Advice
is abundant and freely given even when you are not grieving. It is the milk of
human kindness. Aside from the platitudes, I have received a lot of advice in the
years since Shekhar…some of it immediately useful, some to be taken under
consideration, some contextually irrelevant and some just painfully
insensitive. All well intentioned, I understand, because it is hard to see
someone you care about in pain and not try to alleviate it.
I
have been told I was emotionally unreachable for the first five years. I didn’t
think so. I was busy trying to make sense of and bring order to lives
disassembled. Then to mark the five year milestone, I made a personal decision
to crawl out from under the rock of grief. I thought that if I acted ‘as if’ I
was healed, I would be. There was a collective sigh of relief from those close
to me. The tenor of conversations changed…I became easier to relate to…and for
a while it worked. Even I started to believe I was fine.
The
truth, however, is that in all these years I have pushed down active grieving
to deal with the aftermath of loss. It was monumental yet somehow mundane
because it involved a lot of paperwork. I had to chase paper and finances
across three countries and a few cities within one. Then there was the issue of
securing the future of our children, their education, their needs…both
emotional and resource based. After all, I had suddenly become the sole
provider for our family. The practicalities of life left no band width for
emotional engagement. At about five and a half years, with the bulk of issues
sorted, I felt like I should make the effort to reconnect with the world as a
human being and not an emotional desert. The catch was that I wasn’t doing it
because I was ready or because I had finished the business of grieving…it was
because most people around me expected me to stop, to move on, to see that I
had finally come out on the other side…I began to believe I had until a recent
visit to my marital home opened the floodgates of grief unobserved and attended
to…
I
realised that calendar time held no meaning…the anger, the sense of betrayal
and abandonment, the silence and absence, the deep and debilitating loneliness
all bubbled up to the surface clamouring for the attention they had been denied
in these past seven years…I had bypassed not dealt with them and that is the
scary part…it is still not over and there are days now when I feel it never
will be…if Shekhar had not been the person he was, if our marriage had not been
the outlier, if his loss had not been so sudden, I believe it might be easier
to bid goodbye once and for all but that isn’t the case. Instead, I find myself
caught between a beautiful past filtered through memory and a future that is
constructed out of fear of the unknown. In the present, I have to face the
truth…I have not truly grieved. That for me is the enigma…what have I been doing for these seven years?
***
And
honestly
I kind of jumped right in
My eyes lay golden
But my feet stay still
There's comedy
Within this tragedy
Laugh with tears and hear
The rain…
I kind of jumped right in
My eyes lay golden
But my feet stay still
There's comedy
Within this tragedy
Laugh with tears and hear
The rain…
Time
has stopped and I have spoken
Let him say
As lights go dark
Your thoughts betray…
Let him say
As lights go dark
Your thoughts betray…
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