Boston

josh and gus

To honor the victims of the Boston Marathon tragedy, a lot of folks will be wearing race t-shirts today.  As a pseudo-runner, I have tons of shirts to choose from but instead of one from a race I ran, it seemed more fitting to choose a race for which I volunteered.  So I chose a shirt from Josh and Gus’s Run for a Reason.

Back in 2004, I decided to volunteer for a cause in a completely altruistic manner.  Helping with something that did not directly effect me.  I stumbled upon Josh and Gus’s Run through my mom’s group.  Little did I know that what I gained through my 4 years would benefit me far more than any help I gave to the organization.

Josh and Gus’s Run taught me about grief.  Josh and Gus were two toddlers who died unexpectedly and for no apparent reason.  With no explanation available for their deaths, the deaths were ruled Sudden Unexplained Death in Childhood, a cousin of the much more well-known SIDS.  The run was founded by Josh and Gus’s moms who had lived through the unimaginable, the death of a child.

I had never lost a significant person in my life when I started working on the run, so I was unprepared for the level of grief these moms were dealing with.  I was still in the mindset that you “heal” from grief.

I learned that you never really heal or get over a significant loss.  You just learn to deal with that absence in your life.  The tiniest thing, talking about a book, re-reading sympathy comments or looking at pictures could re-open the wound in your soul, a wound that never heals.

I learned that it was important to say something when someone has lost a significant person.  Just a simple I am sorry will do.  Stumbling over words and a few tears with your words are better than no words.  Recognizing that person once existed by remembering the family on the birthday or “angel date” means a lot to those grieving.

I learned that grief is a life long journey.

Yesterday as I watched the news coverage from Boston, I felt empathy for the volunteers.  For 4 years I helped on the course committee for Josh and Gus’s Run.  I felt a huge responsibility to make sure “my” runners and walkers had fun and were safe on the course. When that last walker crossed the finish line, I felt a great sense of accomplishment. Working a race is supposed to be fun and fulfilling, not terrifying.

So it seems fitting that I honor those lost in Boston by wearing a shirt that symbolizes so much to me.

Feeling Bad

In my new journey as an adult orphan, I have never felt bad about feeling happy.  I enjoyed Christmas with my family two days after Mom died.  I enjoyed a birthday lunch with my sisters and fun with my cousins in the days after  Dad died.  I never once felt guilty or bad about enjoying myself.  I was able to do this because I knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that is what my parents would want.

My parents had a knack for moving on.  No matter what had happened in the past, what tragedies had befallen them, they felt very strongly that one should not dwell on the past.  I can remember breaking up with a boy in high school and my mom, after a week of my moping, said “It is just a boy, get over it.”  That is how we were brought up.  Life knocks you down, get up, dust yourself off and move on.

So it is no surprise that I feel bad about feeling bad.  When I get sad, frustrated or depressed, I hear my parents telling me “Get over it”.

On Sunday, going through another box of their kitchen ware, it was like they were being erased.  Their house is empty and their possessions are scattered as we decide what to keep, donate or throw away.  I felt very empty and sad.  Then someone asked a question that implied my brother, sisters and I should be healed from our loss by now.  So then I felt empty, sad and guilty.  Guilty that I was sad that I missed my parents. Ugh.

Should we be over this by now?

How this began

A few months ago, I decided to quit my job and take care of my dad.  When we found out what it was.  It was some unidentified illness (my guess was cancer) and I knew it would be the end of him.  So when we found out, I would quit my job and take care of him.

But we never found out. On January 28th, he died after suffering a small stroke and then a massive stroke.  I knew it was coming but still…..I thought there would be more time.  There is never more time.

I did quit my job yesterday, that was prompted by another problem that I have put off dealing with long enough.  These things will be the subject of this blog and of course, politics.