBook.
It was amazing to be with our friends clear across the country, for even a few minutes. And to know how much they wanted us to be well and happy, it was heartfelt and true.
Should I feel lucky for that? There must be a better word. There should be a word for good-feelings-in-the-middle-of-disaster. Because it is that, still, every day in one way or another. The wrenching wrongness of everything we are not doing with Silas is a brutal and confusing burden to bear. We aim for grace, but like Kate said, sometimes fuck grace.
I just want to get by without breaking anything else.
My heart breaks easily. I feel it as a slice from my breastbone to the deep reaches of my gut where everything falls into nothing.
Baby carriage. Pregnant belly. Offhand baby-talk.
Slice, slip, drop.
I attempt to fall through the vacuum of his absence into a calm acceptance of whatever comes next.
The everyday awful, the sliced gut and bottomless stomach, sometimes it makes the good parts feel especially rare and fragile. When I feel happy I'm often doubly amazed. What's the word for that one? The knowing-it's-good-because-you've-had-it-so-bad?
I also know this post doesn't make much sense. But how am I supposed to make sense of the fact that it has been almost a year and... and... everything? All of this. Every word from here to a year before. Every day we've half-lived wondering what the fuck just happened to us?
But I'm not trying to understand why. What I am trying to understand is what his life and death means to me and to Lu, and how I will navigate the rest of my life with his absence in my heart.
So far, this year, all of the World has passed through that hole. There is no other way into me anymore. He is the lens through which my everything is sharpened and transformed.
I wonder if that will ever change. I wonder if there is a way to ever feel whole and true. I wonder if I want to.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Do you?


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Reader Comments (20)
Here's what I read, and it's from the 45th Psalm: I will give you the treasures of darkness,
riches stored in secret places...
Treasures of darkness seems like a good phrase for what we experience. Thanks for writing; I always find treasures of darkness in what you write.
(Here's the blog I was reading, to give credit where credit is due: http://mothergrievinglossofchild.blogspot.com
I grew and birthed and buried two children. First one, my girl Freyja, and then the second, my son Kees. How will I ever feel whole and true again when significant parts of me are missing? When there are holes in my heart which nothing can fill? I don't expect that I shall feel whole and true again.
But maybe I will learn to live with it -- that's what I'm hoping for now.
Canons of Becoming
The soul still sings in the darkness telling of the beauty she found there; and daring us not to think that because she passed through such tortures of anguish, doubt, dread, and horror, as has been said, she ran any the more danger of being lost in the night. Nay, in the darkness did she, rather, find herself.
--St. John, Dark Night of the Soul
I know I won't ever feel whole again. I don't think it's possible and I'm okay with that for the most part.
I'm fighting, too, against the idea of wholeness on the other side. With each loss I've had (two miscarriages, and recently, the death and birth of my son at 22 weeks with severe fetal brain anomaly), I've felt less whole, less a part of the social world. Stronger, maybe, but in the way of one exhausted by wounds knowing enough that not to move at all is to risk further injury.
-C
Do I ever want to feel whole and true? Ah that's a toughy. To be whole would involve having my missing child be here with me... to be true involves experiencing her death. A terrible conundrum.
There are days, moments when I would give absolutely anything to feel that naivety/ignorance and innocence of the non-babylost. The reality though is that this was my experience with Jordan, was her, and I would rather have her in my life this way, than not at all.
No is my truest answer. But I can say that I have been more 'whole' than ever this last year by taking action. Doing something in her name, with her as the inspiration, helped. A woman said to me today about starting the group, "You should be so proud". I said, "No, no pride here...it is my job. It is how I get to be Emma's mother. They (my other two) need me to take them swimming. She (Emma) needs me to reach out and comfort people."
It helps me at least. We are coming up an a big day too. Remembering with you.
Getting through this life is difficult and alot of work. Happiness is worked for now and not taken for granted. We do lack a proper vocabulary for our experiences though.
but i do i wish felt better. i wish i could wend my way out of this painful and shattered place and do something creative, proactive - that would honor her, that would be my way of parenting her, of giving both our lives some meaning in the middle of all this horror.
instead i am mostly just getting through my days, crushed, seething. i am told the first year is the worst. i am praying to heaven that this is true and that later, later, some energy and inspiration will emerge... i don't think wholeness and truth AFTER will look anything like wholeness and truth BEFORE though. every day she is changing the whole shape of my future.
love to your family as your anniversary approaches...
Just passed her birthday, out the other side now and yep, still wondering what the fuck just happened there. Just still can't believe it.
I wish none of it was true. For us, for you guys, for all of us.
Keeping you, Lani and Silas in my thoughts as you head in to September.
I don't know what to tell you about feeling whole. I suspect that I'll feel whole when Rosemary and all of the other missing babies come back. Regarding true, I look at your post and the comments below and it all looks true to me. Sad but true as the saying goes. To stare it down and describe it to others--so courageous. Thinking of you, Lani, and Silas,
I feel I could write so much about this but as usual I am reading at 2:30am and I can't make a lot of sense at this hour. Thank you for writing Chris.
Thinking of you Lani and precious Silas x
Pretty sure I don't feel true. And never did. Not even, y'know, before.
Thinking of you and yours as you approach the anniversary. And yes, fuck grace. It's all normal, you know? All of it.
I do not know if I will ever be whole again, what normal will be in a year or two or three.
True? What does that mean? Already, I am fiercely protective of Gabriel and anything associated with him. There were times I wished my other pregnancies had never happened, and that is not true of Gabriel. Even with this end, this horror, this half-life, I would not deny his existence or alter the time we had. There is a terrible truth that is in me, which I am only beginning to explore.
A reader had passed this song on to me that dances around this strange state of thanks.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FG0-cncMpt8
My heart goes to you. It's all still so new and I hope we can embrace you here in a way that helps you to feel unrushed and normal and accompanied.
xo