Intimacy

Months after Mark died, I was having a glass of wine with a friend and said to her, “I don’t know when the last time we had sex was. I can’t remember.” Her eyes teared up and she said, “Did you guys stop doing it? You know a lot of couples our age stop for all kinds of reasons.” “No,” I said, “it’s because I had no reason to believe it was going to be the last time and all I want is to be able to remember every detail and I can’t. So many other stupid things I don’t care about bubble to the top except that,” and then we both cried for another tally mark in the loss column.

I don’t think I realized how affectionate Mark was until after he died and was looking at photos. Always next to me, always with his arm around me. Sometimes I think he thought I was going to drift away from him and he needed to keep a tight hold on me, but then it turned out to be the reverse. He was the one who needed to hang on. His open love of the whole package of me – the wild hair, the clothes, and the creative vibe that spilled over onto the edges of everything was apparent to everyone around us. I didn’t know couples functioned without that because I never knew any different.

There is so much to miss about Mark but the biggest hole to fill is the intimacy of being connected to him. The quiet conversations in the dark where it was okay for me to say that I was scared or worried and he would pull me closer so I could fall asleep while he kept watch in the dark. The getting the results from a mammogram and saying I was okay for another year and him saying, “I knew it would turn out fine,” but seeing the relief in his eyes. The talking about life and science and writing and the kids and the little cottage by a lake that we always dreamed of buying. Where he could fish and I would watch from the porch with a book in my hand, and the sun would set on the day and all would be fine in the world.

It is okay for me to want all of those things again for myself, and I have never asked anyone for permission for that, but for reasons I will never understand not everyone in my life wants that for me. I’d like to say that after everything I’ve been through that I don’t care and that is usually true. As Brene Brown says, “Unless you’re in the arena also getting your ass kicked I’m not interested in your feedback.” But I often do get unsolicited feedback that starts out as “If it were me….” and oh to be on the receiving end of that. What I write is a screenshot of my life, a glimpse into the window of suicide and grief, what I allow to be known. There is so much more of this that is private and sacred to me that I will never share. Things that haunt me, that trigger me, that still can make me sob in an instant, things that keep me awake more nights than not. Sometimes I think I should take this whole collection of vulnerability offline and go live in a cave where there isn’t anyone with the audacity to tell me what they would do if they were me.

But the other day I was at work and a customer asked me if I was Will’s mom. I said I was and she said she was a rep and knew him from the interior design world and loved him. I don’t even know how she made the connection but then she told me that her father died unexpectedly and she found so much truth in what I write. “You get it,” she said and we had the most genuine conversation about life and loss. The real stuff that people feel comfortable talking to me about now because they know I won’t pass judgement on them for how they live with their pain.

A few weeks ago when I saw my mom at her care facility, I knew it was the last time I would see her alive. My daughter and her husband got devastating news last month that nobody saw coming and their pain is so difficult to witness. Not a day goes by that I don’t desperately wish Mark were here to share this with so it didn’t always feel so heavy. That laying in bed next to him I could say, “Does it feel like life is taking so much more than it is giving or is it just me,” and he would pull me closer and keep watch in the dark.

That is intimacy. If you have it, I hope you cherish it. I did and then suddenly didn’t, and nobody knows better than me the risk in loving again. But it’s what I some day see for myself, along with my name as the author of a book, even the little cottage by the lake, our grandkids with their first fishing pole and a styrofoam cup of worms. It’s a choice I have made to stay true to who I am by not settling for a life of complacency, to not let loss define me, to still let my creativity spill over onto the edges of everything, to have faith that life can be full and rich and good again.

Maybe none of those things will ever happen, but in my younger years I dreamed a handsome, smart guy would come into my life and we would live happily ever after. On a hot August night he pulled up in a Chevy Nova and knocked on my door. My first thought when I saw those eyes of his was “Holy shit, this is way better than I imagined.” Now the dreams have changed because my life changed, and the only people allowed into this new arena of mine are the ones who steadfastly believe in the possibility of the unknown.

The kind like the last guy who threw caution to the wind, called a girl he’d never even seen, and then abracadabra’d his way into my life.

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9 thoughts on “Intimacy”

  1. A quiet Sunday morning and I was blessed to see this today.
    I know I have said it before, but your words help me . A lot !
    The love that you shared with Mark is so wonderful to read about.
    On days when I find myself thinking deep about a situation I am going through,
    I think to myself , what would Kathy do ?
    You have been through so much in almost 2 years now , that I admire how you
    Keep pushing on in spite of all the grief.
    I was so blessed when I met your brother and he fell in love with me in spite
    of some heavy baggage that I carried.
    Through the past 40 years of marriage he has helped me get rid of a lot of the weight. My definition of intimacy is loving someone so much that you know
    He is the only person you can really trust. And he knows I will always have his back. I’m not the writer here, but I wanted to tell you once again just how
    Much your stories mean to me. I am certain when the time is right,
    You will get all those stories you want to share and a Book will be born.
    Sending good thoughts . ❤️ Judy

  2. Write the book. Buy the cottage. Embrace the good and the love that still remains. Every trigger, memory…good or bad is a validation of the Love we shared. Our losses are different but the pain, the longing and the missing are similar. Your words express what so many of us who wear this heavy cloak each day feel. That life must be lived and this cloak must shift from time to time in order to do that. Unfortunately a letting go of the people that mean no harm, but do, must happen. It so damn hard. Hang on. Peace and light.

  3. Beautiful and all so true. Unwanted advice by people ( especially family who have great relationships with their children) have no idea how hurtful their “ advice” is.
    I hope for you that you find happiness and love again but on your terms and your time❤️

  4. What a sweet post. Your truth comes across as so authentic- and your writing has so much clarity. Damn you’re good Kathy!!!!!❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  5. What a sweet post. Your truth comes across as so authentic- and your writing has so much clarity. Damn you’re good Kathy!!!!!❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

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