Oh Mark

In the course of his career, if Mark had a paper published in a big journal or had a cool discovery in the lab, he would hang it on the fridge with a magnet like the kids did when they aced a test. The things that he was proud of last summer are still on the fridge this summer.

Scattered around here now are many photos of Mark. The one I took of him in Portugal, the one when we went to the meteor crater in Arizona, the one Maggie took of him holding Mabel on a lunch date just a few short weeks before he died and she had to go back to her teaching job. At every turn are pieces of Mark’s life that I pass by many times a day. I have stared at these photos endlessly and always sigh and think the same thing.

Oh Mark.

When did it all go so wrong? When we had Sunday dinner with the kids did you memorize everything about them because you knew it was the last time you would share a meal with them? Or did you get on your bike to clear your head that morning and end up at the train tracks without even planning it? Did you sleep at all that night? Did you ever so quietly come into the bedroom early in the morning to get your biking clothes? When you headed down the driveway and onto the street did you take one look back at the house we loved and excitedly bought together? The house I was sleeping in?

The one year anniversary of Mark’s death was this week. I went to work the day before and was useless from start to finish. At the end of the day, I cried as soon as I walked out of my building and cried when I walked into my therapist’s office. On the drive there I thought about that awful afternoon once again and wondered how I got to the police station. I remember getting the phone call from them and I remember emailing my boss that I was leaving. I don’t remember driving there, parking the car, getting out of it, or walking inside. I remember everything after that.

How is it possible that such a life changing event is so vivid and so foggy at the same time? How is it that a year has passed since then and there are weeks on end that I have no memory of? How is it that everything feels like it happened yesterday except the last time I heard Mark’s laugh? How is it that I lived with him for 35 years but have to watch videos to remember that laugh?

One of the things Mark was most proud of was being the first lab in the world to make a 2D image of an anthrax pore. He hung the copy of it on the fridge, showed all of us the image on his computer many times, and entered it as an auction item in the Science 2 Art exhibit to raise funds for STEM programs in high school. At the art opening, they played a video of each scientist explaining what their art represented. Mark was last and when it was over I said to him, “Oh my god, Mark, you were the closer.” He looked at me and asked, “What does that even mean?” “What it means,” I said, “is that they save the strongest storyteller to be the finisher. To be the closer is a big deal.” Later when he would talk about it with other people he’d say, “Yeah, it was pretty cool. Not that big of a deal except, you know, I was the closer. You know what that means, right?”

In order to make this unbearable week less so for his two grieving PhD. students, I had the idea to have some kind of sciencey sugar cookies made for them and delivered to the med center. My daughter one-upped that and had the brilliance to ask our local bakery if they could make cookies that resemble the anthrax pore. She sent them the image and they said they could and I picked them up Thursday. When they opened the box to show me I gasped, put my hand to my heart and said, “Oh you guys, you have no idea.”

One year later, Mark’s death still continues to rock my world on such a daily basis that I am unsure of everything. For months on end it was a disappointment for the alarm clock to go off and find myself still alive. That isn’t so much the case lately, but I can’t tell if I really am content to be on this side of life or if I’ve grown accustomed to the disappointment.

Every day since then another page is torn from the calendar and flutters away. I have spent every one of those days weathering the crashing waves of grief while reminding myself that there are many people in Mark’s orbit that mourn his loss too. Their loss isn’t as devastating as mine, but regardless of that I know they look to me in hope for signs of healing. Sometimes I can rise to the occasion and sometimes I can’t. All I’m certain of now is that when the time comes for my journey to end, I’ll sigh and take a long last look at one of those photos of my husband and tell him what I tell myself every day.

Oh Mark.

We did the best we could didn’t we?

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11 thoughts on “Oh Mark”

  1. Oh Kathy, this is so beautiful and heart wrenching. I drove to Kate’s house last Tuesday and saw lots of cars and I knew that day was the one year anniversary of Marks death. I so admire your writing and your honesty. Praying for strength and peace for you.

  2. Another lovely missive. The image of the anthrax spore is so beautiful – how ironic that it is so compelling and yet so dangerous. And the cookie idea and its execution is brilliant.

    I remember just where I was when I got the call about Mark; it’s as vivid as if it happened yesterday, and yet it was a full year ago. Stunning. I so hope this next year brings some light into the dark places.

  3. My father-in-law died last week, a year after Mark, almost to the day. At its heart, the thing that killed him was driven by protein misfolding. It’s strange that my thoughts for two such different people are now so tightly entangled.

  4. Sunday morning , September 8.
    Having my Tea , 8 am and this was the first thing I saw to read.
    Tears came quickly and respectfully for you and all that you have been going through and continue to endure.
    Sending oceans of love to you and I am forever grateful to have even been
    a “Speck” on the journey of you and Mark. XO

  5. Kathy, This is just another beautifully written piece to honor Mark and therapy for you. Your writings touch so many people, ones that their lives are or seen normal or some of us who deal with constant daily heartache.
    I wonder if our heart is somehow guarded by what is too painful to recall, but it doesn’t break our heart any less.
    I’m hoping and praying for you all this first year of “firsts” being over will begin to be a start to more peace. Remember you are doing your best, and no one should expect anymore from you.
    ❤️

  6. What I love is that you acknowledge what you can and cannot do. We are so often forced into roles that we cannot do but suffer through anyway. Thank you for sharing your courage by acknowledging what you cannot do.

  7. Kathleen I was thinking of you this week. My one year was 3 weeks ago. So many words you say echo in my soul as well. How is it that we keep on doing this?

  8. Kathy this is a beautiful post. Your deeply humanistic writing is a tool for healing. Amazing that a year has gone by since Mark’s death. I put it on my calendar months ago so I would be reminded of Mark and the you incredible gathering of people at his memorial service. I also wanted to be sure the business of everyday life would not erase a day and date I suspected would be heavy for you greet. I thought of you all day on the 4th and sent love your way.

    The cookies were crazy beautiful and accurate. WOW!

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