I'm trying to do better at keeping up with my blog. I keep getting subtle reminders of how important it is for us to keep a personal history, and so I'm trying a little harder. I've also had a few reminders lately of how quick time passes and how much we grow in that time. I've looked at how much our lives have changed in the last two years and how much I've grown. How many emotions have come and gone and lingered. I wish I was more eloquent with my words, and there are so many blogging women that inspire me to try and be better at spitting out my thoughts. I read this post from Natalie Norton and she explains things perfectly. It's amazing to me how similar our feelings are in our journey of grieving the loss of our sons. I have to share:
My journey toward authenticity began the day my son died the day I died. (I can tell you from the bottom of my soul, they are one and the same.)
And there I was.
There I was. . .
(Deep exhale here.)
Nothing remained, aside from the physical form of the woman I had once been. Inside of that? Nothing was the same. When you come to THAT moment (that we all pray to God you never will) you have exactly two choices.
1. You die.
2. Or you don’t.
Physical death, yes, I suppose would be a third alternative (a
thought that EVERY mother who’s walked where I’ve walked has
entertained, even if only in an especially weak and fleeting moment),
but I’m not speaking of physical death. I’m speaking of emotional death.
Spiritual callus. The armor of the soul. Survival. Safety. The
opportunity to disengage from the excruciating pain. The promise of
relief from the acute, unrelenting torture. Option number 1, you die.
See?
Option number 2, you don’t. BUT HOW DON’T YOU? HOW?! HOW?!!!! AND YES
I’M SHOUTING NOW. I’M SCREAMING AT THE TOP OF MY BROKEN HEART. HOW
DON’T YOU JUST CLIMB INTO THE CUPBOARD UNDER THE STAIRS AND BURY YOUR
HEAD IN THE SAND? (Yes, my cupboard under the stairs is at the beach.
Apparently. And yes, I’m done yelling at you.)
How?
You submit.
And that’s how.
You submit.
You own your nothingness before God and yet your “everythingness”
within him. For we are, each of us, nothing and everything all in the
same harrowing yet joy-filled breath.
The moments after Gavin died horrified me. Horror. Times infinity. To
the power of a million. For all the obvious reasons yes, but for one
you rarely think about in specific. Eventually, friends, you have to
walk away. You have to hand your dead child over to a stranger, and you
have to walk away. I’ve never felt so small. I’ve never felt so afraid. I
couldn’t do it. I moaned. I cried. I held him as tightly as I could. I
probably screamed out loud, though I don’t remember for certain. If I
didn’t, I should have. I’d certainly earned the right.
I’ve never been so acutely focused (before or since). I was
completely keyed in to the moment I was in, the feelings I was
experiencing, the fear that engulfed me. And amid all that terror, amid
all that submission, amid all that awareness of my nothingness before
God, I found something.
Myself.
No longer was I a woman who was born in 1981, had lived a while, and
was having this experience in a hospital room in the Pediatric Intensive
Care Unit in 2010. I was Natalie.
I felt connected to myself in a whole new way. Connected to my
divinity as a child of God, a literal spirit daughter of The Creator of
Heaven and Earth and all things that in them are. I was Natalie, and
Natalie, this me, SHE had the strength required to walk away.
SHE had the faith required to move through this moment (and every one
that would follow). SHE had the perspective I lacked. SHE had the
courage I desired. SHE knew God in a way that I had never dreamed
possible.
I held her hand, I kissed his face, and I walked away.
Over time, I’ve come to know her better. Learning she existed was half the battle, now getting to know her learning to become her will win me the war.
Authenticity. It’s a practice, not an art. A journey, not a destination.
But it’s worth the work. It’s worth the commitment.
And it’s definitely worth the jump.
And the thing is, I am SO BLESSED. I look back on our journey with Graham and we were blessed in so many ways. During the horror of having to let go of your son and part with him for a while I will be forever grateful for my friend Genny. Never did I have to worry about handing Graham over to a stranger. He was in good hands, and he was in good hands once he made it to the funeral home until we could be with him again. I feel my growing pains everyday. I did get to know myself a whole lot better in the last couple of years. I've learned what I can do when I'm faced with a challenge. I've learned that the only thing that gets me through it is to submit to my Heavenly Father and move forward in faith. There is still not a day that I don't think of Graham and miss his little face. I look at many of the kids around and see that they are turning into little kids, and not babies anymore. It's good to have some time to heal the pain. Good to see how much you can grow and improve and just how much God blesses our lives
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