Monday, May 11, 2015

Moving Forward





I feel acutely aware that I am a completely different person than I was before my husband passed away. At times I feel like I can move mountains with my steady faith and powerful voice. Other times I feel as though I am tiny and weak, waiting for someone to tell me what to do next, to help me find my way in a world that, to me, seems bleak and exhausting.

I have found that the secret is living between these two realities, the powerful moments and the weak moments, embracing both feelings for what they are, the same reality in a different form.

I have come to know that my strength is my weakness asleep.

With this journey one aspect that has continuously felt off is the amount of stuff I am surrounded with. As I said, I feel I am acutely aware that I am a completely different person than I was when Curt was here. Now, when I think about life and the things that surround me, I also think about my husband’s body being ashes in a box sitting quietly next to my bed. I think about the fact that it simply doesn’t matter what we have or don’t have in material possessions and has everything to do with what we have or don’t have in our souls. I am acutely aware that I see the world through a different lens.


As I reflect on these truths, I walk around the house that my beautiful husband and I created together with quiet wonder. The sweet memories of laughing and crying, tenderness and strength, overwhelm my senses and make me lose my breath. I can touch the smooth surface of the counters he built with his strong hands and the rough surface of the beautiful chimney that he slowly and painstakingly chipped dry wall off of so we could enjoy the original beauty of our 1903 home. I can see where we slept on the floor the night we got the keys and didn’t want to leave our new dream. The tangible signs of our love are everywhere; this both comforts me and exhausts me.


This week I am beginning to go through it all and consolidate so I can move out of our home. As I begin this step, I feel overwhelmed with the idea that I have to look at a piece of our history and make a decision. How do I begin, and, if I know that this stuff doesn’t really matter, then why am I having such a hard time letting go of it? A close friend said something that has helped me with this, he said… It’s just stuff, stuff isn’t real, but the feelings you feel when you see it, are very real… That was it. I feel so unattached to stuff yet feel desperate when I think of no longer seeing Curt’s shirts or his tools. That is it, the stuff is absolutely not real yet the feelings that I get when I touch them are more real than I can describe in my earthly terms.


As I touch this stuff that surrounds me for perhaps the last time, my weakness surrounds me and I grasp for its opposite as I begin the journey onward.

Over a year ago I lost my whole world on the river. My home, my lover, my best friend, my everything. Through this loss, through this journey of anguish, I have also found something beautiful. I have found a woman that can do anything because the one thing she didn’t think she could do, she has already done. A woman who now understands more than she ever could have imagined she could, or ever would, know. I have found truth in a world that is spinning out of control. As I walk into this next chapter, I do so with beautiful memories etched deep into my heart. I walk forward with my husbands heart in my own and will slowly let go of the rest.  





1 comment:

  1. Melissa, I have never lost a love in the way that you have, and I can hardly imagine the depth of what you are going through, but I am in awe of the insights that are coming to you that you are sharing on this beautiful blog. I can relate to many of the feelings that you describe here as I felt them when my parents died, and more recently when I sold the last of my family's effects and the solar house that my mom built and in which we all lived for so many years. What you said before about the beauty and the pain is so true! Thank you for sharing your journey, and may God's blessings be with you always.

    ReplyDelete