Thursday, December 26, 2013

Survival

We survived Christmas 2013. That's about all I can say. I don't feel like Amy of us have been particularly graceful through the process, especially not me. I feel particularly graceless, as a matter of fact. 

 I'm hurting. I'm being as kind as I can to others, but I hurt. Mom wants to go visit her aunt. It would add 5 hours to our trip should we "swing by" on our way home. I don't want to go. Libby sure as HELL won't want to go. So Mom is playing her wounded card. 

I seriously have no tolerance for anyone who plays like they are hurting more than me. Yes.  Your life sucks. It seriously does not suck worse than mine. Lemme talk to a mother who has lost two kids, and I'll acquiesce. There are people who hurt as much as I do. NO ONE hurts more. 

Yes, there is a bigger rant there than just my mother. No, it does not involve anyone else in the house with me. 

Everybody has to deal with their own shit. 

Not my problem. 

I'm dealing with the fact that I spent Christmas without my first born. Sleeping in a room literally across the hall from Katie's room because we have to have everyone here at the ranch because it's Christmas. I'm showering in her bathroom, using towels she's used. 

I went into her room here. I touched her bed and her makeup and her clothes. I saw her pictures and her displays. And I miss her. And I cry. 

Monday, December 23, 2013

Christmas Eve, 2013

O come, thou Dayspring, come and cheer
our spirits by thine advent here;
disperse the gloomy clouds of night,
and death's dark shadows put to flight.
Rejoice, rejoice. Emanuel shall come to the O Israel. 

I don't feel like rejoicing. It doesn't feel like Christmas. I really feel like I'm stuck in some Beckett-esque surrealist play. Except when it hurts. 

I try to keep busy and keep going. She is everywhere because she is within me. She is intangible, though. 

O come, o come, Emmanuel shall come to thee O Israel. 

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Nightmares

I've been sitting on this one for a long time, contemplating if I should even blog about nightmares.  I'm still not sure, but I've been haunted by nightmares lately.  Thankfully, I've not had the same nightmare twice, but the ones that I have are the ones that stick with you for days after.

The biggest baddest one was back when Katie's accident just happened.  We were all together, and for whatever reason we decided that we wanted to have a natural burial out where she was killed.  Instead of a funeral home or whatever, we had her at home with us.  She looked like she looked when we saw her before the cremation.  I was holding her in my lap, crying, and I looked over and Libby just laid over on the couch where she was sitting.  She just... died... right before my eyes.  Just... died.  Joe came in and was yelling at me, asking how I could have killed them both.  And in my dream I KNEW it was my fault.  I had done this terrible thing.  I just wanted to die myself.  I woke myself up crying.

I still haven't been able to shake the feeling that I was the cause of Katie's death.  Now I look at Libby with fear that something will happen to her.  That by some neglect I will kill her, too.

Rational Me knows the truth.  Rational Me says that It was not my fault.  I wasn't there.  It wasn't something I did.  It was a mechanical failure that caused the accident and killed my baby.

Rational Me knows that I'm not neglecting Libby.  If anything I'm hovering too closely over her, making sure she eats and drinks and gets to school on time with all of her homework done.

But deep down there are things that I can't shake.  And I won't be able to shake them until I know what mechanical failure actually happen.

If I can shake them then.

I feel like I'm going to be haunted by this for life.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

By the numbers

15. How old my beautiful daughter should have been this year. 

14 years, 10 months, 16 days. How old she was when she was killed. 

8,035,200. The number of times my heart has beaten since the accident.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Wednesday the 11th

What comes two days after?

Friday the 13th. 

Three months exactly from the last Friday the 13th. 

Three months exactly from Katie's accident. 

It feels fresh and painful all over again. It's like the 1 week mark. It's the first of many Friday the 13th anniversaries to come. 

Dammit. 

This week is kicking my ass. (And Libby's and Nana's and Joe's and Cheryl's and...)

This is something that I knew would happen when it was Friday, September 13th. But somehow I didn't think about it being Friday, December 13th. 

Damn. 

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Mary must be my Patron Saint

I look at my Nativity set that's up on top of a cabinet in the parlor. The colors are rich and the expressions are gentle. It's all about the awe. 

When Katie was in 5th grade and thought she might want to live with her dad, I found myself sitting in church and looking at Mary's altar every Sunday. She had a beautiful son, raised him well, and had to lose him. I would think that if she could do that, I could let Katie live with Joe. That time she changed her mind. 

Katie decided in 8th grade that she really did want to go to high school in Oklahoma. She told me, "If I don't live with Dad now, I never will."  Then I prayed to Mary for her to give me strength to handle it until she came home. I was thinking a year, maybe just a semester. Mary who had to watch her son be crucified would understand my plight. She would watch over my baby until she came home. 

Then... 

Then the unspeakable happened. 

How can I not look to Mary now?  She must know my grief and anguish and pain and anger and fear.  I wonder if she railed at God for giving her something so precious only to have to lost forever. 

I doubt she was the calm beatific Mary. If she was anything like me she had a hard time bathing and eating and sleeping. She may have had "grieving mother hair" like mine. 

It's easy to say that Jesus went to Heaven and is at the right hand of God. 

It's easy to believe that Katie is in Heaven now. 

But that doesn't stop my grief. The loss that is too painful to bear at times. The tears that drip on the floor as I write these words. 

Believing in Heaven doesn't alleviate the pain. 

Monday, December 9, 2013

Back to the basics.

As my sweet Other Mothers are reminding me, I've got to go back to the basics this month. Breathe in. Breathe out. Eat, drink, pee, repeat. 

I've never stopped with the "grown up sippy cup" of water.  (Thanks, World Market for the 32 oz tumbler with lid and straw. It has been the only thing between me and dehydration for 2 months and 26 days.) At the beginning I had to have someone fill it and put it in my hand. Now I fill multiple cups multiple times per day. I have a tendency to lose them within the house. 

Naked Juice protein drink reminds me of the Slim Fast shakes in college. I even put mine in the blender today with ice, just to relive that sensation. And it starts my day with protein even when I don't think I can eat. 

Tonight I went to Noodles and Company to pick up dinner. Somehow I didn't know a dad from school manages the place. His daughter played volleyball with both of my girls. He got our dinner for us tonight. 

Breathe. Eat. Drink. Pee.

And someone watching over to help me remember to do it. 

That's back to the basics. 

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Mixed feelings.

I am so surrounded by love. 

On Friday Wendie and her middle daughter drove in from Nebraska and surprised me. I was so shocked! She has always said she just wants to hug me while I cry. I obliged her. 

Saturday was wonderfully chaotic as friends and family descended on the house to help with last minute cleaning and tweaking and all the appetizer making. 

10th Annual Cookie Exchange was a success. Lots of cookies and laughter. The house was filled with love. But if I stopped. Even for a moment, I started to cry. So like Dori in Finding Nemo, I just kept swimming. At one a.m. I crawled in bed and was almost instantly asleep. 

Today was friends and family and girls to sleepover with Lib, so fairly busy. Not much downtime. The Other Mothers came over this evening, and we gave them the thank you gifts. 

We decided on a code phrase for me to send in a text message when I'm drowning. I'll just have to text, "It's really shitty."  Very subtle, but they can read between the lines. 

Right now I'm in bed. I've got a nagging headache. Probably partially because I'm weepy. Partially from not eating well today. Partly because some days I have headaches. 

It's downtime, and I'm processing. Just a review of the weekend running in my head. I've a lot of people who love me. A friend from college who married a dear sorority sister from college emailed me on Saturday to tell me that I am loved and have more friends than there are flakes of snow. 

That's a blessing. 

I just wish I didn't need them so desperately now. 

Friday, December 6, 2013

Hard so I cry

It's been a hard two days. I'm crying again. I'm trying to put on a good face and at least get my stuff done that I need to do. 

Right now I'm just on the couch. Doing what I do best. Crying. 

It's a hard season. 

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Random

1.  I'm back to a tank top and a hoodie today. It's been a no bra kind of day. 

2.  I either have no motivation or I'm exhausted. Or both. 

3.  I made vegetarian northern bean soup for dinner tonight with cornbread muffins. I also pulled a loaf of zucchini bread out of the freezer. I'm glad I baked it back in August. 

4. I cried while listening to the Into The Woods album today. 

5.  We are all easily distracted here. None of us can stay on task for long. 

6. More tired = more easily distracted. I often can't remember a question I've just asked. Or even remember that I asked a question. 

7.  I want to fix my hair and makeup, but it's hard when sometimes I even forget to shower. 

8. I bought a new comforter at Target for my bed. That's the first new comforter I've had in 14 years. My last duvet cover and coverlet literally fell apart.  I wouldn't have bought it had Libby not insisted. Low priority.  Though it will look pretty for the cookie exchange. And my down duvet is under the new comforter. 

9.  The 10th Annual Cookie Exchange is Saturday night. Katie REALLY wanted to be here for the party. We'll REALLY miss her. 

10.  I need a hug. 

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Gah!

I don't want to wear clothes. Clothes make my skin crawl and itch. 

I don't want to have any lights on. Lights make my head hurt. 

I don't want to listen to anything loud. Loud noises startle me. 

I'm just extremely sensitive right now. 

And I'm going to cry again. 

Crying posts

I don't know how many crying posts I can make or you can stand. Hence, my reluctance to blogging these last few days. 

I cried yesterday. A lot. One of Katie's friends (a boy from here, a friend since early grade school) lit a tree in memory of Katie. I told the story of last Wednesday's "Katie" phone call to my counselor. I heard "I'll Be Home For Christmas" at the grocery store this morning. I missed her particularly keenly today while sitting on the couch. 

I'm crying now. Blogging about how I've cried. 

I feel like I've fallen back into the depths of grief. 

Someone explained grief like trying to make it around a giant slippery pit. (The Pit of Despair, if you will.) The edges are steep and slippery and you have to carefully edge around to the other side. Some days you slip at the very beginning. Some days you make it almost all the way around only to slip in almost at the end. 

One misstep. One second lacking focus. Or sometimes no reason at all. And I'm back down in the grief. Unable to do anything but try again the next day. 

Maybe tomorrow. 

Maybe next week.

Maybe. 

Monday, December 2, 2013

Wash, rinse, repeat

Or cry, dry, repeat. 

Damn. It seems like I cry a lot. Tears are good, but I feel like I should run dry sometime. 

Crying releases stress. It cleanses emotion. I've read that there are stress hormones that can only be shed by tears.  I've heard it said that only salt water can heal you: tears or the sea. 

People are so kind. Katie has been on my mind so much. People are telling me their Katie stories, which I love. And I weep. 

Tears are streaming as I write. Forgive ant typos because I can't see. 

Oh God, I miss her so much. It hurts I want to keen. 

I want my baby back.


Saturday, November 30, 2013

Something hard, something right

Today we start the drive back to Milwaukee. It's been a good trip for us so far. The traveling was easy coming down. I hope it's not so hectic going back. 

The visit itself has been good, but emotional. We've cried quite a bit, but as someone pointed out, crying is also good. 

I went back in the pasture to see Katie's tree. It's at the accident site. I just sat in the truck and looked. I was afraid of getting out and breaking down completely. 

I've made mistakes in my life. (We all have.) I did have a big hand in doing something right, though. Those two beautiful girls. 

I think they're pretty special. 

Thursday, November 28, 2013

First Thanksgiving

In this year of firsts, here's another one. I know this is just going to be a long line until we hit the year of seconds. Two months, 15 days. One month since her 15th birthday. 

Last night Cheryl and I were out buying last minute things when my phone rang. The caller ID came up "Katie Diddy."  I was driving down the interstate when I picked it up with my heart in my throat. I don't know why I expected, but I did. It was Joe calling from his home phone which I had associated with Katie. I nearly cried with disappointment. And then I just cried. 

It's been a holiday of tears. 

We'll make it through. 

Monday, November 25, 2013

Self-assessment

When I have time and I'm alone, after my shower I do the Nekkid Self Assessment. You know the one: you scowl and turn this way and that, assessing the good, the bad, and the ugly (to extend a theme). 

I frown a lot lately. I've lost muscle mass, but I've also lost my motivation and some will. Bad combination. What if I become a skinny Jabba the Hut with too much skin?

Why do I have such irrational fears?

Maybe it's because the unthinkable happened. You know, that God-forbid-put-that-thought-out-of-your-mind thing. The I'm-phobic-about-snakes-but-put-me-in-a-pit-of-them-and-then-add-some-spiders-before-THAT thing. 

IT happened. 

How short a stretch is it to irrational fears after that?  Pretty damn short. Like a butt shift in the chair short. 

I can see how people develop serious anxiety from trauma. If the unthinkable happened once, how close is it to happening again? 

Don't freak out on me. I'm not bringing in a royal taster for Libby's food.  I've not wrapped her in bubble wrap (though she did that to herself yesterday for fun). I'm not in need of serious anti-anxiety medication. I can just see it out there. 

It's like the tiger in the cage at the zoo. You solemnly nod to it. You acknowledge it's presence. You concede it's power, that it could probably take you any day of the week if given the chance.  You thank God and modern materials for barriers. 

I hold hugs for longer. I hold hands more.  I hold Libby tighter. You call. You text. You come over. 

We keep it at bay with the light. 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

The good. The bad. The ugly.

The good. 

Today we had our tree trimming party where everyone can over and helped us decorate. We had soup and homemade doughnuts. Everyone was great. The house looks great. It was good. 

The bad. 

Mom, Lib, and I miss Katie so much, we've all cried a lot today. It's a sobbing day. 

The ugly. 

Libby wanted to know why her dad and I divorced. How can you quantify a million different things?

Saturday, November 23, 2013

First one to bed

I was downstairs, and I realized that I couldn't keep my eyes open. Why in the heck would I fight to stay awake for no reason on a Saturday night. Oh, how the mighty have fallen. 

I went to see Catching Fire tonight with a bunch of people. Nine of us. Three twelve-year-old girls. One ten-year-old girl. Four adults. One fourteen-year-old boy who was Katie's friend. 

The movie was very good. It just made my missing Katie keener. To the point that after the movie, I told Katie's friend that I needed to hug him whether he wanted it or not (he's not a real hugger). In typical teen boy fashion he submitted with good grace, but no reciprocity. Doesn't matter. It was probably good for us both. 

What I want is to curl up into someone and hide. Or rest my head.  And cry. 

And I'm really just tired on top of everything. 

I'll be better tomorrow. After all, tomorrow is another day. 

Friday, November 22, 2013

Waiting

I'm outside the school waiting tonight. It's a middle school dance. I dropped off 6 girls. I don't know how many are being picked up and how many are coming back home with me. It's over at 8:30. Even though I live 5 blocks away, it's good to get here and get my parking space and "cop park" in it. 

I can see the door. I can see into the cafeteria. I can drive out of my space. I've learned a few tricks over the years. 

The girls were all giggling when they came to our house after school. They giggled while they changed clothes and put on make up. 

It made me think of other times and other girls. 

I've looked at old pictures today as I was decluttering. I found Katie's second grade "portfolio" of her work. 

I miss her so keenly today that it takes my breath away. 

I'm waiting until someday that maybe it won't. 

And I'm waiting to hold my baby again. 

Thursday, November 21, 2013

No hush-hush

When I was a young child my daddy died suddenly. I was four. There is discussion as to how he died (heart attack or an aortic tear), but it was traumatic. I was four, however. One thing I remember clearly was my mom's instant grief (later mirrored by my own).  I also remember (this is through a four-year-old lens, so forgive me for errors) the almost as instant feeling that I couldn't talk about my daddy to my mom. I really didn't talk about him to my mom for many years. And it still hurts her to talk about him. As a result, it still hurts me to talk about him. 

I'm not going to erase Katie from my vocabulary. I'm not going to stifle talking about her. Libby and I need to say her name, over and over because she was real. She has too many good qualities to pretend we don't miss her and still love her. 

So there is no hush. And if I cry, I cry. She is as much a part of me as when I saw the pregnancy test and told Joe, "It's a girl. We'll name her Katherine and call her Katie."

She still lives on in each of us that she touched. 

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Do you really want to read my blog?

My mom asked me today where she can read this blog. I told her that to would be glad to let her read this, but she had to know that it is raw. It's grief. Naked grief. 

I haven't invited her to read because I don't think she can manage it. I think knowing the pain inside me would make her pain overwhelming. She cried when I told her that is a grief blog. 

Joslyn said that it's beautiful and terrible. 

Many people say that they sob while reading it. 

It's the pain inside me leaking out, one small tear at a time. I can't let it all out at once; I would drown. I can't keep it inside; I would explode. It's raw. 

Today Libby had my phone, and she was looking at the pictures.  November pictures. October pictures. No late September pictures. Back to school pictures. August beach pictures with Katie. July cabin pictures with Katie. June graduation pictures with Katie. May camping pictures with Katie. Katie pictures. Everywhere. 

She flipped through the pictures going backwards. Quickly at first. Then slower. Gradually stopping at a photo of Katie and one of her friends. Enlarging it. Looking at Katie's smile. And she teared up. And I wept. 

Taking a break from moving some furniture, there we were, lying on a mattress on the floor. Missing Katie. 

Monday, November 18, 2013

Time flows strangely

Time is flowing strangely again.  Days are weeks, and weeks are minutes.  I feel like I've had a whole week today. No, I didn't nap. My counselor suggested that I should try and nap. 

I should also drink more of the chicken stock that has been made for me. 

And I should drink more tea. Though tea at this stage and I will be even sleepier.  I found some Sleepy Time tea for the Keurig. That + honey = snooze city. 

I'm dead on my feet right now. I should be asleep. But Libby discovered more homework than she had done, so I'm sitting up to help her keep going. I'm hopeless helping her with it now as she is working on her German. 

I've been in and out of the house. I went to counseling. Then home. Then the grocery store, school pickup, Target, then home again. Maybe that's why time is shifting on me: I've done more and varied things. 

Maybe it's just the time warp.  Maybe it's just time for bed. 

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Hearing things

The best thing about this morning is listening to the girls giggle downstairs. I can almost pretend to hear Katie's laughter in the group. 

I was reading yesterday about children and grief and the article mentioned 

"'hysterical materializations' (transient visual or auditory misperceptions of the loved one's image or voice) and many other potential symptoms. These symptoms are similar to those often seen in the acute post-traumatic period."

http://teacher.scholastic.com/professional/bruceperry/child_loss.htm

That reminds me of the first night Libby was home and was trying to sleep in her own bed alone. She kept hearing Katie ask her to go downstairs and bring her a Coke. (Which she would often do. Libby would bring two Cokes and they would laugh and giggle and talk while drinking them.). It was real to the point that Libby got up and started down the stairs before she realized. 

I think we all hear Katie and see Katie. She's at the very least in our hearts and on our minds constantly. 

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Thankful attempts

I'm thankful for hot showers that help my congestion.  Maybe now I'm upgraded to a Demi Moore voice. 

I'm thankful for friends who insist I get out of the house, who make dinner, and insist that I bring Lib with me. 

I'm thankful for friends who bring dinner to the house and stay and share with us. (And who understand that impromptu sleepovers during our dinner evenings are important, too.)

I'm thankful for the Four Horsemen (girls) who are coming over for Lib tonight. While I like quiet quite a lot, the laughter of those four girls cheers my heart. 

I'm thankful for friends who take me to lunch. Just different scenery helps. 

I'm thankful for hugs in the halls at the girls' school from the students and from the teachers. 

I'm thankful for Amy D who showed up and helped me to actually drag the trash from my garage to the curb Thursday night. 

I'm thankful for the garbage men who hauled all that crap away Friday morning at 7 a.m.

I'm thankful every time I park in my garage. 

On days when making Keurig coffee feels hard, I'm thankful for the prayer and love you send. 

Friday, November 15, 2013

iPhone blogging

Why iPhone blogging is easier than laptop blogging for me...


Rayna Roo, get off the laptop. 

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Dread, grief, and Marx

Today a dreaded thing turned out to be better than I was anticipating. 

Today we met with Katie's counselor. It wasn't the big meeting that I anticipated. It was conversational.  It was gentle. It was like coffee with a friend you haven't seen a while. 

The most touching thing that she said was how often she thought of Katie. Everyday. Like the rest of us. She had never had a patient die from any cause in all ofher years of being a counselor. I think she's grieving just like we are. 

On a separate note, I read an interesting article about grief (or was it on disease?). Maybe it was from one of you? It was about the hierarchy of grief (or something like that).

It said that you should draw a bullseye with the person(s) grieving the most in the center, then in the next larger ring the next layer of person(s) the second most grief, then so on until you've covered all the people. This is the hierarchy. The center can complain or bitch to anyone in any layer about anything. Then the next layer can bitch to everyone in a larger ring, but not to the center. This goes out to the outer edge of the rings. You can gripe/moan/complain to someone in a larger circle, but not to someone in a smaller one. I guess if you're in the largest circle you get to complain to your dog or cat.

I found this interesting for two reasons, one because it made sense to me because of how you guys treat me. Secondly, because I've had friends since who have had bad things happen to them, too. (Lost a grandmother, son, friend.) And I realize that my life on their hierarchy is much lower--I'm in a much bigger ring for them. So, if I can't emotionally manage their complaints, I need to remove myself from the vicinity.

I'm not saying Marx had everything right, but:

From each according to his ability, to each according to his need. 


Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Beautiful girls

All these beautiful girls are turning 15. 

It takes my breath away to think that I don't have a 15-year-old girl here in earth. 

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Missing Things 2

This is another installment of what I remember from the first. 

The question was, should we let Libby see her. None of us knew the right answer, but we did know that it wouldn't happen before the Oklahoma funeral. We decided to bring a counselor into the discussion. I asked the question via text message. She said she'd consult and thing and get me a response Friday morning. 

Wednesday afternoon we met with the ministers who would be doing the service there. Katie hadn't been there long enough to establish herself in a church.  They were very nice, recommended from a friend. They are hospice ministers, so they were able to help us tell the story of Katie so that try could tell her story at the service.  Libby was in that conversation, though she wasn't at the first. She found out what was going on and she wanted to be a part because she has always been such a part of Katie's life. Of course. That made such sense. 

My aunt, cousin, and cousin's two children came in from Texas Wednesday night. My brother, sister-in-law, and niece arrived sometime after that.  

Thursday was still a blur. Amy and Linda came from Tulsa (or Berryhill to be more specific), and family was there, so Thursday was a crash of people for me to cry on. I had showered that morning, but it came time to get dressed. I couldn't dress myself. Amy actually helped dress me that day. I remember sobbing in the bathroom.  Black dress. Lip balm. Purse. Kleenex. Again, my legs didn't work. 

A friend drove us to the church. Joe. Cheryl. Me. Libby.  Into the receiving area. I promoted Amy to family status so she could be Libby's security. There were many people there already. Mainly family and very close friends. More of my family. Joe's family. Cheryl's family. I had to sit. I couldn't walk any further. People came to me. Then it was time. 

Joe and I walked in together.  Family sat. The service was blurred through tears. Katie's choir sang "Let Everything That Hath Breath." Her choir director sand Amazing Grace. The ministers gave beautiful eulogies/remembrances of Katie.  It was short, but beautiful and poignant. 

We had a cookie reception and receiving line in the gathering area. So many of my friends came. I was shocked. I think I  spoke with just about everyone who was there, including many people I did not know. Katie's choir was there. Each of them hugged me and cried. I remember telling every girl that they were beautiful and that Katie loved each of them so much. 

Libby finally had all she could manage, so  as we had prearranged, Amy and Linda took her out to get some food, knowing that they would bring her back to the house. 

Finally it was over. Back to the house for a smaller reception with food. I was exhausted. I just went into the cottage so that I could have a buffer against the masses. Dear friends came, held my hand. Cried. 

I could have just laid over and slept at that point, but I knew that I would be awake in 3-4 hours and then up for another 20 hour stretch. I simply could not sleep at that point. 4 hours was the longest I could manage. 

Food was brought from the main house to the cottage. More than we could have ever eaten.  My appearance was requested at the main house. I walked over barefoot, still in my dress and talked to old friends from Young Democrats. We aren't so young any more. Then one friend pops into my face and says, "Oh Good!  You're here! We can take the picture now!!"

I was so shocked I couldn't breathe. They wanted a group picture of all the Young Democrats. At the reception for my baby's funeral. I had to get out of there and sit down. I had to be able to breathe again. I couldn't memorialize that day with a smiling photograph. I couldn't memorialize that day with any photograph. I finally escaped. 

Monday, November 11, 2013

I knew it was probable

Its nice that I can just type in my blog post since I have very little voice. It's early this year, but I usually get sick and lose my voice at least once per year. My guess is that this is just the first time this season. 

I'm taking my vitamins and eating the best I can, but the doctors in my life say that grief makes you more succeptable to whatever virus or germ is walking by. (Again, prepositions.)

So, it's pretty quiet here. 

I guess you could say that I'm sick and tired. And sad. 

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Thankfulness (not crying)

Seems like all I do is cry. I'm glad that you're supporting me in my grieving process, but there has got to be something more. I will cry. Don't get me wrong. I have a lot of tears to go.  I will also try to be thankful. Here goes nothing. 

I'm grateful for my friends who have mentally, emotionally, and sometimes literally carried me these past 8 weeks and 2 days. You got a phone call, and you came immediately over.  You held me, cried with me, cooked for me, scheduled for me, packed for me, did my laundry, cleaned my kitchen, bought groceries, took me out of the house, bought me coffee, brought me tea, prayed, called, mourned, cheered those days when I actually wore a bra, held my hand, raked my leaves, cleaned my garage, drove me when I could not drive, did a thousand other things, both great and small, and, especially, you loved me. I'm grateful beyond words. 

I'm thankful that my last words to Katie were loving. 

I'm thankful especially for my family, which oddly includes my ex-husband, his wife, their daughters, and their extended friends and family.  Blood *and* choice make families.  I couldn't do this without my mom, brother, and sister-in-law. 

I'm thankful for Katie's friends who hug me every time they see me. Even the boys. 

I'm thankful for Lib's friends who have loved and supported her from the moment the call came. One was here, others came. They both come over and invite her over.  They say this is the fun house. (Even though they drink koolaid or cheap soda, eat popcorn, pretzels and cheap pizza, and I have every movie beyond PG13 blocked.)

I'm so thankful for Libby. She gives me a reason to get out of bed and breathe in and out all day.  I need her right now like I need air. 

I shed buckets of tears just writing this. 

I wish I had no reason to be this grateful. 

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Productive

It's another new standard: productive. I remember when productive meant actually working a 10 hour day and then doing more when I got home. Now, my productive week included spending 3 days steaming and scrubbing the bathroom floor. I also had help cleaning my garage so that I can park two cars in it. 

Now I'm exhausted. 

But it feels productive. Like I've done something worthwhile. 

And this evening instead of dinner, Lib and I ate a huge bowl of popcorn while watching a movie. Not gourmet, but productive in the sense that we were together. Just be-ing together. (Sometimes you must separate out the "be" part.)

Be still and know that I am God. 
Be still and know that I am. 
Be still and know that I. 
Be still and know that. 
Be still and know. 
Be still and. 
Be still. 
Be. 

I have to continue to just BE. And I will take every chance that I can to just BE with Libby. I'm thankful for all the times I could just BE with both girls. I cherish those memories. 

Friday, November 8, 2013

8 weeks

No matter how you count it, it's 8 weeks today. 

Before Katie I had a miscarriage and had to have a D&E at 13 weeks. The baby had stopped developing at 8 weeks, but my doctor explained that because I wanted so badly to be pregnant, my body held on for longer than it should have. The anesthesiologist said it was the saddest thing he had witnessed because I cried from the moment they gave me the anesthetic until long after I woke up. He kept wiping tears during te procedure. 

I remember being 8 weeks pregnant with Katie, thankful for morning sickness which proved I was still pregnant. I remember that 8 week ultrasound because my doctor wanted me to know that everything was okay. 

Eight weeks I was on pins and needles, waiting. Dreaming of Katie. I knew from the pregnancy test that it was a girl and we would name her Katherine and call her Katie. 

Eight weeks of anticipation and love. 

Now eight weeks of love and sorrow.  

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Random Wednesday (on a Thursday)

1.  I've been confused as to what day it is all week long. I usually have a fairly good grasp on the day of the week if not the day of the month, but Hell, I'm totally screwed up this week. I'd probably have to drop something to check gravity to figure out up or down. 

2.  Everything is also fuzzy this week. My eyes. My brain. I've driven and missed turns that I haven't ever missed before. 

3.  My eyes have not improved any more. I keep hoping that they will start to improve again, and I can make do with just part-time reading glasses. I am afraid I'm going from no glasses needed to bifocals (at the least) in the last 2 months.  And my complaint is not the bifocal business. Dude, I complained about that Before. I could not care less about vanity now.  Now it is just one more appointment and one more explanation I have to make. "Well, the changes began when I lost my daughter in an accident..."

4. Last night I was snuggling with Libby and I kept thinking about how warm she is and how cold Katie was the last time I held her. 

5.  I don't think I can go any further in my random musings today. 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Sisters

I woke up thinking about Libby. Not unusual. She's on my mind as much or more even than Katie. Amy wrote about mourning the loss of "me."  I'm also mourning the loss of Libby and Libby's loss. 

Libby lost the single most important person in her world. I'm her mom. It feels pretty hard to say, but the bond between Katie and Libby was far stronger than any bond they had with anyone else. Stronger than mine (and mine is FIERCE). Stronger than Dad's (and his is TIGHT).  People ask me how it could be that my daughters are so close.  (Present tense/past tense. Meh. Life, love, and time are fluid around here. Bear with me as I slip back and forth between the two.) But my babies just were. They were close from the moment I brought Libby home from the birth center at a whopping 4 hours old, and Katie wove her hair through Libby's fingers then protested that Libby was pulling her hair "because that's what sisters do."  

Libby can't love Katie any more than I do.  But Libby was Katie's counterbalance, her confidant, her best friend, and vice versa.  Katie was justice, and Libby is fairness. Hand in hand to conquer the world. 

Libby's loss is just as valid as mine. And I have to watch her world crumble and be rebuilt just as she has to watch mine. That's a painful process for both of us. 

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

The first rule

The first rule of grief blogging is don't blog in public. If you try, you cry. 

I'll try again later. 

Monday, November 4, 2013

Other people's funerals

An elderly friend's 20-something grandson committed suicide, and the funeral is tomorrow. I also know the mom fairly well, though I haven't seen any of the family in a couple of years.  My heart breaks for the family, because I now know the pain of losing a child. 

I feel like I should at least go to the visitation, but I'm having an anxiety attack just thinking about it. 

I think that all I can do is to mail a card. It's about all I can consider doing. 

I need more time

I wish I hadn't lost the post wrote yesterday.  I was pretty fond of it, until I went to look something up, and it disappeared.  My brain is so mushy that I can't even remember much about what I wrote, let alone the gist of it.  I do remember the two things I was looking up, though...

-------------------------------
W. H. Auden, Funeral Blues


Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,
Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone,
Silence the pianos and with muffled drum
Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.
Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead
Scribbling on the sky the message He Is Dead,
Put crepe bows round the white necks of the public doves,
Let the traffic policemen wear black cotton gloves.
He was my North, my South, my East and West,
My working week and my Sunday rest,
My noon, my midnight, my talk, my song;
I thought that love would last for ever: I was wrong.
The stars are not wanted now: put out every one;
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun;
Pour away the ocean and sweep up the wood.
For nothing now can ever come to any good.


Hootie and the Blowfish, The Earth Stopped Cold at Dawn (Fairweather Johnson)

The hands kept spinning around the face 
But the earth stopped cold at dawn 
For a moment, then moved on 
For a moment, then moved on...

--------------------------------

Time.  It seems like time is moving way too fast.  It doesn't feel like November.  It doesn't feel like I've had enough time to grieve enough or hurt enough or cry enough for my baby.  I wish that I could stop the clocks. I want the world to stop so that I can grieve at my own pace.  Or in my own time.  Time should not keep going.

Maybe that is what is making me so anxious.  Time is not behaving the way it should.  Time should stop for me.  Time should stop for my baby.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

So damn hard

I could just write that I'm tired of life being so damn hard and quit for today. I think everyone would understand. I am tired. It is hard. I don't have enough energy to pick up my story where I left off. 

Early on I was told by a counselor that when it gets too hard, our brains will shut down that part of the emotion. I hit that at the first funeral especially. I remember it like a switch. Sobbing. Exhausted. Then...nothing. It was a blessing at the receiving line. "Thank you. You're so kind..... Thank you. You're so kind...."  People I didn't know. Condolences. Repeat. I was a flight attendant at the final gate. "Bye bye. Thanks for flying. Goodbye. Bye bye. Thank you...."

It was only broke up by the "real people." My people. The ones I whispered to in hugs. The ones I told that I was going to get through the receiving line before I collapsed. Or lost it. The ones who held my hands and heart. On whose shoulders I leaned. 

I don't have a real reason for telling you this other than maybe just to say, I need a little numb. I'm tired of it being damn hard. I'm tired of having a panic attack while sitting on my own couch, trying to read a fluff book while waiting for pizza to arrive. That's hard. 

There were good points to today. I invented a new cookie bar on the fly (Oreo candy bars). I had friends come help with yard work, and they put away the summer furniture. Amy D visited. Joslyn visited. Lib has a sleepover here tonight, and two more mom friends visited. 

So why?  Just why...everything? 

Friday, November 1, 2013

Missing things

So much of the beginning was a blur.  I have very clear memories of certain things, but most of it is filtered through tears and grief.  I was thinking this morning that I should make a record of certain things, while I'm thinking about them.  This is both for you and for me.  Someday I might want to make a hard copy record of this.  Or someday I might want to burn a hard copy of this.  Or maybe I'll just let it sit on the internet until it expires of old age.  Nonetheless, I want the world to know.

I'll do a little bit now.  Until it hurts too much.  Then I'll put it away and try again later.

I ordered in Chinese food for the three of us and for Lib's friend to eat on Friday the 13th.  It has just been delivered, and I was putting out the food when the call from Joe came.  I hadn't even popped my obligatory crab rangoon at that point.  I never ate a bite of that meal.  Someone later brought me some, but I couldn't eat it.  I still can't eat delivery Chinese food.

I remember crying face down on the kitchen floor.  I remember crying face down on the bathroom floor.  I remember people and phone calls.  People trying to get me to eat or drink something.  Mostly I just remember crying.  I kept thinking, "She was supposed to come home.  I have a ticket for her in October.  She was supposed to come home for good."  Maybe not for good in October, but at the semester.  At the end of her freshman year, for certain.  I'd already checked into how she could make the transition from block scheduling to traditional scheduling.  It wasn't supposed to happen this way.  It wasn't supposed to be ashes that I brought to Wisconsin.  It was supposed to be a sweet, smart, funny, caring, living, breathing girl.

Saturday was a blur of tears and people.  I don't know who was here or when they were here.  Someone else had to answer the phone and the door.  My closest friends and the Other Mothers/Dads, just walked  in the door.  I cried on everyone's shoulders.  I sat on the couch, freezing, in my layers and under blankets.  I told my rabbi friend on Sunday (rabbis are nice on Sunday, since they're not working) about how cold I was.  He told me that Katie was with me.  There is an old Jewish proverb that when we're cold, that is when the dead are closest to us.  Which seems right.  I know I haven't broken a sweat since, even in 90+ degree Oklahoma weather where I wore a sweater outside practically all the time and was under a blanket inside with my sweater still on.

We had more food brought than we could handle.  My brother was in charge of feeding everyone and keeping the food managed.  He labeled everything, putting it in the fridge or freezer and then listing everything that we had.  My sister-in-law kept herbal tea with plenty of honey in my hand or a large lidded tumbler full of water.  I still didn't eat. I couldn't.  I didn't think about eating or drinking or sleeping.  I just hurt.

My brother made travel arrangements.  Bridget helped pick out photos of Katie for her memorial video.  I had to think about songs for the funerals and songs for the video.  I Facebook messaged a friend from church, then I talked to the priest.   I talked to Joe about funeral arrangements in Oklahoma and in Milwaukee.  We had to talk about cremation.  We had to talk about what happened and about what Katie would have wanted.  And we cried on the phone together.  Joe kept apologizing and saying that he had tried to fix her, but he couldn't.  We tried to piece together why our serious, responsible child would have had such an accident.  It was so out of character.  She would not have hurried because she went out that evening to relax and read and watch the deer.

We flew to Oklahoma via Denver.  I couldn't manage the time change, so I was never certain that we had time for anything.  Libby insisted that I buy some lotion stuff for Cheryl at Bath and Body Works as a "hostess gift."  We bought bagels and didn't eat them.  I didn't know how we were getting from the airport to Joe's house, but knew someone would pick us up and would take us.  It was Katie's Godfather's legislative intern that picked us up.  We went to the Capitol to see the Godfather.  He drove us out to the house.  My sorority sister Amy came in from Tulsa.

The next day Joe and I had to go to the funeral home to sign the paperwork to allow the cremation.  Cheryl went with us for support.  I didn't think I could walk in the door of the funeral home.  I mean, literally, my legs wouldn't work at first.  I could barely stand, let alone walk. Paperwork.  Paperwork.  Decisions over how to contain the ashes.  Then the funeral director asked the question, "Would we like to see her?"  I had been ready to not see her until that point in time.  At that point, how could I not?  It would take about 1.5-2 hours.  We went to have our version of lunch, Braum's milkshakes that none of us drank.  Joe picked up his suit that he had bought. Then back to the funeral home.

She was lying on a bier, covered with the quilts that she had brought from Wisconsin to Oklahoma.  The lap blanket that I had made for her when she was six or seven.  The twin blanket that my Granny had made, probably years before my dad married my mom.  Joe uncovered her face first, to make sure that she was not looking like she had at the accident site where he had last seen her.  I walked over and saw her face, fell on my knees, and cried.  Those quilts and her hair absorbed my tears.  I kissed her hair and put my head on her chest and my arm over her.  She was so cold.  We hadn't had her embalmed, so she was cold from the morgue.  She was wearing her new favorite dress from a recent photo shoot with Joe and family.  Joe was stroking her head, but wound up curled up in the fetal position on the floor crying.  I just kept talking to her.  Then we said goodbye.

In the afternoon, Amy came to Oklahoma City again.  We had to buy Lib a black dress for the funeral.  Thanks to directions from Cheryl and Siri, we found a Kohl's.  Because I had very little tolerance for anything, I found a Kohl's associate, explained the situation, and asked her to find all of the black dresses in Lib's size and bring them to us.  Thankfully, she did.  I don't think I could have managed much shopping before losing it in the store.  Then off to buy shoes.  Then back to the house.

Then was the important question, should Libby see her.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Here's what I know.

I'm going to sign the contract with That Attorney. He's going to investigate. I should know if there is a prima facia case by the end of the day Wednesday. 


Wednesday, October 30, 2013

It's Wednesday again.

1.  I'm still eating casseroles from my freezer. It's a blessing to not have to worry about dinner when....

2. Somehow I wound up with 2 bushels of apples from apple picking. Apple sauce is on the stove and apple butter is in the crock pot. 1.5 bushels of apples to go. Anyone want to come help make apple pies to freeze?

3.  My never ending rotation of hoodies is good now that it's starting to get cold. 

4.  I'm getting lonely(er), though quiet is good for my soul, too. 

5. I hiked around Doctors Park today looking for Libby's cell phone. I also stopped to talk with Katie while I was there, then had coffee with the rabbi. 

6. I want another pajama day. Soon. Like now. 

7. I'm not enjoying fall this year. I don't know if it will be my favorite season ever again. 

8. On a large scale I know what I want and can't have. On a smaller scale, I want something that I can't put my finger on. 

9.  I really think that grammar will change sooner rather than later to allow ending a sentence with a preposition. 

10.  6 weeks, 5 days. Almost to the minute. 

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Days

It's just been since Saturday that I blogged. It feels like I've had several weeks in these 2.5-ish days. First there is the diary version of events that you should know, then there is the journal that will come. 

Saturday night we went trick or treating. 

Sunday morning we adopted a tiny two pound girl kitten. 

Sunday evening was the memorial. 

Monday morning we went to get passports. 

Monday afternoon we went apple picking. After that and a late lunch L and MK went back home. 

Late Monday afternoon we sang happy birthday to Katie and sent balloons to heaven for her. 

Monday early evening the three sisters made a birthday cake for Katie and shared it with her in her bedroom. 

Monday evening we had dinner made by the Other Mothers, then Joe, Cheryl and the Littles left. 

Monday night, all family was gone and the Other Mothers stayed until after 10. 

It was a long weekend. Parts of the weekend were nice. I felt Katie with us especially at the lantern lighting and at the orchard. I thought about her constantly. I cried a lot more than Libby expected. She even called Joe and me "saps." 

Joe and I separately had conversations with Katie at the orchard. Apple picking was one of Katie's favorite things. We always ate our weight in apples and laughed about how we were cheating the system. We found an unmarked variety of apples that were amazing. We were also the only people there for most of the time. 

Joe an I held each other and sobbed at the birthday balloons. Libby asked if we were falling in love again. I had to explain that Daddy and I are the only ones who come close to understanding what each of other is going through.  She said that made a lot of sense. 

I missed Katie every second. 


Saturday, October 26, 2013

It's a long road

Someone asked me today how I am. I said that it was hard to hold it together. He told me that I make it look easy. I'm sure he meant it as a compliment, like I have so much fabulous grace under pressure kind of stuff. But I don't. 

I cry at the shoe section of Burlington Coat Factory. I weep during my massages. I lose it in the driveway. (That's all today.)

Maybe he just catches me when I'm lucid. When I put sentences together with the words all in the right order. When I don't consistently and without noticing call all female children that I'm related to "Katie."  

I feel that I speak like a stroke victim.  What I'm saying is not what I'm thinking in my head. It's a huge disconnect. I can't remember the word "blue," but I see it in my head and then I say the word "red."  I tell the same three people the same thing ten times, but I never Renee to tell it to the twenty people I need to inform. 

Yeah. I'm fine. 

Thursday, October 24, 2013

A weird thing happened on Facebook

I know Facebook is full of weird stuff, but this is in the cool kind of weird category. 

Anne Lamott the author is someone I follow on Facebook. It seems like her unorthodox Christianity meshes with mine and makes me feel better.  Several days ago she put an essay of sorts as her status. That's what she does. She has these uber long status messages. This one was about permission to complain, whether it was small or large.  I complained about losing and missing Katie. Then my comment was swallowed by hundreds of others, lost, or so I thought. 

Today I received a notification that someone responded to my comment on Anne's Facebook post. Mine. The one sentence that was lost. 

"Shannon...I'm walking along side you in your pain, it's a pain we both share...I'm a few more months down the road and barely hanging on, but I AM hanging on and I hope you can get through this minute..then the next one..then the next one. My prayers and hugs to you. Keep breathing as best you can."

Someone way out there heard. 

You guys always hear. You always know. And THAT is a true miracle. You carry me. 

But what are the odds? Someone heard my little voice in the wilderness. Amid all the complaining, big and small. My tiny voice was heard. Some stranger took the time to acknowledge my pain and share her own with me. 

I friended her and she accepted. She's in San Diego, but spent 6 years in Milwaukee. She said my profile made her smile because of the Milwaukee connection. We've started a conversation. 

A weird thing happened on Facebook. My voice was heard in the vast babble; I made a new friend. 


Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Amy's words

Here is a text that Oklahoma Amy sent me. I thought I needed to share. It's huge. Yes, I'm also grieving losing who I was *before.* She was a lot more carefree and open. 

"Yeah, I get that.

I told Jody the day after it happened, this is so selfish of me, but I'm grieving you as much as I'm grieving Katie.  Obviously it breaks my heart that I'll never see Katie again, but what I'm most crushed about is that I'll never see YOU again.  Not the you that you used to be.  That person is gone.  You'll never be the same again.  And my God I loved that person.

I'll never stop loving you, of course.  I'll love whoever you become, every part of you, physical, mental, and emotional.  I will have your back as long as we live.  But "you" as you were no longer exists.  How could she?  There's no way.  So that's a loss that I'm grieving.

And a huge part of that grief is fear.  I'm just terrified for you having to live the rest of your life like this.

I'm sorry I'm rambling.  You've just been on my heart so much."

Random Wednesday

Maybe I'll make it a practice (when it suits me) to have Random Wednesday. We'll see how it goes. 

1. My soundtrack in my brain is now Why? by Annie Lennox. Or is it when she was still in the Eurythmics? I'm sure someone will look it up for me if they care enough. 

2.  I think I may start reading a book given to me by a friend of a friend who lost her son three years ago.  

3. I've got to write thank you notes to the little old ladies who expect them. And probably to the cash donors to the memorial fund. Definitely to the girl whose name I didn't recognize who sent a card and a half-dozen pink roses to the funeral. That one touched me the most. 

4. Grief? Depression? Exhaustion? 

5. This weekend will be hard. Very hard. 

6.  I put on Facebook that I needed a cookie. Cookies were delivered. Maybe I should put on Facebook that I need wine. 

7.  I still haven't touched alcohol since. I'm rather afraid of falling into the bottle. If I drink, I don't want to drink alone. 

8.  I need to find purpose again in my life.  I need Libby to consistently be in school.  

9.  *That* attorney will be here the morning of November 1st. 

10. I can't get what I want out of a lawsuit, but maybe I can prevent someone else's grief. 

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Grief

Lib's question to the school social worker today was, "Why am I not over this yet?" The social worker told her that usually grief takes 3-5 years, but in her case when she and sister were so close it will probably take a lot longer. 

It's okay that we can't see the end of it. I was told by someone else today that it's probably good that we can't see the ups and downs in front of us. It would seem too daunting. 

Monday, October 21, 2013

Reading glasses

So I'm starting to always pull out my reading glasses to read something. I can only squint for so long. It's weird, but I swear that my eyes have changed drastically in the last 5 weeks. Initially, I really had a hard time seeing anything clearly. Up close was fuzzy, across the room was fuzzy, driving was fuzzy (which was one reason why I didn't drive initially).  Now my driving is fine, but I can read green with white road signs much better than I can read others. Thank you US Interstate uniformity for figuring that out. Now my reading glasses help up close, and I can focus better on the far when I take them off. 

Grief. It does weird things to your head and your eyes and your heart and your body. 

I just wish that I had some reading glasses (or, Hell, any kind of glasses) that would make my heart see clearer. 

I am having a hard time deciphering moods. Even my own. I'm having a harder time deciphering Lib's moods--when it's going to be okay; when we are heading for a full-blown melt down. I can't even predict that for myself, who am I fooling?

I'd like glasses that would give me a compass to where I need to go. 

I'd like glasses that would show me what I should do in any given situation. 

I'd like glasses that would melt away the fogginess sometimes. (Other times I like the fact that the fog softens the harsh reality.)

And I'd like fortune telling glasses and a time machine to go back to August or early September. I'd like to prevent what happened. 

Libby has a Harry Potter time-turner. Oh how I wish it was real. 

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Wicked

We went to see the touring Broadway production of Wicked today here in the Twin Cities. I planned ahead and packed Kleenex. That was good because I needed them. 

Amy D could not have chosen a better song for Katie's funeral. People are amazed when I tell them that I didn't know the song until I saw the service program at the church. 

"It well may be
That we will never meet again
In this lifetime
So let me say before we part
So much of me
Is made from what I learned from you
You'll be with me
Like a handprint on my heart
And now whatever way our stories end
I know you have re-written mine
By being my friend..."

--For Good. Wicked. 

Now I'm crying again. I miss you, baby girl. 


Friday, October 18, 2013

What happened to fun?

At Ikea I had a panic attack walking through the area where I would normally buy care package stuff for Katie. It continued throughout the store, barely under control. To get through to the checkout I had to pass through the Christmas stuff--Katie loved Christmas decorating.  Then I was at my breaking point. I had to get out of there as quickly as possible. Sadly, I snapped at Libby while I was trying to get our stuff packaged. When we got back to the house, Libby and I headed up to our room for some quiet time. I wept some. Mainly, I just worked on my breathing and tried to center myself. 

Now I'm back out at the Mall of America with Lib, MK, J and L. It's blackout riding at the amusement park. It's just dark, not dangerous. And I'm keeping it together so far. 

So many memories jump out at me everywhere I go, even if I've never been there before. 

And I'm tired. 

Update: I did weep in the amusement park. It's hard not to weep. 

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Another weekend, another train

It's weird the train travel I've done this month already. Before last weekend I had taken the commuter train to Chicago three years ago and before that the last train ride was when I was eleven. 

But train rides are easier than driving. I can knit. I can read. I can eat dinner at 65 mph at a table with a white table cloth. I can blog. None of those things can be done behind the wheel of a car. At least not safely.  I'm all about safety. 

Be careful driving home! I say. Don't text and drive! I remind. Call me if you need me! Watch your step! Watch that last step! 

It's what I do now. Because I sometimes wonder if I said it enough. Even though the accident wasn't Katie's fault, I still fret. 

And I tell you that I love you. I'm grateful that my last words to Katie were, "I love you.  Look for the good tomorrow. I'll talk to you tomorrow night. Good night. I love you."  

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

End of the rope

I shouldn't blog when I'm at the end of my rope. I am there now. Here goes ten random facts in no particular order:

1. A personal injury/product liability attorney will probably be flying at his own expense to Milwaukee to meet me. Yes. About that. 

2. Green was Katie's favorite color, and it matches her eyes. 

3.  I threw away nail polish today because the brush annoyed me. 

4. It doesn't take much to annoy me. 

5.  I ended a text message tonight with "It's not about you."  I meant it that way. 

6.  I'm ambivalent about a lot of things. 

7.  If you're reading this, you are not someone I'm ambivalent about. I need you guys. 

8.  I wish I could smack John Boehner on his Oompa-Loompa colored head. This government shutdown was ridiculous grandstanding. 

9. I've watched no sporting events since It happened. And I'm a die hard OU football fan. I just can't bear to watch anymore. 

10.  My skin is so sensitive that some days I'd rather not wear clothes. But then I realize that I love you guys too much to scare you, so I put them on. 

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

It's a long day.

Maybe I should have said that it has been a long day. But it is still a long day. Every day is a long day. 

Tuesday the 15th of October. I've gone from good mother to okay mother to pretty good mother to WORST MOTHER EVER to good mother in the span of 14 hours. Exhausting when I'm at the top of my game, but I definitely am NOT at the top of my game. I'm not even close to being at the top of the bottom half of my game. 

But at Pier 1 she kissed the top of my head. That was the beginning of the last swing. I was forgiven. Forgiven feels pretty good especially when you've not done anything wrong in anyone else's eyes but hers. 

So many things are not in her control. Normal teenagers go through these same emotions. Hers are just exacerbated by trauma. Yes, I said it, trauma. I'm going to own the word. It's more than grief--it's also trauma. When you go from fine to destroyed in less than 5 seconds, it's trauma. 

I have to get through the trauma and then the grief and then find a way to live with the pain. 

The impossible will take a little while. 

Monday, October 14, 2013

Life goes on. Somehow. Maybe.

It has been decided that we are going on a cruise for Christmas. We all need a break from the reality of staring life in the face. I think all of us felt better this weekend for being together. 

Libby asked why there were times that Joe and I just looked at each other and didn't say anything. My only answer was that we were being the witness for each other's grief. Our grief. The burden we share. We started it. We're gonna finish it. Somehow.  This has brought us closer together as a family. 

On a separate note, we are back to couch sleeping tonight. I'm not sure why. I don't think Lib could tell you why either. It's so complicated. It's tied up in tired and emotional and sad and angry and I-don't-want-to-be-brave and it's-not-right-without-Katie. 

It isn't. Nothing is right without Katie. I cried on the train yesterday because Katie should have been with us. I miss her every second. Even if I'm laughing about something a part of me thinks, "Katie would think this is funny." 

Or "Katie would like this book."

Or "That's Katie's favorite ice cream/color/coat/quote...."

Surely there will be an end sometime to the pain. 

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Breaking rules and traditions

This has been a rule breaking weekend.  I'm back on a train, headed back to Milwaukee.  This time I invested in a roomette (small sleeper). I figured we'd need it coming back to decompress some. The top bunk is supposed to only go down at night. Dude, Libby has been in that bunk already. Without her anti roll pillow.  Without her mummy-type seatbelt. Breaking the rules. 

Peanuts, peanut butter, peanut butter cookies on the train? Yep, we've been doing that. (It's not a rule, but I'm generally more courteous than that.)  I left trash, like last night's dinner for 6 from Pei Wei, in the hotel room. Semi-gathered up. All the way Chinese-food-leftovers smell.  (Again, against my personal norms and code.)

Which goes to our breaking traditions. This year we probably won't be doing a white Christmas in Milwaukee. We may be doing a Caribbeen cruise. (Eastern or Southern or Bahamas--NOT Western as there are too many memories of Katie tied up there for Joe.) Crazy, I know, a Christmas NOT at home.  There are just too many memories there for all of us and too many spoiled Christmas plans at the Oklahoma house for Joe. (Katie was already sketching out her decoration plans in August for the Christmas decorations and had asked BOTH Joe and Cheryl separately for decorating budgets--I think she was angling for combining both to a $10,000 total for the grand extravaganza.)

Today is one month. I've dwelled on that since early last night. There was one day between the milestones. Four weeks. A day off. Then BOOM one month.  I feel like the milestones are zooming at me and I can't slow them down to catch my breath. For every second I wish that time would pass ("Wake me up when it's all over, when I'm wiser and I'm older..."), I feel that there is an opposite reaction in me where I can't catch my breath before the next wave goes over my head, continuing my drowning theme. 

Saturday, October 12, 2013

The song in my head

When you're lost and alone
Or you're sinking like a stone
Carry on. 

--fun.

Friday, October 11, 2013

Four weeks and in St. Louis

We are at the four week mark. In fact, almost to the minute that I got the call. Today we are together: Libby, Sammie, Maddy, Joe, Cheryl, and me, and we are in St. Louis. We are trying to pretend that our upside down life is normal, that we are completely human. 

And we are trying to pretend that our lives that are merged as they are can be completely normal. A whole lotta people wouldn't understand why I'm "vacationing" with my ex-husband and his family (ahem, you can guess).  They can all just suck eggs.  It's my new normal. It helps me keep my sanity. It's the only way we can all share everyone's lives without missing anything. 

So I sit, watching Nick, with Lib beside me and Maddy on my lap. It's not what I would choose, but it's a life. It's just what I've got. It's all that I've got right now. 


Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Wake me

"Wake me up when it's all over;
When I'm wiser and I'm older."

It is a nice dream. 

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Baby girl time

Libby, my baby girl, made it through a whole day at school today. This is a huge first. And for our "treat" we went to Gigi's Cupcakes where she interviewed the employees for a school project on cupcake bakers. She's baked the cupcakes and is now doing the voice overs. And she's exhausted. And I am, too. 

I didn't do much today. I was so tired I actually laid on the couch and dozed for a while. I certainly don't feel like Wonder Woman or A Good Mother or even a sloth mother. I'm just surviving. 

Maybe that's the point. Just surviving until I can feel human again. 

Monday, October 7, 2013

If we can make it through...

I tell myself I we can make it through the year of firsts, it will get easier. Today is the first big day: her dad's birthday. Then in 3 weeks hers. Then Halloween which she loved.  Not a good month to start with. Next is November and Thanksgiving and Christmas decorating. Then the Holiday Cookie Exchange  and Christmas and then New Year's Eve. 

It will make you crazy if you try to start cataloging the number of traditions you have. Everything from Family Game Night to a new pair of PJs on Christmas Eve to watching old musicals or playing games with friends and finger foods for NYE. 

I never thought our silly off-the-cuff things could be so huge. 

It's Daddy's birthday today, though. It sucks that his is the first. A part of me is grateful beyond belief that I have another 8 months to prepare. Another part of me cries that I have to prepare at all. That Joe has to go first. That ANYONE or ANYTHING ha to have a first. And I want to scream about it. And flail. And cry. And let my hurting two-year-old self throw a temper tantrum about it. 

But what good would that accomplish? I'd scare Libby and my mom. And feel worse for doing that. 

So I'll just let it trickle out as tears. 

Friday, October 4, 2013

Exhausting

It's exhausting just breathing in and out. I don't know if it's the grief or the allergies or just life wearing me down. 

Today is the three week mark. 21 days. I'll think about it all day and almost hold my breath from 6-8 tonight.  

Lib asked to stay home from school today. I said it's okay. I've got to call her in to school soon. Yesterday was a long day. School. Orthodontist. More school. Counseling. It's a Friday. As Libby says, Fridays are hard. This is only the second Friday she could have been in school. 

The first Friday, we were in Oklahoma because the first funeral was Thursday. On Wednesday, Joe and I saw Katie. Then that Friday (after discussing and consulting with counselors) we gave Libby the option of seeing her. She did. She has since repeatedly told us that she regrets seeing Katie and that she blames us for giving her the option. 

So. Fridays are hard. And exhausting. 

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Hard things that used to be easy.

I cooked dinner tonight for the first time. What I really mean is that I opened bags of frozen things and heated the contents in appropriate manners. How did I go from the even-homemade-broth-kind-of-mom to this?  But I fed myself and my girl. (That was really hard not to add an "s" on girl.  I actually wrote it plural 3 times before getting the singular form to stick.)

I rearranged my bedroom in the hopes that Lib and I can sleep in a real bed for the first time since...a long time. We've been on the couch, the sleeper sofa, or at someone else's house for probably 16 of the last 19 nights. Maybe 17. It's too hard to count.  Feng shui is out the window. We're just looking for different enough to sleep there tonight. 

My allergies are kicking my ass. What is worse than permanently screwed up sinuses from crying? Adding allergies and sinus congestion into the mix. I'll probably have to go into rehab for my Afrin addiction before I'm through. 

I've had no alcohol since before that night. No wine. No cocktail. I've only taken sleeping pills (rationed out), vitamin supplements (my immune system is in major compromised mode), allergy pills, tums, and naproxen. I think it would be too easy to stay numb. Numb would be simple, but it has a price--not being aware for Libby. And I've gotta stay functional for her. 

She asked me today why she's still alive when she feels so dead inside. I told her that she's my reason for being right now and that we would both find meaning in our lives again sometime. We just have to trust that we will. I can parrot my counselor.  That's not hard. Making her believe that I trust is hard. Making her go to school when it seems pretty pointless to her is hard. Not panicking in Target is hard. 

Meanwhile, I can sit and knit. I've started a simple knit afghan, just knitting every row. It's methodical. It helps me regulate my breathing. It may cover a football field when I'm done. I have no concept of size, when i started I just cast on however many stitches and then knit rows until I ran out of a skein of yarn, then I changed colors and knit another skein.  Someday I'll either run out of yarn and end it, or it will get too big to carry around.

It will probably always be easier to carry than my grief. 

19 Days

It's been 19 days and counting since I've lost my beloved oldest daughter. Now my beloved youngest daughter and I are trying to figure out how to be two instead of three. 

We were already working in this because Katie had decided that she wanted to try high school in Oklahoma living with her dad. Her words: Mom, if I don't live with Dad now, I'll never live with him. One month from waving at her as she rode away with him, leaving Wisconsin, boxes in the back of his Suburban, I got the call from Dad. "You've gotta sit down, Shannon.  There was an accident. She's gone," he said. "I'm so so sorry. I tried so hard to fix her."

She was driving one of those overgrown golf carts (like the ones at the zoo).  She was by herself on their 20 acres on her way back from quiet time, reading, watching the deer. It has been ruled by the police as a mechanical failure, not operator error. The steering shaft (rod? seriously, my brain is mushy) broke--probably metal fatigue, which should have never happened on a machine that new. She tried to turn. It didn't.  She hit a fence. It flipped on top of her.  There was no roll bar. The rest is history.  It was instant. 

The first was a fog of grief and disbelief--I'm still there a lot of the time. I'm processing a little at a time, marking milestones.  A day. Two. The trip to Oklahoma for the first of two funerals. The trip back to Wisconsin. The second funeral. 10 days. My baby's attempt at returning to school. Two weeks. 

Counseling appointments. Casserole delivery. Cards. But no Katie. 

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Hollow

The song in my head is the chorus from "It's Alright" by fun.  "It's alright. I guess it's all alright. I've got nothing left inside of my chest, but it's alright."  I don't know why it's in my head. It's not alright, and I never foresee a time when it will be.  As far as having nothing left inside of my chest, well, I do feel hollow. But I'd  think hollow wouldn't hurt this much.