Loss, to me, has been a crazy and absurd journey. There are times when my body physically aches, my heart feels like it is being squeezed and I can’t get enough air in, and there are moments of peace, of starting to understand that I will be ok and that I am being carried through this.
Today I will talk about the pain of loss. I do so with the hope that someone else may relate, my words may resonate with you and help you feel not alone. Because, you are not.
The times of deep ache, for me, come when I really think about my husband. When I see videos and pictures. I am instantly reminded that the person I knew better than anyone else on this earth, and who knew my every thought, is not here. I will never again get to rely on his wisdom to help me through the day or rely on his kiss to make the world disappear. This is torture. The word torture is the best way I have found to describe this longing. I don’t believe there are earthly words to truly describe it, so I will stick with torture. I mean, the word torture, to me, ignites the deepest fire of sadness, and that is what I feel.
When I think of the last 5 years, more than half of the memories are shared by only Curt. He is the only person that shares that thought, story, feeling, or sense. I can no longer talk to, and get an answer back, from him regarding those thoughts. This realization is one of the hardest. It feels as though those memories are being held hostage until I see him again. Those years of my life don’t feel as crisp, I have to rely on only myself to recall the memory. The way we felt the first time we walked on South East Asia soil, the way we felt as we sprawled out on the ground in our middle of nowhere to look at the stars, the way we felt when he got down on one knee on the side of the Skagit River with all his courage and shakiness.. Memory after memory, my list could fill ten thousand sheets.
When I think about his body, the perfect gorgeous, fit, body that I followed up and down countless trails, is no longer here. I long with every essence of my soul, to follow those legs up a trail, to reach the top and have his arm around my neck, have him kiss my forehead and tell me how he knows that together, me and him can do anything.
When I see a video of him talking it is like this never happened. He is here. The video brings into play the normalcy of my husband that I know so well. Him telling a story and giving advice. Talking as he has for thousands of hours to me, over quiet dinners, under comfy blankets, on a plane, on a trail, in this country and far off lands.
I often think of my husbands hands. His perfect, manly hands that could be strong as nails when needed and soft as satin when he wanted to be tender. I can see their every outline, and feel their touch. His meticulous hands, working to get our boats just right or cook me an awesome meal.Torture is definitely the only word that fits.
I know his every smirk, his every way of speaking, his silly, his serious, his passion. I know it all and I have come to understand that our brains are not wired to understand or compute the loss of our everyday normal.
As those of you who have lost a spouse know, there are hundreds of these memories that can go from being a comforting memory to a torturous thought, all in the course of an instant. I think it all depends on the state that you are in at the time. If you are having one of those hours where you are feeling like maybe you can do this, maybe you got this, then perhaps the memory would ignite a smile. But, if you are having an hour where you feel like the thought of going another instant without your love is unbearable, then the memory can feel like you are being held hostage. And, for me, I do what is now my normal, I start crying, and this time it is the deep wailing of crying that I would wish on no one. The kind where you don’t make sense, you cry out and sob uncontrollably. A very, very dark place. A place where you are very aware of the hole in your heart, the aching hole that seems to be the only thing that matters in the world.
Although, I know we can do this, we can move forward with strength and grace from Jesus, it doesn’t mean that it is easy. It is torture and it is not easy. Strength on the outside, a small child’s weakness on the inside. And, maybe that’s as it should be, the bible says “The Lord protects those of childlike faith; I was facing death, and then he saved me” Psalm 116:6. I feel like a small child, weak and scared, I feel that I, myself, am facing death. It is my faith and my hope that the Lord hears our prayers, knows our heart, and will continue to carry all of us and protect us through our greatest storm on earth.
This is Stacie Bralens, Christians mom....Amen! You are an amazing writer and I'm VERY sorry to hear about your loss....whenever I read your blogs, you got me crying too....my heart hurts with you...however I've never been married or lost a spouse, but I've dealt with a lot of death in my lifetime, and just recently lost a VERY close friend...so I really do feel for you. You're beautiful inside and out...hang in there, I know it's hard, but it will get easier. Love you!!
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