
So why now?! Why am I writing this post ten years later?! I've thought about this question a lot over the past month as I've entertained the idea of finally gathering up the courage to sit down and put some of these thoughts, reflections, and emotions on paper. And for others to read, nonetheless. And, I'm not completely sure why now, to be honest. And yet, I feel like now is the time. Perhaps it's something about "ten years" - which for me, sounds like such a long time. Or perhaps my time in Japan, which has forced me to face some aspects of her death a bit more intensely, head-on, and without my usual support system, has lead me to this point. Who knows?! Regardless, in this moment, I am sitting at my computer...ready to put some of these thoughts to paper.
Ten years...and yet, it feels like both yesterday and a lifetime ago in the same moment. Time is funny like that...isn't it?!
When my mom died, I was a senior in college. At that point, I was applying to graduate schools and didn't even know where I was going to go. And now, ten years later, I'm writing this post from Japan - a place that I never in my wildest dreams ever imagined I would visit (let alone live). In that time, I completed a practicum living in Washington DC; I graduated with my Master's Degree; I became a speech-language pathologist; I got my first real job; I moved to Cincinnati; I ran three marathons; I met Kaz; I got married; I presented at numerous conferences; I published two papers; I moved to Japan; I lived in Japan; and, now, I'm getting ready to move to Dallas and take on a whole slew of new changes, adjustments, challenges, and opportunities.



Perhaps, instead of getting easier, the journey ebbs and flows...as most journeys do. And, maybe a lot of these ebbs and flows are dependent on where I am at a given point in my life. Take Japan, for example. Being so far away from my support networks has been difficult...probably the single most difficult aspect of this entire journey actually. I've realized how much you 'just talk' about things with people when you're physically around them...and how difficult a 14-hour time difference can be in 'just talking' in the moment that you need to talk most.

While I am reminded daily that my mom is no longer psychically with me, and I've learned to walk with that fact, I have to admit that even after ten long years...I don't know that I've truly accepted this fact. About four years ago, when I told my counselor that I couldn't get myself to just talk to my mom...whether through writing, thoughts, or talking out loud when no one was listening...he pulled up a chair, placed it across from me, and suggested that I try talking to my mom as though she was sitting there with me. My reaction was one of total flight - I jumped back in my own chair and started shaking harder than I had in years. My breathing quickened, my heart raced, my face flushed, and I froze. I think I scared myself more than I surprised my counselor. Why was it so difficulty to talk to someone that I had talked to every day of my life for over twenty-one years.
I still haven't talked to the chair; however, I'm slowly taking steps in allowing myself to move towards connecting with my mom in a different way. Will I ever truly accept that I can no longer connect with her in the ways that I used to? Will the thought of her ever not bring with it a twinge of pain or an ache in my hands? I don't know. And yet, the more time that passes, the more I miss her...and the more the desire to connect grows (and begins to overpower the fear of what connecting in this new way may bring with it). I've also been slowly getting used to the idea that where I am at any moment is where I am at that moment. It's not right or wrong, good or bad...it's simply where I am and what I'm feeling in that moment. While it sounds simple, it sure isn't...especially for someone who is used to solving every problem she's faced with by working as hard as she possibly can...and now finds herself with a lifelong problem with no solution.

I love you - one hundred, million, billion, trillion, gazillions plus one!
***********************
While I have many people in my life to thank for the nudge toward writing this blog post, it's not actually my first step toward putting some of these thoughts into words. For years, I've been thinking about writing a song for mom. Selfishly, I recognize that music helps me to stay in the moment - and I thought that being able to listen to a song about my mom would help me to both deeply feel and also release emotions in ways I've been avoiding since she died. This year, on her birthday, I spent a few hours at a coffee shop...and attempted to put ten years of thoughts, emotions, and experiences into words. Quite the feat...that's for sure. What resulted was a poem (my mom always loved my poetry) that one of my closest friends is now transforming into a song. Here's the poem - without what will be the chorus in the song. I'll share the song in the future.
The Picture Fades

As years go by
A young girl grows
Experiencing, evolving, becoming
Safely surrounded by her mother's love
Triumphs celebrated, problems solved, advice shared
Through conversations from afar
Disagreements inevitable, necessary
As she paves her own way

Time freezes
Uncertainty invades
Her world shatters
As sickness cheats and takes her mother away
Faced with a problem she cannot solve
And a reality she cannot change
Emotions bolted and buried
Silencing even the voice from within

Numbness moves her forward
Fear, grief, and loneliness come too
Weighing heavily
On her broken heart
Slowly emotions awaken
Memories resurface
Family and friends remain
Reminders that love prevails

The years keep moving
Each faster than the last
A grown woman continues
Reflecting, trusting, learning to be
Walking with fear and hope
Sitting with pain and joy
Slowly reconnecting
With the voice that’s always been there
Moving toward the acceptance that
While time won't heal
And pain won't fade
Her mother lives on
Welcome to your life! This was warm, loving, and truly a tribute to you and your mom. And pictures are priceless, just like you both. Thank your courage and sharing that with the world. :-)
ReplyDelete