My Biggest Disappointment

Seems like an insignificant word to use, but no one talks about how unbelievably disappointing it is to lose a loved one.

I mean, if you google “disappointing,” it says, “failing to fulfill someone’s hopes or expectations”

My Dad was my person. He made me feel safe and seen in the world. Always. No matter what. I always knew when I came to him with anything, I would receive love and acceptance. Even when I couldn’t give it to myself.

He had been through the gamut of serious illnesses (cancer twice) and accidents (like, with construction backhoe hitting his head … and he didn’t have a hard hat on), an open heart surgery to replace a valve, and he always came out of everything unscathed. Just typing this out, for the first time, I’m realizing how incredibly grateful we were to even have him until he was 62.

With all that he went through, it’s fair to say, at the time, in my mind, he most certainly would live to be an old man. Not only that, I decided even, (poor guy), that he would likely outlive me. Selfishly, I was totally fine with that.

He’s been gone now for almost 10 years and the disappointment grows with every passing year.

I have so many questions about business and life and marriage.

I try not to think about it, but, he didn’t get to see me happy. I’m married to a great guy now who he never met and will never get to meet.

Every cool and funny thing my kids have done over the years. Maya graduated high school and college and is now a teacher… and she lives in Arizona and loves it. He would have loved Arizona.

Marley Belle graduated high school last year and is living and going to school in NYC. I can hear him now saying, of course she is! Marley has always been our fashionista.

Little Willow, the quiet shy little person, is the social butterfly of the neighborhood. She loves music and art and is traveling to visit Marina and live with her in Spain this summer.

My God, the grandchildren that have been born since he has been gone. That’s the hardest part. They will never know him. The unfairness of that could destroy my heart if it let it. Not just the unfairness for the kids, it’s more the unfairness I feel for my two younger sisters.

I have been pushing the disappointment away for the past 10 years and I’m understanding now that it’s always been there, waiting for me to feel it.

Tell me all your thoughts on GRIEF

We each have our own ideas in our minds around death, loss, and grief. They are based on how we grew up, what we witnessed perhaps when someone died, and how we took in information and made sense of it.

My early pictures and ideas of grief were that death happens to other people. Not my family because we are really blessed and lucky.

My Dad lost his father when he was 12. It effected him traumatically, as it was always part of him, his conversations, and who he was as a person. I know he truly felt that he and his siblings would have had completely different lives if their father had lived. My Dad made choices for himself that were really difficult, but, I believe they were fueled by crisis and the fact that he felt he didn’t have a choice. His father was dead and his mother was institutionalized from a nervous breakdown.

He wanted to go to the Catholic High School in Philadelphia, so he worked the night shift at Mrs. Pauls fish sticks and went to school from there in the morning. His twin brother turned to drugs. Because of the choices his twin brother made, my dad felt an extra sense of responsibility to have to also take care of his brother. My dad was super driven. He wanted a family and a good life. He met my mom and the rest was history.

I believe my dad felt that by being a good person and going to church every Sunday (something his family didn’t do), somehow, it would protect his family from tragedy. I believed it too. We had theories to prove it. My Dad beat cancer not only once, but twice. And, he was a GREAT person. My dad never knew a stranger and was always giving or helping someone in need.

Then, tragedy happened, and he died in 2014. I refused to accept it. I was so angry for so long and just wouldn’t accept what happened. Based on the “story” I told myself, of course, death and tragedy in my family didn’t make any sense. Then, it kept happening. In 2017, my Aunt Kathleen died, in 2022, my Uncle Mike, and now, just this past Friday, my cousin Matt was killed in a hit and run. None of this makes any sense and they just feel pilled on, like some kind of family curse. My mom insists that “nothing has been good since your dad died” and I tend to agree with her. I blurted out, just a few months ago, without thought, that “I just don’t like life without Dad here” to my sister. I think it took us both back. What a sad thing to feel. But, that has been my truth. I felt in my bones, that life was so much better with him in it. This is true for me. It’s been 10 years now without him.

About a month ago, I started volunteer training at the Center for Loss and Bereavement working with children who have suffered great loss. Most of them have lost either a parent or sibling. There’s a big part of me that feels generational healing while I’m there. When I look at these kids, I can’t help but see my Dad and his siblings.

The particular age group I was with was 4-6 years old. One of the little boys, looked up as he painted a picture and said to me “You know, we are all going to die”. I said, “I know.” and then, he continued “But, that is what makes life so special”. From the mouth of babes. Finding meaning in loss. I’m grateful for this 6 year old.

Last month, I also began a course with David Kessler to become a grief educator . I want to help others in grief. This course, along with the volunteering, I’m finding healing for myself as well. Yesterday, David talked about the randomness of death. He said, “the death rate in families is 100%”… which made me laugh… but, somehow it flipped a switch for me. Yes, I always knew everyone would die. But, I was able to form a new connection with death and tragedy when he talked about it “not being personal”. That sentence also made me angry, so, I can see I have some feelings to feel there around that sentiment.

Ideally, there is an “order” to death. Old people die first. My Nanny, my dad’s mother, passed in 2013 at the age of 92. After her passing, my brain went to my Grandmom, my mom’s mother. I thought, she must be next. That Christmas, I focused my time and attention to my Grandmom. This could be her last Christmas. But, as life would go, it was actually my Dad’s last Christmas. He was 62. Why? I will never know or understand. But, this is what happened and I need to accept it. Even typing this now, 10 years later, I feel a pang and heaviness in my heart. My eyes are filling up with tears.

I’m sharing because perhaps someone else out there is grieving in the same way. I know my family is right now with my cousin Matt’s death just a week ago. No, it doesn’t make any sense. Yes, you may see old people and be angry at their sheer existence. My dear aunt, you will see mother’s with their son’s and feel to the depths of your soul how grossly unfair it is. I ran from my grief for the past 10 years. I ate, drank, and smoked it.

The only way to heal it is to feel it. Be kind and gentle to yourself as you feel and travel through this pain. You are so loved.

Everyday moments

Time… always an ongoing theme in my house. I’m sure in every house all over the world. As a single parent, it looks above me and feels impossible to lasso…. I wish for more of it and then chase it away…. all in one evening.

I hate that I constantly refer to grief and loss, but, it has changed who I am and still surprises me everyday.

Time has stood still, yet my head spins some days with I get lost inside the dark void of grief.

I realize…. THIS, THIS is it right here… these are my memories and my kids’ memories. Not our next vacation, not the next Holiday…. TODAY. Thursday after dinner and homework, this is the shit they are going to remember.

When my father was dying, in that moment, I was holding his hand and talking to him… just one memory kept flashing in my mind….. it was of my sisters and I playing in the leaves with him one Sunday afternoon in front of our house. I know it was a Sunday, because my father was almost always working Monday through Saturday.

For all I know this memory could have started as a chore he didn’t feel like doing….

Well, that moment of playing in the leaves with my Dad and sisters, turned into a moment where, at the end of my Father’s short life, somehow, in the depths of a brain that didn’t remember what I did hours before, would magically come spewing out of me. That is what I remembered last.

Do I mess up some days and let my unfortunate mix of adolescent and premenopausal hormones get the best of me? …. sure do…. at the end of the day, I try my best to take a step back and remember… it’s not about working until the next time I consciously make a choice to to do “something fun” with my kids. Because in all honestly, 99% of the time, when I make those choices, it almost never pans out how I envisioned.

Until then, I will try and find fun with my kids in going to the post office, folding laundry, making dinner… all of the things that would typically take time away from them. One of those everyday moments could become their most precious memory of me.

Oh, the pressure.

Why I cry at Funerals

If you’ve experienced deep loss with death, you’ll know what I’m talking about…. Heck, you could even write this yourself.  

And I’m not talking about your grandma or grandpa dying at 92, which, of course it is sad when your grandparents die and you wish they could live forever.  If they were lucky enough to raise their children and see their children’s children grow up and perhaps even THEIR children, that’s a good solid run.… they were so blessed.  I’m talking about rip-the-rug-out-from-under-you, throw-you-out-of-an-airplane-without-a-parachute kind of loss.

If you haven’t experienced this kind of loss, read on if you have someone close to you that is going through the stages of grief.

I can remember a time before I experienced tragic loss and funerals would come up within the threads of my large family or group of friends and I would think to myself “It doesn’t really matter if I go”…. “What’s the difference if I get there or not”…. Or, “I have so much work to do” or even seemingly more valid  (it’s not) “Darn, I don’t have anyone to watch the kids” … there… no big deal… I’ll send a card…boom.  Life moved on.

Fast forward to the tragic loss in my family…. The whole world went silent for me… I still feel like part of me is with my person and part of me is still on the Earth….   The sun is shining, the world is somehow still spinning, the seasons are still passing…. But nothing is the same.  The truth is, nothing ever will be.  Can’t sugar coat death.  

This is why I cry (sometimes embarrassingly so) at funerals.  

When I see the family of the person who passed,  I know that right now, they are in a total, surreal-like fog.  Most likely, they won’t even remember this day… and if they do, it may just come back to them in bits and pieces over years…. Years.

I also know that the “hard part” hasn’t even started for them yet….   And that makes me cry more… knowing what lies ahead for them.

I had people who experienced the same reach out to me when I experienced my loss and I’m truly grateful…. Otherwise, I would have at times thought I was losing my mind. While grief is different for everyone and everyone experiences grief differently, they all had similar things to say….

  1. Year one is a blur, you don’t really remember anything
  2. Year two is harder than year one… you’re just coming out of your “grief fog” and things become more “real”.
  3. Year three is a little easier… but you’ll regress back to year two sometimes … awesome.

I still find myself feeling like Rumplestiltskin… like someone just dropped me from 2014 to 2017 and I missed everything in between…. Is Trump really president (seriously)?

Years later, l would ask myself who attended my person’s funeral and who didn’t… early on, I wrote off the ones who didn’t and felt a new kinship with the ones who did…. I was so angry in my grief and it was easy to direct anger at the people who in my mind “should have been there”.  I realize now that they were just like I was… they haven’t experienced this type of loss yet and they don’t understand… let them hang onto that as long as they can.   

Surfacing from grief can take years and it’s important to note that our brains are solution oriented and wired to make sense of things.  This can create a merry go round in our heads… trying to make sense of something that makes absolutely no sense at all.  

If you are on this ugly merry go round, go easy on yourself… if you manage to just dress yourself or your kids, you did a good job.  Tomorrow is a new day.  Hang in there and know you are not alone.  Keep a lookout for signs from your person… no matter what your religion or beliefs are, your soul never dies… they will be around you as long as you are here.  Not in the form that you would like, but they are there, I promise.

 

God Bless,

 

Daria