On
one ordinary Saturday evening, Shekhar’s life passed…one minute he was there
and the next he was gone.
Then
two years later, my Mom’s life passed…one moment she was there and the next she
was gone.
Each
time I lost more than the people I loved. I lost a definition. I moved from
wife to widow in an instant, from child to…I am still looking for a new way to
define myself.
After
Shekhar, I lost the will to live. It was the singular thought of my children that
kept me going. Until Mom… when to bypass the pain and angst I experienced after
Shekhar, I decided to throw myself at life and living. I forgot definitions and
said yes to everything that came my way – new job, travel, responsibility and
obligation. In a ‘man bites dog’ frame of mind, I reacted, attacked and engaged
with life. By ‘man bites dog’ I mean jumping into situations that are against your
nature and norm that unnecessarily complicate what could have been easier if
you just let sleeping dogs lie…
This
has been my life for the past two years. Now, I realize allowing the pendulum
to swing from one extreme to another has not helped. It is time to regroup and
reassess. Time to find the centre. Time to redefine. Time to forge a bond with
myself. Time to let go of the dog.
As
we draw near to what would have been Shekhar’s 50th birthday, the
boys and I have taken a leap from our errand based lives to create new
memories. To overlay the sadness with a new map…it is not just a time to look
forward but also a time to look back and see just how far we have come. I have
been afraid to do that…what if I turn back and he is just a speck on the horizon.
What if we have come too far…
***
For too much of my life
I have been a noun;
child, boy, man, father, whatever;
nouns of identity.
Often, preceded by too many adjectives…
I have been a noun;
child, boy, man, father, whatever;
nouns of identity.
Often, preceded by too many adjectives…
I exist through my living,
not because of some label.
Descriptives enhance mind pictures,
but do not define the essence of my spirit.
I am living. I am being.
I am not a noun.
I am a verb.
—From I am a verb by Gene McParland, North Babylon, NY
not because of some label.
Descriptives enhance mind pictures,
but do not define the essence of my spirit.
I am living. I am being.
I am not a noun.
I am a verb.
—From I am a verb by Gene McParland, North Babylon, NY
Thank you for writing this blog. I lost my husband in September to a massive heart attack. Your writing is the closest I have found to how I feel as I deal with this.
ReplyDeleteI feel your pain, Rae...take care of yourself. I was beginning to wonder why I wrote this blog. You have just given me a reason to continue...
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