One Week & One Thousand Thoughts

I recently went to a wedding for the daughter of some dear friends. It was three days before Mark’s birthday. I had very mixed feelings about going alone, but it seemed cowardly on my part to bail when they did the opposite when my life fell apart. On the spur of the moment that day I decide to buy a new dress. Not where I work and get a very generous discount, but at another store where I pay full price for something linen and embroidered and just my style. As the time got closer for me to leave the house, my oldest daughter starting texting me to fill my confidence tank. “You got this, Mom,” she said which was sweet and not the least bit accurate. I drive to the church. The church Mark and I went to for years, the one where his funeral was, the one I’ve been to twice since he died because all I see when I go there is a box in the center aisle with his ashes in it. Some friends ask me to join them which is a huge relief. I sit at the end of the pew, eyes on the center aisle and have an immediate flashback to the funeral and the box, the box, the box. The priest, and the reason Mark became Catholic after 25 years of marriage, talks about Covid, about us needing each other, about loving bigger and more generously. He has not lost his touch. I do not cry at this wedding like I usually do. Instead, my mind drifts back to Mark’s baptism at the Easter vigil, when he came back out in regular clothes and stood on the side of the altar. He is wearing a linen suit and a light blue shirt. Most of my family has flown in for this occasion, Joe from work comes, many friends are there. In the formality of that night, while the priest offers a prayer, Mark catches my eyes, winks, and then smiles. I am overwhelmed and grateful. It had been a long journey for him to believe in something bigger and he did it on his own terms like he did everything. Now I’m utterly confused by it all. My recurring thoughts about heaven are that it seems like Disneyworld for dead people.

The reception is in the parents’ backyard and absolutely lovely. I stay longer than I planned and when I do decide to leave I find the mother of the bride. “I had a good time,” I tell her. “I made it and I didn’t think I would.” “I know,” she says and we hug so hard and then both cry because we are very aware of what is missing. On the way down the driveway the father of the bride is sitting alone in the dark on a bench and tells me good night. I think about turning around and sitting next to him for a few minutes but decide against it. These momentous family occasions when everything is good and beautiful must be reflected on alone. To do otherwise would break the spell.

The next day I go to work. This job kicks my ass every which way to Sunday. It is never not busy or without a lot to do which means that it is perfect for me now. It gives me no time to think about my life. In passing, a coworker asks if I want to go next door after we get off and have margaritas. “I would love to,” I say and ask somebody else who asks somebody else. We are all running on fumes but it is the promise of margaritas and fajitas that carry us to the end of the day. We cram in a booth, gossip about work, have a hundred ideas to make the place better if we were the ones running it which none of us want to do. I go home. I’m exhausted. I fall asleep after three a.m.

I wake up to Father’s Day and am full to the brim with sadness. I don’t even know where to place it. It’s obese and fits into nothing. I have coffee, I give myself a pep talk, I get on Facebook and see post after post of gratitude for fathers. I want to rage at all of it. My father is dead, so is the father of my kids. But my son-in-law is a father and they are coming later for dinner so I go to the grocery store. I don’t know what to make. Every summer Sunday Mark grilled, now it’s me every week flying by the seat of my pants. I get groceries and stop at a local nursery on the way home. They are closing for the season in a few days. Their plants still look great and are cheap. I get begonias. Top hat begonias that grow 12″-16″ high. Begonias on steroids seems like a good idea. The color is called badabing. I smile. Mark used to go around all the time and say in a very heavy Italian accent, “Badabing badaboom,” which always made me laugh. The kids and grandkids arrive. Things get better. I perk up. I go to bed and fall asleep sometime after 3:30. Mark used to say sleep was the street sweeper for the brain, essential to keep away Alzheimer’s and dementia. My brain is as big a clogged mess as the bathroom sink upstairs. I don’t know how to unclog either.

That Monday is Mark’s birthday. I am not in despair. It ran out the day before. I have therapy. With her kind eyes and soft voice, my therapist asks me how I’m doing. “I’m okay,” I tell her, “better than yesterday which tried to kill me.” We talk about the usual baggage and I say that these hard days have a pattern. “The week before is crushing, the day less so, the after takes about a week to work itself through me. And during it I buy myself a bunch of shit to compensate.” She says, “Within reason, right?” “Of course,” I answer back, “nothing over the top,” and smile. Later I ask myself what is within reason in the aftermath of your husband’s suicide. The crocheted sweater that drapes oh so beautifully was over the top but it looked like something a writer would wear so I bought it.

After therapy I mow the lawn. The back is easy and always looks great when I’m done. The front and side are nothing but weeds which I never think about until I’m mowing. Mark didn’t believe in using chemicals and would spend hours digging them up. I’ve neither used chemicals nor dug them up and think that if he was so adamant about that kind of stuff on the lawn he should have stuck around. Then I think about dead bees and birds and know I could do without one more lifeless thing in my life. I consider the options and decide that at least the weeds are green so from a distance the lawn looks fine. Same as me. I have to stop mowing. There is something dark laying near the base of the tree inches from the sidewalk. I think maybe it’s a stick or a beer bottle flung from a car. It is neither. I gape at it in shock. I look up and down an empty street for some explanation. Where did this come from?

I open my emails the next morning and there is something from Mark’s student. “A birthday present for him,” she writes me with a link to a paper on Mark’s work that has been published in Nature. “Nature, Kath,” he would say, “that’s the big guns.” I read the end. Mark Fisher is deceased. Why is that so brutal to read after all this time? We would probably go out for a big gun dinner that night but instead I go to work. I am working the register when a woman comes in with returns. We are supposed to ask why but I rarely do. She offers me an explanation anyways. “I paid extra for expedited shipping and it didn’t come in time for my daughter’s rehearsal dinner. I was heartbroken.” I look up. The heartbroken don’t say things like that. They don’t have to. It is their eyes that convey a sadness that can never be adequately expressed. I offer to refund her shipping. Her faux heartbroken eyes perk up. I come home and make popcorn for dinner. At 11:00 my neighbor texts me about her shitty life. I ask her if she’s outside. She is. I pour a bit of whiskey over ice and head down still wearing the dress I wore to work. We cry about how everything keeps going south in our lives on a regular basis, we talk about Bridgerton which I have just finished, we end up laughing uncontrollably about how we may have gone a bit overboard in gardening this year. She has bought her own badabing begonias and I imitate Mark. We repeat badabing badaboom over and over. She has spotlights in her backyard and I tell her if I had those I’d garden in the middle of the night when I can’t sleep. “I have,” she tells me. The conversation and whiskey have cleansed me of the heaviness of the last days and at 12:30 I decide to walk home. I fall asleep at 2:30.

The next day my friend invites some of us over for happy hour in her yard. It’s hot but beautiful. We discuss politics. I act normal except I’m so tired I could face plant on the table. A different set of friends is meeting for drinks the next night. I tell them I’ll be there, leave work, and in every direction there are orange cones. It takes me forever. I have lost my mojo for drinks and conversation but smile and talk and wish the earth would swallow me whole in slow motion like a parked car tipping into a sinkhole.

Some guy is hot on my trail on a dating site. We go back and forth with messages. He seems kind and funny in the absurd world of online dating. After several days he gives me his email and phone number. I talk this over with the women I work with. They are all much younger and more versed in this stuff. “Go for it,” they tell me. I decide that I need to put myself out there and call him up. He seems surprised. Maybe this was the wrong week to put myself out there. Five minutes into the conversation he’s talking about the Bush/Gore election and I’m confused. Is this small talk? He is talking so much and I feel like I’ve stumbled into a traveling preacher’s tent and there’s bodyguards blocking all the exits. I talk about Covid and how overwhelmed I am after a year of not doing much. He tells me he’s no conspiracy theorist but don’t I find it weird that people on meth, cocaine, and heroin don’t get Covid? I have no fucking idea what he’s talking about. I ask him if he’s been vaccinated. When he says no I tell him that (besides being batshit crazy) this wasn’t going to work for me. He says, “You’re not listening to the other side. What you’re doing, sweetie, is building blocks around yourself to keep out information and pretty soon you will be walled off in your own world where nobody can get in.” I don’t know what is more offensive – getting life advice from a complete stranger or being called sweetie by the same stranger. I think how the old me would have argued with this kind of stuff but instead I hang up on him mid-rant and block him from everything. I want to talk to Mark. We would laugh-cry at the whole I’m no conspiracy theorist. “You don’t want to peak too early in this, Kath,” he would tell me. “You do that and you have nowhere to go.” He said this all the time. People would talk to him about their kid’s interest in science. “Let them have fun,” he’d say. “Don’t meddle in their curiosity. You want them in it for the long haul and if they peak too early it’s over.” I should be grateful I’m not peaking too early. Instead I’m pissed at Mark for leaving me. I never stay pissed. I ask my therapist why that is. Why can’t I be raging mad that he left me alone in life? She tells me that the loss is so huge that it dwarfs everything else. “Yes,” I say quietly, “so huge.”

I try to unclog the sink. I research what to do about weeds that doesn’t involve Round Up. I go to work. I don’t sleep. I start packing up the kitchen for the reno that’s starting soon. I want to throw everything away. Every single thing. These kinds of weeks always threaten to sweep me out to sea if I don’t paddle furiously, but there is that thing that was at the base of the oak tree when I was mowing that caused me to stop in my tracks. I have no idea where it came from or how long it had been there. I drive by that tree many times a week when I’m going to and from work and never saw it, and now that I have I don’t know what to make of it.

I decide to not overthink this one. There are signs and then there is a sign.

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12 thoughts on “One Week & One Thousand Thoughts”

  1. You are an unbelievably good story teller. I really enjoyed reading this, and yes, losing our husbands really sucks.

  2. Beautifully written. Your words flow up and down with your emotions.
    You really have a gift in sharing your life as it is now and memories of Mark .
    That sign is really amazing. I would be tempted to keep it .
    Thanks for sharing another beautiful story …… 🌹
    Judy & Tom

  3. Oh my goodness!
    You have a person who knew you needed a sign.
    You are surrounded by people who want to hold you up when you need a little something….. What a blessing!

  4. I loved this. And how can anyone in the world keep saying, it’s just a coincidence, when something happens again and again at a time when you’re begging for them. There is only one way to communicate without earthly words, that’s soul to soul. It’s Mark. To you.

  5. You did it again, the whole journey setting the scene, I see it all, I’m smiling, then laughing , and now crying. Kathleen I’m so sorry for how painful and terrible, and necessary this process is, remember through it all you’re amazing.

  6. Oh lordy Kath. I’m overwhelmed by your ability to keep telling the story. Seems like you are recording chapters, some interwoven, some straight narrative. This is your life, and we are watching you watching yourself. My take on the sign is that your friends do love you, and we want to keep hearing your story.

  7. I loss my husband to suicide 3 years ago. I feel like this was written about my life…exactly what I go through. The emotions are overwhelming. Thanks for sharing.

  8. Mind spinning in every direction. A whirlpool that never stops. I get it. WOW. WHAT a sign! Keep looking for them.

  9. On our last anniversary together, our 36th, my husband and I each wrote the same thing to each other in our anniversary cards: “love you more,” and signed with just our first initials. It’s a sign, I said, that we were meant to be together. Tomorrow would have been our 39th, and I’m still heartbroken.

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