It is surreal, this path I am walking. I feel as if I have slipped down the rabbit hole into an alternate reality, a reality where all the colors are so vibrant they seem to be lit from within by flames, flames that simultaneously both consume in death while facilitating rebirth. Juxtaposition in this realm are many dilapidated stone houses, miles from each other, each of which is covered by ancient weathered vines that have over a millennia adhered themselves to the rotting structures. Most of their windows are broken and as the winds move through the tattered cloth coverings billow into spider web covered interiors filled with the discarded belongings of people who have disappeared during another age. As I navigate the convoluted paths of this reality, the ones that snake from one house to another through forests that are thick and overgrown I know what my task will be. When I arrive I am to search for my truth, for Home, knowing full well that I will find neither. And as I leave the realization once again becomes clear, that no matter how hard I search I will never find my way back home. With each step I take towards the next house I can feel the increasing weight of it all as it sets itself upon my shoulders like a stone yoke. This is the nature of my grief. Millennia old, aged by time and circumstance, multiplied by death upon death as the vines of which have become one, entangled within my soul. I thought, maybe in truth, more likely within denial, that I was building a new relationship to my grief. Nothing like the death of one's child to clear the senses.
I have said that I have walked this earth before. Many times as far as I can tell. New York City was one, Budapest another, London, Moscow, maybe Vienna. I tested this once in the mid Nineties when I met my friend Diane in New York City. It was my second trip there and we had just finished a wonderful meal on the Lower East Side. As we walked out of the restaurant I said, "Let me show you where our subway stop is." I had told Diane about my history so she readily agreed as she had grown up in New York City and knew it well. As we walked snaking our way northwest I went directly to the subway stop some seven blocks away, the one that would take us back up to the Upper West Side where our hotel room was located. I had felt the same sense of deja vu when I was in London and Budapest. When I went back to New York City just after my father died three years ago I had that same feeling again. I had been sick while I was there and was grateful for a night out. I walked a few blocks over to a cinema to watch a movie with Judy Dench. On the way back to my hotel I knew that I had walked that street many many times before. Closely on its heels came the familiar refrain, that I will be forever destined to wander this earth without ever being able to go back from once I came. I wept when I got back to my room, as much as for losing my father as it was for the pervasive feeling of Other that has dogged me for the whole of my life. I suppose I am much like my paternal grandfather's sister Hazel. Hers was much like the life I have had. She communicated with the dead as I have. She had experiences that could not be explained; except by her. Once, she had had a "Visitor" who came to her when her first husband was at work one day. The visitor taught her how to play the piano, the one that had sat in the parlor collecting dust for years. When her husband came home there she sat playing like she had been a accomplished pianist for the whole of her life. Dumbfounded, he asked for an explanation and she told him what had happened. He was so unsettled that soon after he filed for divorce.
My dad came to me many times after he had died, sometimes talking with me, others not. Our last conversation was him asking me how it felt to not have parents. I was taken aback by this question at first but then I understood. My dad knew who I was but had lost the ability to speak to me from the perspective of being my father. My mom visited me after her death but in a nefarious way. She, like my paternal aunt Jeanette, turned on the high capacity burner on my stove but without the flame. Crook came to me too, albeit briefly. I only caught sight of him once as he made his way over to our favorite spot by the south face living room windows. That was where we would lay on the floor cuddling as I sang good morning to him. Larry has been around too. Just after I got home the day he died I had laid down in bed not knowing what else to do. When I rolled onto my back I felt him jump up, one of his front paws landing on my leg. Since then I have seen him a number of times. When he came in from the bedroom I got down onto the floor as I always did greeting him. When he passed by I felt him brush up against my right forearm. I saw him going into the bathroom too. I followed him in turning the bathtub spout on for him to drink from only to begin weeping as I sat on the edge of the tub.
When I said that all things originated from Larry, that he ordered every facet of our existence together, I never realized how deeply ingrained that was. Everything around me has his imprint on it and not just the obvious things that I recently alluded to in my previous blog. Every cupboard, every closet, the cabinet under the bathroom sink; they are all his. How I partially close the shower curtain, how I stack the prerinsed dishes in the drainer, when and in what order I wash the dishes at the end of the day; they are all his. How I hang my clothes in both closets, how every closet is organized, where I store my gardening shoes, it even extends to how I shop for fruit and veg. They are all his.
I always knew where he was in the house. Whenever I left, came in, or moved about, I instinctively made visual contact and if I did not readily see him I would search for him finding him asleep on the perch in the bedroom closet, or curled up under the bed, or baking in the sauna. He was my touchstone of unconditional love and seeing him brought me eminence comfort and joy. Often I would walk over, lean in, and gently kiss him. In response he would curl his head under, or stretch his legs, his whole body quivering, while settling back into a deep sleep. Now however, when I turn to look for him he's not here. When I stop at the door craning my neck back to say I love you as I'm leaving for work I realize he is no longer here. When I open a closet door, or a drawer, or a cupboard he is there but not here. As I move about my world all of these actions have become ticking emotional time bombs that can in an instant take me right back down onto my knees. And as I descend to the floor, my head bowed, my arms wrapped tightly around my chest, tears streaming down my face I utter what have become familiar words in the wake of his death, "I can't do this without you."
I am a dead man walking, my Raison D'etre having been taken from me. I've noticed that at times I have agonal breathing, that labored way in which a person breaths just before death. I do not always realize I'm doing it but when I do I accept that that is where I happened to be in the moment. Just as when my chest closes down because of my contracting muscles are tightening around my lungs, or when I feel the blood draining from my head, or I feel my body being drawn once again into the fetal position, I accept that is where I happen to be, that this is my insurmountable grief speaking its truth.
Monday, May 11, 2020
Thursday, May 7, 2020
The Loss of Oneself
Morning are typically hard for me I find it takes me some time to get my wits about me, to get both eyes open at the same time. Today is no exception. As I sit here propped up in bed, my back resting against Larry's pillow I am faced with the reality of what my life will be like now that Larry is gone. Larry and I had rituals in the morning. We had rituals about many things. How we woke up, how we said good morning, how we navigated our day together. How we ended them. Bedtime was of particular importance. Me spooning with him on the floor, then him moving onto the sofa curling up, waiting. Of me saying "time for bed" as I turned the lights out. Of me picking him up and carrying him into the bedroom. And once we were settled in bed, of me saying "lights out". He had many things he did afterwards too. Climbing under the covers for a while, then going to eat, followed by climbing onto the bedding box to stare out at the garden, eventually coming back to bed with me. Even within his dementia he remembered. Looking around I can see all of his favorite spots, the nest at the end of the bed, the perch in the closet that looked out on the garden. That was his sister Sylvia's spot before it was his. What I called the Sauna, the triangular space behind one of the bedroom doors that backed up against the wall where the heat pipe was behind, next to the radiator for the bedroom. Larry had a particular fondness for the feel of cotton sheets. He loved to sleep next to me on or against the pillow. I suppose remembering is my way of diverting my attention from the obvious on this first morning without my boy; how one navigates the pain of losing ones child. Of how one defines oneself in the face of intense loss and with the prospect of becoming "Other". In the old days it seemed defining ourselves was more straightforward. People chose their marriage or profession as their title. Mr. and Mrs. X, Doctor and Mrs. Y. In Italy doctors are afforded the title Il Docttore when being addressed, both in and out of work. People do it out of respect and to honor their accomplishments. We have done the same for priests, college professors, and lawyers just naming a few. Times have changed though. These days we seemed to have come to the understand that the search for our authenticity is how we define ourselves, especially in the midst of loss. Or it seems to be that to me within the microcosms of my life as I know it. Even within the realms of gender we have come to understand that the traditional monikers of male and female no longer apply for some. That gender fluidity is just that, the vast area that exists between the polar opposites of male and female.
Sitting here in bed, I wonder what my life will now be, how I will define myself as I face the abyss that exists in front of me.
How does one take in the vastness of losing their existence as one knows it, of losing the sun that both fed and sustained. Larry was quite literally the center of my life of which all else revolved. He was the core to which all else was ordered. I may be sounding melodramatic, but I'm not. There is a very real history to all of this. It was Larry and his sister Sylvia who fed and sustained me through the darkest days of my early recovery nearly seventeen years ago. Days during which I thought at any moment I would quite literally die. It was the touch of their bodies against mine, the sound of their purr, the life I saw in their eyes that provided for me the only link to sanity and the real world I had. When Sylvia died suddenly eleven years ago it became Larry and I; me trying to support him in his incomprehensible pain of losing the world as he had always known since birth and me of losing her and the understanding of what "Us" had been. Before her death Sylvia had been the center of our existence. She was core by which all else was ordered. Her indomitable spirit, her ability to love and be loved so unconditionally was what had fed and sustained us all; and by the grace of the Universe Larry somehow survived the loss of that and his sister, as I of mine and her. In the intervening years I adopted Crook and we forged a new definition of "Us" as Larry came out of his shell taking on Sylvia's indomitable spirit and ability to love so freely and completely. Then three years ago we lost Crook and the unique unfailing love that he had brought into our family. That is what I am again facing as I sit here, the loss of that indomitable spirit that only an animal companion can bring, that unconditional love. The loss of my beloved Larry and by extension Crook. I am also reliving the loss of Sylvia and the loss of the meaning of "Us" as I always do within the confines how my PTSD has changed my physical and emotional body's processes.
I blogged incessantly in the month after Sylvia's death. Each entry titled only by the date and time in which it had been written. Those blogs are a chronicle of the immediacy of my grief of that time. It is still extraordinarily painful for me to read them. It took me many years before I could comprehend the fullness of that loss. And now I find myself back from once I came, sitting in the immediacy of my incomprehensible grief just trusting that my next breath will come when it is meant to. I can't imagine a life without Larry. What the loss of his loving spirit and by extension of our rituals will mean for me.
His death came as a surprise much like Sylvia's had. She had been seemingly happy, content with playing and chasing Larry around the house only to be dead eight hours later of heart failure. For Larry, he had had some ongoing dental issues since January, an abbess then, a small lesion now. one that was to be addressed by surgery yesterday morning. Nothing seemingly bad or out of the ordinary. Then the mid morning call came that he had suspected bone cancer, that a small part of his jaw had already been eaten away. That left little choice in which way to go forward. Before Crook died I had had a week with him to spend grieving his oncoming death. With Larry.....
I can't say that I will blog incessantly during the next month as I navigate Larry's loss. Blogging, like journaling, doesn't hold the same value it once had in my life. Before, both were written words, a way for me to navigate and understand what was happening in the immediacy of my emotional and physical life during a time when without them I seemed lost. Now..... I suppose that is because I seem to have a better grasp of my internal processes or maybe I am just doing what I naturally do in the face of intense emotion; I isolate. Either way my path will be what it will be as I am reluctantly forced to navigate towards a new definition of self without my precious baby boy.
Sitting here in bed, I wonder what my life will now be, how I will define myself as I face the abyss that exists in front of me.
How does one take in the vastness of losing their existence as one knows it, of losing the sun that both fed and sustained. Larry was quite literally the center of my life of which all else revolved. He was the core to which all else was ordered. I may be sounding melodramatic, but I'm not. There is a very real history to all of this. It was Larry and his sister Sylvia who fed and sustained me through the darkest days of my early recovery nearly seventeen years ago. Days during which I thought at any moment I would quite literally die. It was the touch of their bodies against mine, the sound of their purr, the life I saw in their eyes that provided for me the only link to sanity and the real world I had. When Sylvia died suddenly eleven years ago it became Larry and I; me trying to support him in his incomprehensible pain of losing the world as he had always known since birth and me of losing her and the understanding of what "Us" had been. Before her death Sylvia had been the center of our existence. She was core by which all else was ordered. Her indomitable spirit, her ability to love and be loved so unconditionally was what had fed and sustained us all; and by the grace of the Universe Larry somehow survived the loss of that and his sister, as I of mine and her. In the intervening years I adopted Crook and we forged a new definition of "Us" as Larry came out of his shell taking on Sylvia's indomitable spirit and ability to love so freely and completely. Then three years ago we lost Crook and the unique unfailing love that he had brought into our family. That is what I am again facing as I sit here, the loss of that indomitable spirit that only an animal companion can bring, that unconditional love. The loss of my beloved Larry and by extension Crook. I am also reliving the loss of Sylvia and the loss of the meaning of "Us" as I always do within the confines how my PTSD has changed my physical and emotional body's processes.
I blogged incessantly in the month after Sylvia's death. Each entry titled only by the date and time in which it had been written. Those blogs are a chronicle of the immediacy of my grief of that time. It is still extraordinarily painful for me to read them. It took me many years before I could comprehend the fullness of that loss. And now I find myself back from once I came, sitting in the immediacy of my incomprehensible grief just trusting that my next breath will come when it is meant to. I can't imagine a life without Larry. What the loss of his loving spirit and by extension of our rituals will mean for me.
His death came as a surprise much like Sylvia's had. She had been seemingly happy, content with playing and chasing Larry around the house only to be dead eight hours later of heart failure. For Larry, he had had some ongoing dental issues since January, an abbess then, a small lesion now. one that was to be addressed by surgery yesterday morning. Nothing seemingly bad or out of the ordinary. Then the mid morning call came that he had suspected bone cancer, that a small part of his jaw had already been eaten away. That left little choice in which way to go forward. Before Crook died I had had a week with him to spend grieving his oncoming death. With Larry.....
I can't say that I will blog incessantly during the next month as I navigate Larry's loss. Blogging, like journaling, doesn't hold the same value it once had in my life. Before, both were written words, a way for me to navigate and understand what was happening in the immediacy of my emotional and physical life during a time when without them I seemed lost. Now..... I suppose that is because I seem to have a better grasp of my internal processes or maybe I am just doing what I naturally do in the face of intense emotion; I isolate. Either way my path will be what it will be as I am reluctantly forced to navigate towards a new definition of self without my precious baby boy.
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