Into The Deep

When I was looking for a therapist, I contacted a friend who worked in the psychology department at the med center where Mark worked, which is how I met Eileen. I figured I’d meet with her a few times, she’d give me some handy dandy grief tips and I’d be just fine. At the end of each appointment she’d say, “Same time next week?” And I would think, same time next week? We have to do this again?

I hated every one of those first year appointments. I hated that she wasn’t fixing anything, I hated that I had to lay bare every piece of my life, Mark’s life, our marriage, his career, his sister, his parents, everything. More than once I said, “Every single person in his family is damaged, so tell me why I’m the one showing up for this gut wrenching work?” I already knew the answer. Now I was the one who was damaged and somebody had to stop the bleed before it seeped into the lives of those beautiful kids I made with the only guy I ever loved.

One of the hardest aspects of grief is the expectation to get through it and move on, that with some concentrated effort one could be less sad. Me and my credit card tried really hard to buy my way out of sadness. Sometimes I’d come home from work and there’d be a mound of packages on my doorstep of things I barely remembered liking let alone ordering. Turns out that didn’t work and so I’d drag my sad self into Eileen’s office and tell her I was sinking into the abyss and she would say, “Of course you are. Your entire life fell apart,” and it was such a relief to be with someone who understood that.

Things tend to return to normal fairly quickly after a death unless you are in the epicenter, and from that vantage point it feels like everything has been burned to the ground. I had no normal and am still trying to figure that out, so when I am having a hard day, when I am unable to fake any sort of positive attitude and somebody asks me what’s wrong I usually look at them in stunned silence. What’s wrong? Well my husband ended his life one morning which, believe it or not, still plays out for me every day. When Eileen and I talk about these conversations, I always ask her why there are people I thought I was close to who can’t go there. “Are these people you had deep conversations with before, people who could talk about pain?” I thought about that question for a long while and said, “Not necessarily,” and she told me that I was barking up the wrong tree. “But this is different,” I said, and she looked at me and said, “It isn’t for them,” which left me so infuriated I wanted a new therapist right then and there.

When Covid hit, Eileen and I did a year of tele-therapy, and when she said she could do office visits again, I jumped at the chance. I went once. That office held so much of my pain it felt like it was painted into the walls. I couldn’t get out of there fast enough so we switched back to tele-therapy every Monday afternoon. There are times when it is still hard, times when I start out okay but cry within minutes, but not always. Eileen has repeatedly told me I have to watch Schitt’s Creek. I told her she had to watch My Octopus Teacher. The week after I told her that she said, “Before we start anything we have to talk about the octopus because I can’t stop thinking about him.” We’ve talked about anti-aging products and mascara, my job, her daughter’s wedding. I told her about a room I was cleaning out and she said, “Oh how perfect. Now you can make it your writing studio.” This never occurred to me and it was such a brilliant idea it is all I’ve been able to think about since she said it. In a recent session, I asked her how some people seem to be able to move on from loss so quickly and here I am three years later only managing to pull a foot out of the quicksand. “Because you’re a digger,” she said, “it is your nature to search for the why and you aren’t satisfied until you understand it.”

There are people in my life that I wish I could open up to and tell them how painful this still is for me, that there is no such thing as closure, that every morning my husband is still dead and will be for the rest of my life. It can be better for me and the kids, though, if the entire topic isn’t avoided, if we heard stories about Mark so that for a few minutes he can come back to life for us instead of any mention of him being carefully avoided as if he never existed. It is the nature of most of us to offer advice to someone we see in pain, to fix the broken. How Mark’s life ended and the repercussions it has had on me, our kids, and the army of people who loved him cannot be fixed. It has to be carried, and I have learned that mixed with gratitude, beauty, humor, and compassionate conversations makes the weight of it so much more manageable.

I recently read that people can only go as deep with someone else as they go with themselves, and suddenly all the pieces of those awkward conversations that stayed on the surface made so much sense. I don’t understand that because in the deep is where things get sifted and sorted and understood, and so I keep showing up on Monday afternoons with Eileen to make sense of something that still feels surreal.

Not because I want to, but because I married into a family who dug their heels so deep into the surface that they failed to notice that their pain was slowly pulling them under.

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9 thoughts on “Into The Deep”

  1. I can’t remember how I learned about your blog but I am so grateful that I did.
    I have not suffered a loss anything close to what you have experienced, but I feel enlightened and more well-rounded each and every time I read your words. Your writing is exquisite and powerful.

  2. “How Mark’s life ended and the repercussions it has had on me, our kids, and the army of people who loved him cannot be fixed. It has to be carried, and I have learned that mixed with gratitude, beauty, humor, and compassionate conversations makes the weight so much more manageable.”

    This really stuck out to me. Yes, it has to be carried. Your words are my words except you can put them down and reflect them back to me in a way that also helps me carry the grief of the loss of that one person that meant the entire world to me. Thank you, again.

  3. I always look forward to a notification from you appearing in my inbox. It is something that I save and leave till I have some time to read thoroughly and consider thoughtfully your content, you always deliver such profound insights and valuable lessons. Much love to you 😘

  4. Some day I have a feeling I’m going to see you on CBS Sunday morning or some other thoughtful newscast who tells stories of awesome writers, musicians and artists. You are that good!

  5. Another thought provoking Blog about Mark and all you
    Continue to endure. It breaks me to the core of my soul to know all you go through. I keep you and the kids in my thoughts and Prayers. I don’t think a week goes by, that something triggers a conversation about Mark.
    Sometimes it’s something Tom remembers about Hockey
    And what a great player Mark was. Or something on the news about politics or COVID. But he will always be remembered for the unique man he was .Keeping you in our Prayers as you
    Do your best to keep things going. These words don’t even skim the surface of what you endure each day. But we wanted you to know we will never forget all the stories you have shared both funny and tender. ❤️ T & J ❤️

  6. Kathy, we usually don’t know what our friends are randomly thinking. In your case, however, it’s always just under the surface that any- and everything can bring Mark’s presence into the conversation, and I’m actually comfortable with that. So I don’t really know why I don’t initiate talking about him, probably because I somehow fear making you sad. Yet every time I read your thoughts in this form, I see that you are very much in control of your words even though you are quite sad, and it’s in the expression of your sadness that I hear your need to talk about him. As your friend, I want to be as present as possible with what’s going on in your head. You’re not walking around with a shopping list in that curly scalp, but with a real struggle to exist and try to go on, so long after his death, which as you very well know and say so well, will last forever. We love and support you, and now we know we can let Mark in when we need to as part of that support and love.

  7. I am reading/listening to “Clap When You Land” and it seems like something you would like. The prose is wonderful and the sentiment is stated beautifully. Much love to you.

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