I have not posted here for awhile, but we had Jerry's committal service May 7, as I had planned, on his 84th birthday. If such an event can be perfect it was. Yet the full circumstances is another complete blog post. This photo is the columbarium on Memorial Day, the second time that week I went to the cemetery. Jerry's niche is the bottom row, the third from the right. Since May 7, more vets have joined him and there were only 3 more niches left until that entire section will be filled. There is no choosing the site for the niche nor for the gravesite if that option is elected. It is assigned, an orderly system. Someday when I am done with this earthly existence I will join him in the same niche and then they will get anew carved marble cover with my name added. Memorial Day was very emotional for me, just about the time I thought I had been doing so well in this grief journey that I am taking alone, the crash came and the tears would not stay inside me. I have learned that t is best to let them flow, a release.
I went to the Preston Veterans Cemetery on Memorial Day to visit Jerry's niche. It was very busy and a very emotional time for me. I was grateful for the local woman who saw me and came to ask if I was "ok?" I told her "I'm as OK as I ever will be, thank you." S he spent a bit of time with me and walked over to the niche where she had first spotted me sitting on the cement in front of it. I appreciated her kindness. These days the comfort comes from strangers mostly.
Not one person called me that day let alone thought of going with me. Later that evening Jerry's son called the first time since the service, what we used to call his self obligatory calls. Although he and DIL and grandson come for the service, they did not stay, flew in and back home, were no help, no comfort. I can write them off now too. Truly I never expected much support from him but now I know for sure there will be none. He is into himself. Anything I mention he diverts to his own goings on. I tried to tell him about the military service and he did not listen. He has no frame of reference never having served and knows little about his father's life. So I have nothing to say. I will post more later about the service and how that day was a blur to me although I functioned well and no one noticed. I got through it. What choice do I have. And that is my reality, I have no choice but to go on.
And that is my reality, I have no choice but to go on. “It’s kind of a dorky
statement, but it is true that grief rearranges your address book. It’s amazing
how many people drop out of your life in the wake of catastrophic loss. People
who have been with you through thick and thin suddenly disappear, or turn dismissive,
shaming, strange. Random strangers become your biggest, deepest source of
comfort, if even only for a few moments.” ― Megan Devine
Finding this to be true, people I thought were friends no longer know me. They are going on about their lives. One particular friend now acts very bored the last few times I have tried to talk with her. When I call her on the phone, she yawns or has to hang up to go talk with her husband who has come home for lunch. My God, if's not like she doesn't see him every day all the time! I am feeling she cannot be bothered, so I will not try again, 3 strikes and out. I sometimes feel bitter and think, "just you wait...your turn will come..." but I quickly give that feeling up, it does nothing for me. I am living my new reality and my entire life has changed to something nearly unrecognizable.
Our parish is hosting a new grief support group with another church facilitated by a nurse and a counselor. It is to be a small group of 12 and meet weekly at the other church. After learning it is not just for widows, and looking at the book they will use, I pass. I can see no benefit to me from going into such a setting with mixed grievers. The book is so very elementary it would be like learning the alphabet again. If is were just widows, I might consider, but this, nope. The Mayo social worker or known as grief outreach worker called me and offered a widow group but they meet on zoom. Nope to that too. I am sick of zoom gatherings. If it cannot be in real face to face time, nope. I talked with her a short time and found myself annoyed at this young eager person who has not experienced this loss, yes she has lost a parent. That is the natural order of life but not relevant to losing my best friend, my 53 year partner. I told her bluntly I have become somewhat of an expert on grief, not by choice. But losing my only child, our son 12+ years ago and now Jerry, I am using all the skills I have. Over years, I have lost all 3 of my closest friends and of course all my elderly relatives.
My life is not going to ever be the same, no more coach trip, no more someone to take care of the house, no more hugs, just more and more of no more. And unless I can be with a group with similar losses I am not interested. I am not mentally ill and do not need a counselor. I just would like company. Sometimes just someone to eat with.
Lately I am experiencing more down feelings, in waves, previously these had been infrequent, episodic. So alone yet the reality is I am alone and will be. Some days the only contact I have with other people is a phone call, online--thru FB, or if I go to the store. I have often heard that people desert you in grief and I never concerned myself with it. Hah, it wouldn't happen to me, not as active as I am. I thought the workout friends would endure, they did not. I did my best with my mother in law who was a widow, not an easy person to be with but who depended on us. I used to talk with her, ask her things, have her here for meals so she would not be alone. My late aunt in PA was another widow, runs in my family, and I called her every week as well as traveling to PA to visit her. Here, nobody to do that for me. I think if I dropped dead in this house who would know and how long would I be here.
I get most support, understanding and wisdom from the FB group, Grief Speaks Out. Many of the quotes I shared here come from that site where people from all over share their grief experiences.
It has been very hot unseasonably for us, for June, extreme 90's and 100 degrees, no rain, hot. So I try to get my outside chores done by noon and even then I am drenched in sweat, and make periodic trips inside to drink water and cool off. Miserable. So not getting my daily walks this week. I had been doing that early morning but that time I need for outdoor weeding, watering, etc, so my walks are off schedule for now. After dinner time or later afternoons, it is not at all possible. The heat is strong. This is as bad as winter when it is subzero and I stay inside. Even the weather is not cooperative.
Well here I am again, just me and my shadow.....