At this winter time when everything is cold and dreary and the sky is often gray, I feel the sorrow linger and the pain increase. I therefore try to look forward to spring in order to survive. These pictures that I have taken brighten my day a bit and allow me to think of beautiful things. I hope that you will enjoy them as much as I have.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Sunday, December 28, 2014
I Weep
During this holiday
season I am more emotional than ever and the loneliness and despair has
resulted in the writing of this short article.
I weep not only for losing my son but for all the parents
who lost their children. I weep when I think of his face, I weep for his empty
place. I weep when I think of the cold ground that covers him. Is he really
gone from me on earth? I question that and continue to weep.
I have cried and wrestled often in prayer. How could someone
as precious, so dear to my heart vanish like vapor and disappear? Yet I say to
myself no, no, he is still with me. And then I say to myself “where is my son?”
Where is he hiding? I look for him everywhere, among the flowers and trees,
around the empty streets, in the house and everywhere, yet he is not there.
Pleasant memories bring him back to me, and my eyes become
blurry with tears, yet there is no glimpse of him. Loneliness fills my soul and
I question his whereabouts and wonder how one so close to me in life could be
so far away now. I am alone and my heart is broken and my longing for him is as
strong as ever. I long for him by day and by night. I often wish that he would
come back again and free me from all the intense pain. Just as the leaves fall
and the flowers die, I think of my son who is gone.
My hopes and feelings are confused; my sick heart grieves
and is full of anguish. Yet his going from this earth has given me serener
thoughts and nearness to the sky, and has opened my heart and my eyes to see
what is beautiful and has strengthened my faith and turned me around from what
is temporal to what is eternal.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Happy Birthday David
PRECIOUS DAVID; Thank you for being you. Today you would have been 42. You have transformed my life and put meaning into it for which I am thankful. You opened my eyes to see the beauty that surrounds me. You continue to be a big part of my life and will continue to impact every aspect of it. Happy birthday.
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Why be thankful
In Psalms 34:1 we read: “I will bless the Lord at all times,
His praise shall be continually in my mouth”. I often ask myself: “how can I be thankful after losing my son?”
My mother was a simple woman who was uneducated. Yet she was
a godly woman who saw God in His creation. I remember her washing fruits and
vegetables and praising God in amazement over the beauty of the colors of the
various fruits and vegetables. She would laugh when she saw a bird hopping or
singing through the kitchen window. I remember her kneeling by the bedside at
night praying and thanking God for everything even though she could hardly
provide for our food and clothing. We too can be thankful for the things that
we take for granted, for the fruit on the tree, the birds that sing, the flowers
that bloom and the leaves that fall.
I am a biology teacher by profession. I often instill in my
students a thankful attitude. For example when I talk about the kidneys, I
explain to them as to why they cannot live without both kidneys as they remove
the nitrogenous waste products from our bodies without which our bodies would
become toxic. I then ask them if they
were ever thankful for their kidneys. I do not think that we realize all the
blessings that we have until we lose them. We take talking, seeing, hearing,
walking and being able to use our hands for granted, as an example. Many people
are blind, deaf, crippled or paralyzed. Every heartbeat matters and we should
cherish every moment of life as it is a gift.
If you have nothing to be thankful for this year, rejoice
for the life within you that is a gift from God. You can be thankful for the
miracle of spring that brings nature to a new life, the beauty of the sky and
sea, the sunrise and the sunset as well as the moon and the stars that
illuminate the darkness of the sky.
Do the memories alone make life worth living? Can I be
thankful for the loneliness that I experience? Yes, it is because of the deep
loneliness that I can reflect over David’s life for which I am thankful. I often ask myself how can I be thankful
after losing my son. How can I be thankful when my wounded heart and all life’s
sweetness seem to ebb and die? How can I be thankful when slow sad years go by?
How can I be thankful when peace was replaced with anguish and turmoil?
Thank God for life, love, and pain. Thankfulness to me is
one of the most exalted principles that can provoke the heart of man. It is
something noble and devout.
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Sunday, November 23, 2014
More Diary Notes
This was written in my early days of grief in 2004
I am really despondent today and have some anger. I can’t
imagine living like this till the day I die. It has been such a struggle and
challenge. I am tired of pretending and philosophizing. It does not work. It is
telling me that I can make it if I think this way or think of the eternal when
everything that surrounds me is temporal and I live in a tangible world and I
have to think of the unseen. I am really all confused and full of doubt. Faith
is based on the unseen. It is so easy for someone who has not suffered such a
loss to judge my faith and it has been judged many a time. Only the Lord knows
my heart and knows how much I am hurting. I feel like a knife is cutting my
heart out at times. Today is no good. The world around me is full of life and yet
I feel dead on the inside. I want David to see the flowers that I am seeing and
I want him to participate in this life. I am so void. I am so empty and so
lonely and so messed up at this moment. This is not the way one must live. I am
so stupid to deprive myself of the joy of this life knowing full well that
there is nothing that I can do to change the unchangeable and yet I continue to
feel sad. I really cannot change how I feel in an instant. It is not magic. It
is a process of accepting and not accepting what happened until it sinks into
my brain that life could be good again. Maybe someday I will feel like myself
again. Yet I know that my grief will never be lost.
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Thursday, November 13, 2014
Thoughts About The Loss
I gave this article to my colleagues
before returning to teach after a semester off. It might be something that some
of you, who have recently lost a child, could use.
I wish that David had not died and I want him back so badly. He was
very important to me. I hope that you will not be afraid to speak his name. If
I cry when you talk about David, it isn’t because you have hurt me. David’s
death is the cause of my tears. I will be grateful if you will allow me to talk
about him and to share my grief. Grieving is the hardest job that I will ever
do. It is exhausting. Grieving is not contagious. Please do not shy away from
me. I need you now more than ever. I know that you think and pray for me often.
Please let me know through a phone call, a note or a hug. I wish that you would
not think that my grief will be over in six months. These first months are
traumatic for me. I hope that you will understand that my grief will never be
over. I will suffer the death of David until the day I die. I will never not
remember him, ever. I am trying hard to recover, but you need to understand
that I will never fully recover, and will always miss David and will always
grieve that he is dead. I am not asking for pity. I just want you to let me
grieve. I must hurt before I can heal. I struggle daily and might be doing OK,
but I do not feel OK. Depression, anger, hopelessness and overwhelming sadness
is what I am experiencing which are normal reactions to grief. David believed
in hope. He often said to me “mom, hope is a good thing, it is the best of
things, and good things never die.” I hope that you will understand when I
might be quiet, withdrawn, and cranky or irritable. I was told to “take one day
at a time”. I would be doing well if I can handle one hour at a time or one
moment at a time. Grief has changed me. I am not the same person I was before I
lost David, and I will never be that person again. I wish that you would
understand my loss, my grief, my tears, my void, my loneliness, my pain. BUT I pray that you will never
understand.
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Diary Entry from November 1, 2004
November 1, 2004, another month without my honey. The
sadness grows as time moves. I feel a bit better today so far. I am going to
trust that God knows the beginning from the end and that he allowed this to
happen. I do not know why and will never know why. My thoughts however do not
match my feelings. I try to be strong and then I fail. How can I be strong when
the love of my life is gone? How can I go on with the trivial daily chores that
have no meaning? I can't stand it. I never realized how empty life could be. I
put so much energy all my life to succeed and be successful for my family and I
failed everything. I feel so humbled by all this. I am nobody. I am nothing. It
is 10 pm and I am extremely sad. I long for David and want to hold him. I
continually have tears in my eyes. I have fears that I will not remember some
aspects of his life. This is why I am trying to write as much as I can. His
face I have memorized as well as his gentleness and love. I miss him so
terribly and there is deep hole in my heart and soul.
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