Peace, Love, and Grief – Time is Precious

As I write this, the Christian community is contemplating Good Friday. The day Jesus was crucified. The day Jesus died. The day those who loved him, those who called him “Teacher” and “Rabbi” witnessed his horrific death. The day his own mother watched him die a tortuous death.

According to the Christian tradition, that isn’t the end of the story, though. According to the Christian faith, Easter happened a few days later… According to those beliefs, Jesus didn’t stay dead… He rose again and lives still.

While I know that is what today (the day you are reading this) is about, that isn’t the part I want to focus on. I want to go back to that Friday… That death… That pain that all those who loved Jesus must have felt. They had no idea what was coming. All they knew was that this person… This man… Their friend… Her son… was dead… gone. Also, keep in mind, according to tradition, the sky went dark when Jesus died, because even God felt all the emotions of grief, including anger.

Today, I wonder if all those grieving people felt the same way so many of us do when we are grieving… That feeling of “I can’t believe they are gone”. I wonder if they said the same thing we all tell ourselves afterward… Time is so precious. I wonder if they second guessed those last days, weeks, or months like we tend to do… Did I spend my time with them wisely?… Do I have any regrets?… Is there anything I would have done different if I were given the chance to do even one day over again?

… I wonder if that is our connection in that story…

I have written that phrase so many times, both here and in my journal… “Time is precious.” I don’t really have any regrets about Bruce and my time together. That is probably because I think of regrets as things that are more negative like time spent fighting or being angry. That didn’t happen. As I wrote last week, our last week together was so incredibly normal. Yet, there are things I would have done different, if I had known that was his last week… month… or year…

I would have taken more vacation days and spent them with him. I would have gone with him that last Thursday to watch the sunrise on the beach. I would have spent more time listening… I mean really listening to what he said and what he didn’t say. I probably would have asked a million questions trying to get to know every last part of him before it was too late. I would have cried… a lot. I would have held him longer and kissed him at every opportunity…

But I didn’t know, and I didn’t do any of those things… Why?

I think that is because living your life like that would be kind of weird… That really isn’t how any of us live our lives. We love those around us, and we appreciate all that they add to our lives. At the same time, we each live the life we were called to live. We don’t drop everything in our world to focus on someone else (or at least we shouldn’t) because that isn’t healthy.

Yet, I still say it, and I still believe it… Time is precious.

So how do we live like we mean that?

I have spent the last decade since Bruce died, trying to make good use of my time. Learning how to be me and all that might entail… Figuring out my faith… Learning to accept and love myself… Learning to simply “Be” … Trying to be present in each moment… Trying to maintain relationships that are loving and healthy… Learning to forgive and let go, while still maintaining boundaries that allow me to live a healthy life… Not forcing relationships, but leaving the door cracked, just in case… Remembering that to be present in each moment includes feeling whatever is there, whether I am loving, laughing, crying, or discovering.

Do I always get it right? Of course not! However, that pursuit is what life is all about – figuring out all of these things that make us who we are is exactly what allows us to love the world and all that is in it. It is what allows me to see the divine in each and every person and connect with them at that point… even when we are getting everything else terribly wrong. It is what allows me to get up each and every morning and start again – fresh. It is why I call my aging parents every week, as well as my family that is so far away. It is why I don’t give up on those relationships that are currently upside-down or the ones that seem hopelessly lost.

The death and resurrection of Jesus gives us hope… It shows us how to connect to the Christ within all of us. The death of Bruce showed me that time really is precious. At the same time, it isn’t about trying to spend every minute with every person – I can’t… That isn’t realistic. Instead, for me, it is about living my purpose in each moment and touching those lives that want to be a part of mine… It is about creating those precious memories filled with love, because we know that tomorrow just might be too late… So, I will need to do the best that I can with this moment and this day… No pressure to do anything more… or anything less.

For me, I do believe that one day I will see Bruce again… I believe that one day he and I will celebrate our Easter… Our resurrection and transformation… Until that time comes, though, I have promised myself that I will do all I can to live each and every moment knowing how precious our time here truly is.
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Grief changes us. This journey is not an easy path for anyone. That is why I share the mistakes I have made, as well as what I have felt and learned along the way. Even sharing our stories of love and life can be helpful on this journey. We know learning to function on this new path is hard, and it is easy to lose our way or forget that we don’t have to do it alone. I don’t think any of us chose to be here… I know I didn’t. Yet, this is where life has landed us for now… This is where we are. Our lives are now filled with challenges we never imagined and emotions that feel overwhelming at times. So often, I think I have it all figured out, only to find that isn’t true at all. Despite the years since Bruce passed, my life is still filled with challenges, as I am sure yours is too. Learning to take it one day/moment at a time is all any of us can do.

Thankfully, I know I am not alone… None of us are… We have each other. It is our love for those we have lost that brings us together into this space where we can share our experiences. I believe the sharing of our stories is so important… I believe it is healing. Do you have a story to tell? I believe we can find courage and strength in one another’s stories. I believe we can offer each other empathy when we open our hearts to one another. I don’t know about you, but it makes me feel better knowing there are others out there who understand what I mean, and what I feel. It’s nice to know I’m not alone… Maybe this strikes a chord with you too. We would all love to hear your thoughts or your story. If you would like to share your experience or if you need a helping hand or maybe a virtual hug, let us know. We are here for you.

Please do… This is our community. To share your thoughts and experiences go to the comments and leave your message.*

This is a weekly blog, for daily affirmations we have a Facebook page of the same name. Join us daily at www.facebook.com/peaceloveandgrief

* Be advised that all comments are subject to approval prior to posting. Any comments determined to be spam or not in accordance with the mission of this website/blog will not be approved or posted. Furthermore, any comments determined to be hostile in nature will be reported to the proper authorities. Thank you.

Peace, Love, and Grief – A Holy Week

For those of us raised or practicing the Christian faith, we know that this coming week – the week before Easter – is generally referred to as Holy Week. Different denominations and churches will do different things to commemorate this particular week. Growing up Southern Baptist, I don’t actually recall any special services other than Palm Sunday. (There may have been other services offered; we just didn’t attend any that I remember.)

The stories about the events of that week were told in Sunday School, so I have been familiar with them since childhood. However, I don’t recall the emphasis on how those events were set into motion, nor how they impacted the events of Good Friday and Easter.

That emphasis, however, was driven home when I joined the Roman Catholic faith as a young adult. At that time, I learned about the 40 days of Lent, as well as the somberness of the events of Holy Week. There was a special day (Ash Wednesday) to start the season of Lent. “Sacrifices” were expected to be made throughout Lent. (“What are you giving up?” was a common discussion or homily topic.) As well as special services each night throughout Holy Week to lead us up to Good Friday, where the entire church went into mourning. There was no service on Good Friday. Everything in our church was draped in black, and silence was usually observed from noon – 3pm in memory of the time Jesus hung on the cross.

Then more silence on Saturday as we waited…

And finally, the resurrection on Easter Sunday, when suddenly there was color and smiles and music and… life… sweet precious life… Salvation through resurrection was and is the message proclaimed on that day.

So, what does all of that have to do with this blog? How is it even remotely connected to what we encounter on this grief journey… this “new normal”? Let me explain…

This week I was challenged to take my thoughts on this liturgical season a little bit further when I read an article called, What Makes a Week Holy, by Rev. Jacquie Fernandez, in the March/April 2024 edition of Unity Magazine. Here I want to take what she says and expand on it to include our journey… (To be clear, these are her ideas with my expansion of them.)

My thought is that we all have a holy week… However, my question is… Can we see it as such?

Holy Week for Jesus was not a good week… It was a week filled with a lot of hardship and emotion. It was a time in his career when he was considered a “star” in his own right. Things seemed to be going well. He found himself surrounded by the curiosity of the crowds who wanted to see what he was all about… The people – his people were overwhelmed with love for this man. Life seemed to be going in the right direction… until it wasn’t…

Does any of that sound familiar?

It does for me. The week before Bruce passed on January 12, started with Epiphany… A celebration of the Wise Men visiting Jesus… A day of gift-giving in remembrance of that legendary visit. Bruce was not raised in a faith that celebrated Epiphany, and since it followed closely behind Christmas, he often (okay… always) forgot about it. To save any feelings of disappointment that last year, I purchased a gift from and to both of us. (Nothing required on his part.) The look of relief on his face that morning was priceless! The gift wasn’t anything big or amazing, but the impact it had on the day and our relationship was everything I could have hoped for. It was definitely a great way to start the week… no hard feelings, no guilt… and no regrets.

While we both had two days off a week, the only one we shared was Sunday. Bruce’s other day off was Thursday. That week, like any other week, was “normal”. We started each day as always, going through our morning routines and kissing each other good-bye as we went our separate ways, texting throughout the day (little things that were only important to the two of us), greeting each other with hugs and kisses back at home, and finally, retiring for the night in each other’s arms – all snuggly and cozy – as we let the peace of slumber fill us with the comfort of normalcy… Life was good.

On Thursday, his day off, Bruce went to watch the sunrise at the beach, sending me photos and a message that read, “My only regret this morning is that you aren’t here to share this with me.” Of course, I smiled and responded with, “Next time. <3”

Only there would not be a “next time”…

Friday… Our “good Friday”… started like any other day with kisses good-by as we each left for work. A few text messages were exchanged throughout the day, as we let each other know what time to we expected to be home, and what to do for dinner… All normal… All good… All with the expectation of more days just like this one…

I beat Bruce home that night by about two or more hours. When I finally heard his SUV in the driveway, I ran out to greet him with a kiss and to help him carry his things into the house. I had already eaten hours ago, but I still sat with him at the table as he ate, and we discussed our Sunday plans for kayaking. Then, off to bed – all snuggly and cozy, as we again let the peace of slumber fill us with the comfort of normalcy.

Then at 1:15 am, it started… I awoke to Bruce dying…

The days, weeks, and months that followed were some of the hardest I have ever endured. The shock and trauma of the actual event, plus the grief and loneliness of his loss were overwhelming to say the least. I found myself in deep, deep depression for several years – trying to find my way back… trying to be okay…

Finally, more than a decade later, I can say that I am enjoying life again… I miss Bruce immensely. Yet, somewhere on this spiritual journey, (one inspired and supported by him), I am finally understanding that our connection is not over.

If anything, just like my salvation is found in the resurrection of Jesus, which is transformational (not the death, which is transactional), finding my way on this spiritual path has also led to a resurrection of my heart… A transformation that is connected to the Divine within and all around… A connection that includes the loving energy Bruce added to my life and allows me… no… encourages and inspires me to see that same Divine energy all around me, allowing me to see all things and everyone as a Divine creation.

If I go a step further and define “holy” as “wholeness; being made whole”, then my perspective on that last week together and the years since also take on a whole new meaning.

Like Jesus, my own “holy week” was filled with normal life events that turned into an agonizing traumatic event… Watching and holding the person with whom I was integrally connected die… Then the days, months, and years spent hiding… waiting… too scared to move and too scared to stay still. Until (with Bruce’s legacy as my guide), I found my own faith – one that created real transformation from within… One that has resurrected my life and allows me to laugh… and love… and live – really live my life again.

I’m not trying to be sacrilegious in making this comparison. Quite the opposite… I am trying to point out the holy gifts in our own lives that may not feel like a gift as we usually define it… I am trying to give us something of value to validate our own experiences… Something that makes those events holy because they have the ability to make us whole by enabling a Divine connection that we might miss otherwise.

So, my question today is… When was your holy week? And… Have you/Can you work through it to find your own holy resurrection… your own transformation back into a Divinely connected life? … Back to a place of wholeness?

…if you picked a day out of your own week or month or year, whatever season of transformation you might find yourself in – would you be able to call the worst of it holy? A new perspective such as this is indeed a sacred gift.” ~ Rev. Jacquie Fernandez, What Makes a Week Holy/Unity Magazine, March/April 2024 ________________________________________________________

Grief changes us. This journey is not an easy path for anyone. That is why I share the mistakes I have made, as well as what I have felt and learned along the way. Even sharing our stories of love and life can be helpful on this journey. We know learning to function on this new path is hard, and it is easy to lose our way or forget that we don’t have to do it alone. I don’t think any of us chose to be here… I know I didn’t. Yet, this is where life has landed us for now… This is where we are. Our lives are now filled with challenges we never imagined and emotions that feel overwhelming at times. So often, I think I have it all figured out, only to find that isn’t true at all. Despite the years since Bruce passed, my life is still filled with challenges, as I am sure yours is too. Learning to take it one day/moment at a time is all any of us can do.

Thankfully, I know I am not alone… None of us are… We have each other. It is our love for those we have lost that brings us together into this space where we can share our experiences. I believe the sharing of our stories is so important… I believe it is healing. Do you have a story to tell? I believe we can find courage and strength in one another’s stories. I believe we can offer each other empathy when we open our hearts to one another. I don’t know about you, but it makes me feel better knowing there are others out there who understand what I mean, and what I feel. It’s nice to know I’m not alone… Maybe this strikes a chord with you too. We would all love to hear your thoughts or your story. If you would like to share your experience or if you need a helping hand or maybe a virtual hug, let us know. We are here for you.

Please do… This is our community. To share your thoughts and experiences go to the comments and leave your message.*

This is a weekly blog, for daily affirmations we have a Facebook page of the same name. Join us daily at www.facebook.com/peaceloveandgrief

* Be advised that all comments are subject to approval prior to posting. Any comments determined to be spam or not in accordance with the mission of this website/blog will not be approved or posted. Furthermore, any comments determined to be hostile in nature will be reported to the proper authorities. Thank you.

Peace, Love, and Grief – The Last Say

I was born a female in the south in the 1960’s… which should tell you a lot about the culture in which I grew up. As a toddler, my family changed to a fundamentalist, strictly authoritarian religion… which should tell you a little bit more. Of course, this also led to living in a home that reflected all of these things – a culture where women were considered “less than” with a church and home that supported that line of thought (and the threat of hell if you didn’t).

I am not speaking out of anger or malice. I am simply stating facts… Facts that had a huge effect on how I viewed myself. I am also not speaking out of self-pity. Everyone I knew or had contact with was just like me – the culture of the time, the religion, and the way “power” was distributed within the home. I felt love, and I knew kindness, but mostly from the women in my world – my mother, and my grandmothers. God (as “father”) and the men in our world represented “authority” and held all the power. For the most part, (with the exception of my grandfather), my relationship with the men in my life was more about fear than love. However, because I didn’t know anything different, I didn’t want anything different. It was simply the way it was.

Until it wasn’t…

With my first marriage, I began to actually see the world with all of its glorious variety. My first husband was in the military, so while my religion and family life continued to hold those same authoritarian values of my childhood, I was finally getting a glimpse of something else… Granted, this was also a time of massive cultural change in most parts of the world, so it wasn’t just the fact that I had left my protective bubble. Yet, as the world opened up for me, I began to have friends who were respected in their homes… whose voices and opinions were not only heard but were also often acted on… in a positive way.

At the time, I wasn’t quite sure what to do with all of that. It seemed so foreign. It felt wrong and wonderful all at the same time. How could my thoughts be worth listening to? Was this something God ordained as “okay” or was I “risking my soul” if I chose to speak up? My own self-esteem was not in a place that would allow me to even begin thinking of myself as worthy of having an equal seat at anyone’s table – much less God’s or my husband’s.

It took well over 20 years for me to finally start turning my own thoughts around, and even then, it didn’t happen quickly. It was more like turning the Titanic… It was slow… So slow, in fact, that I couldn’t avoid hitting an iceberg here and there.

My first marriage was the first of those icebergs.

I did finally conclude that that environment was one of abuse which I could no longer tolerate, but there was already so much damage done. Still… there was less damage than if I continued on that course… Despite all the damage endured, it was my first step in healing… It was my first step in recognizing my own value and worth on this planet. It was the first time I realized that I had a purpose, and that purpose was not to be the target of someone else’s lack of self-control or unhealthy drive for “power over”.

Then, along came Bruce.

Bruce was one of the first men in my life to be interested in me as a person – who I was, what I thought, and what I was passionate about. He also recognized where I had been, where I wanted to go, and encouraged me every step of the way. He would laugh with me as I found joy in the simple things that had never been available to me before, and he held me safely in his arms when my world felt scary and ominous. It was wondrously refreshing to be with someone who was simply interested in who I was – not who I thought I was expected to be.

Of course, this, then, resulted in hitting the next iceberg – my faith…

Was it mine? Or was it something that had been handed to me? Something I wasn’t allowed to question… Something I was supposed to accept at face value, even if my own experiences told me something different… screamed something different. What if the God I knew wasn’t the God of my parents? Was that okay?

I have written about this so many times… how I left the church only a few short months before Bruce passed… how I cried for two weeks solid – not sure where to go or what to do next. Then, when Bruce died. I felt completely lost… and with no faith that was mine, I felt like I had nowhere to turn.

However, like any good story, we know that the hero in the story must go through a challenge or battle before they get their “happily ever after” … And my story has been no different. Through the past 11+ years, I have worked hard to reshape my own faith… Making sure that as I de-construct and reconstruct what I believe, I examine it from every angle – verifying that it is what I believe in before moving to the next step.

It has been a long journey, and one that is far from over. Yet, here is what I know so far…

No one else gets to tell me what or who I should be… I alone get to have the last say about who I am. I don’t want to say Bruce would be proud of me for that, because, honestly, that doesn’t matter… That isn’t my goal. However, I do believe he would be happy (maybe even over-joyed) for me that I have finally learned my value and worth in this world and in the eyes of the Divine.

And I thank him for always believing in and encouraging me. He is a gift I will always cherish… I love you, Babe – always and forever!
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Grief changes us. This journey is not an easy path for anyone. That is why I share the mistakes I have made, as well as what I have felt and learned along the way. Even sharing our stories of love and life can be helpful on this journey. We know learning to function on this new path is hard, and it is easy to lose our way or forget that we don’t have to do it alone. I don’t think any of us chose to be here… I know I didn’t. Yet, this is where life has landed us for now… This is where we are. Our lives are now filled with challenges we never imagined and emotions that feel overwhelming at times. So often, I think I have it all figured out, only to find that isn’t true at all. Despite the years since Bruce passed, my life is still filled with challenges, as I am sure yours is too. Learning to take it one day/moment at a time is all any of us can do.

Thankfully, I know I am not alone… None of us are… We have each other. It is our love for those we have lost that brings us together into this space where we can share our experiences. I believe the sharing of our stories is so important… I believe it is healing. Do you have a story to tell? I believe we can find courage and strength in one another’s stories. I believe we can offer each other empathy when we open our hearts to one another. I don’t know about you, but it makes me feel better knowing there are others out there who understand what I mean, and what I feel. It’s nice to know I’m not alone… Maybe this strikes a chord with you too. We would all love to hear your thoughts or your story. If you would like to share your experience or if you need a helping hand or maybe a virtual hug, let us know. We are here for you.

Please do… This is our community. To share your thoughts and experiences go to the comments and leave your message.*

This is a weekly blog, for daily affirmations we have a Facebook page of the same name. Join us daily at www.facebook.com/peaceloveandgrief

* Be advised that all comments are subject to approval prior to posting. Any comments determined to be spam or not in accordance with the mission of this website/blog will not be approved or posted. Furthermore, any comments determined to be hostile in nature will be reported to the proper authorities. Thank you.

Peace, Love, and Grief – My Yayas

This past week, according to the calendar, we celebrated International Women’s Day on Friday. I love this day. Not simply because I am a woman, but because it is a reminder to celebrate all of the wonderful women who have guided me and/or traveled alongside me on this journey. These women are my tribe. They are my yayas.

I know. What are “yayas”?

Well, in ancient Greece, yaya literally meant “woman”. In later years and other cultures, it came to mean one’s mother, grandmother, or even a female priestess. In a deeper perspective, one could say this word “represents the highest form of woman, achieved only through initiation, experience, and longevity.” (1) In more modern terms, yayas are defined as “a group of three of more women whose hearts and souls are joined together by laughter and tears shared through the glorious journey of life.” (2) This is the definition, I am using today when I say, “I am so very thankful for my yayas!”

Not all of my yayas are widows. In fact, that term would only apply to a tiny handful. However, that doesn’t mean the rest of my tribe haven’t known loss or pain… They have… They all have in one form or another. They have all known the pain that comes from deep-rooted loss… And while this isn’t what joins us together, it is what inspires them to travel with me on this journey, whether that is for one or two steps or for much longer.

They all seem to understand that “we must climb the hard side of the bridge to come down on the other side.” (3) They also understand that it is easier to climb that “hard side of the bridge” when you are not alone. Just having someone to lean on every now and then makes such a difference on that “hard side”. I can’t tell you how many times, on this journey, I thought I was alone. I would have sworn I was completely alone… but I wasn’t. They were there… In some form or fashion, they were right there.

Even though I might not have recognized that they were there at the time, I know without a doubt that they were. I know this because I also know that I could not have survived this journey without them… I struggled a lot in the beginning. I did not want to be here without Bruce. So, I know that each and every one of them made a tremendous difference in my journey.

Each one, at some point stepped up and took their place beside me. Some have coached me. Some have cried with me. Some have picked me up off the ground when I didn’t think I could take another step. Some showed me how to laugh again, and others showed me how to run head-long into the wind. The point is each one had a strength and a gift to offer that helped me get where I am today.

Research tells us that women do something that men don’t do. When times are hard, when our souls feel completely diminished, women will reach out to each other. We know and understand the strength that comes to each of us when we join together and hold each other up.

This is not something most men do. According to this same research, men tend to hide their hurt, and tuck it away. The idea of calling up their buddies to discuss their emotions and pain, is generally not done in male culture. (I’m not saying always – I’m saying generally.)

Maybe that is why women live longer… Because we share our burdens rather than struggle alone. I don’t know… I’m just guessing. But I do know this… If it weren’t for my yayas, I would not still be here. I could not have managed the pain of grief by myself.

These women are my heroes. They are my family, and they are my friends. They are my spiritual sisters and my beacons of light when the path seems pitch black.

They are my yayas… And I am forever grateful for every single one.

1 – Mom.com

2 – The Oogie Boogie Witch, FaceBook

3 – Unknown
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Grief changes us. This journey is not an easy path for anyone. That is why I share the mistakes I have made, as well as what I have felt and learned along the way. Even sharing our stories of love and life can be helpful on this journey. We know learning to function on this new path is hard, and it is easy to lose our way or forget that we don’t have to do it alone. I don’t think any of us chose to be here… I know I didn’t. Yet, this is where life has landed us for now… This is where we are. Our lives are now filled with challenges we never imagined and emotions that feel overwhelming at times. So often, I think I have it all figured out, only to find that isn’t true at all. Despite the years since Bruce passed, my life is still filled with challenges, as I am sure yours is too. Learning to take it one day/moment at a time is all any of us can do.

Thankfully, I know I am not alone… None of us are… We have each other. It is our love for those we have lost that brings us together into this space where we can share our experiences. I believe the sharing of our stories is so important… I believe it is healing. Do you have a story to tell? I believe we can find courage and strength in one another’s stories. I believe we can offer each other empathy when we open our hearts to one another. I don’t know about you, but it makes me feel better knowing there are others out there who understand what I mean, and what I feel. It’s nice to know I’m not alone… Maybe this strikes a chord with you too. We would all love to hear your thoughts or your story. If you would like to share your experience or if you need a helping hand or maybe a virtual hug, let us know. We are here for you.
Please do… This is our community. To share your thoughts and experiences go to the comments and leave your message.*

This is a weekly blog, for daily affirmations we have a Facebook page of the same name. Join us daily at www.facebook.com/peaceloveandgrief

* Be advised that all comments are subject to approval prior to posting. Any comments determined to be spam or not in accordance with the mission of this website/blog will not be approved or posted. Furthermore, any comments determined to be hostile in nature will be reported to the proper authorities. Thank you.

Peace, Love, and Grief – Finding Courage for the Lesson in Front of Us

I am a firm believer that when we come to this earth, we each have a purpose… a reason for being here… And to accomplish that purpose, there are lessons we must learn along the way. I also believe that if we don’t “get” the lesson when it is presented to us, that same lesson will keep reappearing over and over and over… until we do. These lessons happen throughout our lifetime, because we need them to achieve our purpose… and we are here until that purpose is achieved.

That being said, I will honestly say that there are some lessons I have not learned the first time around… or the second… of the third. There are some lessons that I have struggled with, but this week, I think I broke a hole in that barrier… and I can’t stop smiling.

I have shared before that my first marriage was one of chaos and domestic violence. I have also shared that I was diagnosed with PTSD after I left, and just recently began undergoing an intense (kinda weird) therapy for it. It is a therapy called EMDR, and it involves reprocessing past traumas so that you can move forward in a healthy way.

First of all, let me be honest that my first marriage was not the cause of all of my trauma to date. We all have traumatic events throughout our lifetime. I am no different than any of you, in that regard. However, I never processed them in a healthy way, so they have continued to affect my life in an unhealthy way. As we began this therapy, it became apparent that Bruce dying in my arms was probably the one event that was the most traumatic for me, and hence, the first one I tackled first many months ago.

To begin the EMDR, my therapist had me list several traumatic events that I have struggled with through the years – some from childhood, some from my 1st marriage, and some from my recent past. Then, we have been tackling one at a time. With each one, I give her a summary of the event. Then, we discuss how I felt (and still feel) when I think about that event. It didn’t take long to find a pattern… Consistently, I was left feeling either powerless in the event or that I “wasn’t enough” and so I “deserved” it in a way. (I believe that sounds like a lesson I may have missed somewhere.)

Now let me change gears a little bit… (I will pull it all together in a moment – you’ll see.)

I recently started a new job. I was excited. The job was doing what I love to do. The salary and benefits were fine… and the person I interviewed with seemed full of energy and excitement. I was pumped!
However, there were red flags from day one. I saw them. I even noted them in my journal. However, I chose to ignore them. I told myself that I had spent 17 years in one place. I was just used to things being a certain way. I needed to give it time.

However, as time passed, those red flags got bigger and bigger. Promises that were made to me when I was offered the position disappeared almost immediately. Then, I began to notice how other people were also being treated. (Not by the company as a whole, just one person… one person with power.) There was no respect. Many times, this person would say that they wanted to make the employees feel bad. (I couldn’t even wrap my brain around it.) People’s thoughts and opinions were dismissed like dust into a trash bin. Unreasonable demands were made, and the discomfort in the office was palatable.

Then, I started being asked to do things that go completely against my core values. (I’m not saying this was a bad company. It was one person who was not a good fit for me.) I know it sounds silly, but I swear I could feel my soul slowly withering away day by day. It reached a point where I was sick in the morning before driving in and cried all the way home.

I was feeling completely powerless. (Sound familiar?) Yet, I was not even recognizing it for what it was… I was simply accepting it.

Last month, I came across a quote, “One cannot live a healthy life in an unhealthy environment.” (I wish I could remember where I found it or who said it, but I can’t. I simply copied it onto a sticky note and stuck it to my monitor in my home office, where I could see it daily. That quote become my mantra and my inspiration… and I realized that I could not stay here and be a healthy person. I did not need to give it time… I needed to leave.

So, I started a new job search. Quietly, I reached out to friends… I started networking and applying again… I couldn’t help but feel like Bruce would be proud of me. Instead of staying and feeling powerless, I was doing something about it. I was doing something for me that was healthy… I was taking steps to change my world for the better.

And this past week the offer I was seeking came, and I accepted. I will be working for someone I know… A true leader… Someone with integrity and a respect for her employees. So, my next step was to give my two weeks’ notice, which I did the following day…

It did not go well…

That same person became angry… not a little bit angry… I mean really angry. I was stunned. I felt myself going back to my old behavior of trying make myself smaller and just “taking it”. That feeling of being powerless, once again, took hold. This person started telling me how they were going to treat me over the next two weeks and ended it with, “I will make sure these last two weeks are hell.” And that was it… The Zoom call was over. I was left stunned… and shaken… and crying… until I looked over and read “One cannot live a healthy life in an unhealthy environment.”

And I sat up in my chair a little bit straighter… Then, I remembered the last several EMDR sessions where we have reprocessed so many events (similar to this one) where I felt powerless. Yet in the reprocessing, I had taken back my power… And that is exactly what I decided to do.

First, I reached out to HR, but they were busy and said they could talk to me next week. Then, I spent the rest of that day and into the night, creating folders and organizing information that my co-workers would need. I wrote a summary of the conversation that had just happened while it was still fresh in my mind. Then, I wrote three letters: One letter was to my peers simply saying that life sometimes takes a turn that we aren’t expecting, and while I was sorry not to say a proper goodbye, I thanked them for all they mean to me. The second was to HR to give a quick report of what happened and my personal contact information if they want to discuss anything further. Then finally, my actual letter of resignation… which now said, “effective immediately”. You see, in Florida, I am not required to give two weeks’ notice. I was simply trying to do the right thing. I also don’t need to stop that person’s behavior – that is theirs to own… At the same time, I don’t have to simply “take it”, because I am not powerless after all!

I finally found the courage to master that lesson that has been presented to me over and over and over. I am not responsible for someone else’s behavior, nor do I need to absorb their emotions. I don’t have to “take it”. I don’t have to respond or react to it. I can simply… walk away… with my head held high and my emotions in check.

… And that is what I did… I finally found the courage for the lesson in front of me…

No, it isn’t a big, grand story to anyone but me. Yet, I know this is a lesson I have been trying to learn for most of my life… This is what Bruce was always trying to help me see in myself… (I think he would be so proud of me.) … This is the lesson I needed to learn so that I can take that next healthy step on this journey.

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Grief changes us. This journey is not an easy path for anyone. That is why I share the mistakes I have made, as well as what I have felt and learned along the way. Even sharing our stories of love and life can be helpful on this journey. We know learning to function on this new path is hard, and it is easy to lose our way or forget that we don’t have to do it alone. I don’t think any of us chose to be here… I know I didn’t. Yet, this is where life has landed us for now… This is where we are. Our lives are now filled with challenges we never imagined and emotions that feel overwhelming at times. So often, I think I have it all figured out, only to find that isn’t true at all. Despite the years since Bruce passed, my life is still filled with challenges, as I am sure yours is too. Learning to take it one day/moment at a time is all any of us can do.

Thankfully, I know I am not alone… None of us are… We have each other. It is our love for those we have lost that brings us together into this space where we can share our experiences. I believe the sharing of our stories is so important… I believe it is healing. Do you have a story to tell? I believe we can find courage and strength in one another’s stories. I believe we can offer each other empathy when we open our hearts to one another. I don’t know about you, but it makes me feel better knowing there are others out there who understand what I mean, and what I feel. It’s nice to know I’m not alone… Maybe this strikes a chord with you too. We would all love to hear your thoughts or your story. If you would like to share your experience or if you need a helping hand or maybe a virtual hug, let us know. We are here for you.
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