Archives for posts with tag: our son

Studying the worn out, creaky old thing in the corner of our room, time aged and unstable. No, not myself through the looking glass but his old bookcase, held together with masking tape and love. I spent many moments grieving through his books, looking at his favourite, the heavy old one, battered dust cover with pages he poured over and consumed. His need to understand to make sense of everything, to put it in boxes then make connections, to have his own world view. There in the pages, the ideas learned, projected, assimilated, the evolved musings and the notions we discussed. Thank god he got that book read. He’d been saving it for years – a real treat, like a great bottle of wine.

At least those words were drunk, swirled around and savoured. They made him dizzy and happy for a while.

But what about all the others? The new ones neatly ordered, ready to be worked through over the next twenty years. Pillars of novels now academia was out of the way. Mind you it would never have really been out if the way, always the odd new concept to creep in, something else that needed to be looked at. Couldn’t resist it. At least he worked through the books he bought, whereas I just bought books and added them to the pile. However,the past eleven months have made me read – greedily, desperately, searching for what others did. How ? what? why? stepping stones, outreached hands, nets and sky hooks, real hooks and hope. I have to get through all my new books before I can look back at any of the others.

And now his books sit and look back at me, questioningly. The pages, the chapters, the paragraphs, the sentences, the words, the letters, the punctuation, the hours. Will I read them for him? Maybe some of them, will our son? Maybe some. They sit collecting dust, like me. I picked one off the shelf in the early days, one from the top of the pile. ‘Descent into Hell’, another bit of light reading… Oh the irony, turned out to be my journey, not his. All of them of the old world, the old order, when there were plans.

What if it had been me who didn’t get to see out her plans?

What would he have made of this? How would this have fitted into his Weltanschauung? or veltanshnitzel, as I preferred to call it. How would he have coped? To be a single parent, to carry the weight of responsibility, the full-time job of grief. How to make sense of all this? The tumbleweed existence, this relentless nowhereland? How would he have moved concrete steps through the quicksand seconds?

Everything was about understanding.

And now I do the same, but its all about feelings not thoughts. Am I creating this grief because I experience myself as being alive? Is that even a valid question?

I get close sometimes then it slips away. It’s almost as though I ‘get it’ but it’s just off to the side in my peripheral vision and if I turn to look at it, to bring it into focus, into consciousness then it disappears. It’s there, I feel it, I sense it, but it can’t be looked at head on. Bit like existential angst but the flip side, he’d know what I mean. x

Battling with it all this morning.

Back in our early days on the phone, wrestling with four-dimensional space time (as you do). Then into the mothering it became less of a focus, for me. I was too busy or tired to think about Schopenhauer’s struggle with feminism while my own view on an ’emergent property’ had more to do with both ends of our child than a theoretical feature of the universe.

He nicked a friends classic line and often tried it out on me. ‘But how do you know you exist?’ Best delivered for maximum effect and impact while he was sitting comfortably looking out of the window and I was plate spinning toddlers, trying to find an illusive shoe or fighting fabric with my head up a duvet cover… Oh how we laughed.

Now I struggle with my own mind-body problem which is centred on the realisation that its morning and wondering whether or not I can be bothered to haul my carcass out of bed?

So now it’s me who sits and stares out of the window in this empty museum of wonders. Stale ideas leaving coffee rings around my heart. A delight of knowledge that served it’s purpose, a cycle, a journey, a mind. He didn’t like intermittent faults, liked to get to the bottom of things, to solve and to fix. No, he certainly wouldn’t have liked this. The irrational, the unpredictable, the ambiguous nature of grieving. This abstract and empirical process. To grieve, to occur in the grief itself, or of the grief itself? He certainly liked to challenge himself, but this is a book he’d have left on the shelf. Good job its my story, that its me bent double, tying myself in knots, feeling the ends of the universe as I unravel and implode in my own singularity.

Now I can finally answer his question.

Yes I exist, I know because I’m in pain.

P.S

First thing

As I crunch freeze into the last month burning gloveless, isolated tweets and hurrying calls. Too cold even for grief. Should have worn the scarf. Icing sugared sparkled bridge, wanted to stay but I daren’t. At least it’s frozen the recent mud. Too hard to be slippy today. Icicles instead of tears. Must go, steadily tiptoe down the rushy glen, tentatively over decorated steps. It’s hiding in the undergrowth today, a little bit timid and shy, it rustles at me as I hurry from the cold. It’ll be back, can’t do much with it if it won’t be looked at. Round the corner past the end house where we had the BBQ in a frayed lost summer. She talked without censorship and he assessed the potential, while our son entertained himself on the pointless slope. The wall blew over in the recent gales. I helped the owner throw bricks on the garden, clearing a path through the tired rubble, the bricks make my hands sore and scuff my fingers as I hurl them. They bash down hard on hopeful plants that were waiting at the edge.

Managing destruction… yeah, ain’t we all?

Nearly home, take the path by the drain cover, somewhere low and dark, it’s carried regardless, I hear it muttering, un-stemed, busily plotting and churning beneath us.

I glance at the crumpled cider can, finishing off their fussy border, their marked out territory, christened with Strongbow. I leave before the sun gets round to me.

x

Eleven years ago I sat here in pain, my world was changing and I just had to hold on. I was well past my due date with severe ligament damage and an unstable pelvis meaning I couldn’t really walk or even lift a kettle without support.

The natural birth I wanted (for which I had written a Birth Plan – a great work of fiction) went out of the window along with my muscle strength, mobility and visions of early motherhood.

Many days and drugs later I held him for the first time, releasing a primal love that served me through the long years of a slow recovery to health and is my only foundation now in this unstable new life of widowhood.

…So ten years after the birth, sat in the garden on our wedding anniversary, I had the foolish idea to travel to Norway. I reasoned it would be six months by the time of the holiday and I would feel differently.

6 months landed in a second and whilst I’d emotionally, barely moved from the spot, and as I was without a way back, I hauled all of us (me, my son, the suitcases and the pain) off to find our Ship.

A cruise wasn’t really our sort of thing, not what we’d normally do. We were small cottage types with a spider or two in the sink and some old leaflets from 1994 on available attractions. However, we’d done a cruise once before as a special holiday after losing my Mother in law. So I knew the system and as long as it was a different ship thought I’d be ok.

I’d never left the country by myself, never needed to, yet here I was having triple checked the documents, the money and the doors attempting (no, actually going) to do it.

The widows amongst us will understand how some days even to get a pair of boots on is a major achievement, so this was an immense challenge yet I felt compelled by the fear. Although scared I was driven by a determination to do it and something primal kicked in. I had to get out there, build a life for us and shoving suitcases in a taxi was the very first step.

Once on board I came down heavily with a splat. Great, I’d done it, all the practicalities over with… now what? I’m in the middle of the North Sea, looking out for oil rigs and he still wasnt around. Did a part of me think I’d find him on the ship? Did I think it would break the spell and find it had all been some huge hideous mistake? Our son was happily checking out cupboards and trying to make the tv work (like father like son:-) whilst I was sobbing quietly looking out to sea, battling with competing emotions of abandonment, desolation, pride and fear.

I survived the trauma of our first evening meal: silver service, smiling waiters, chinking couples and the horror of 2 places at a table for 4. Yes we were ok – no I didn’t want the wine waiter – no more rolls thank you – yes everything was still fine with the meal, – no we didn’t want anything else……Oh God, I longed for Macdonald’s and a jaded 18yr old. “Did i want fries with it?” would have been music to my ears.

Apparently we were approaching a ‘Front’ that evening and the Captain assured us that although there maybe a slight ‘swell’ it was nothing to worry about. I wasn’t worried anyway, maybe we’d go down with the ship and join him then all this agony would fade away. But the ship didn’t sink and I lay awake awhile listening to the clothes rattle on their hangers, the glasses slide on the table, depressed and wanting to go home.

As is usual (but not always) with grief, the morning brought a new landscape. It did for me, literally and emotionally. We’d arrived in Stavanger, I saw the sun come up and rediscovered some of my resolve. The scenery was quite fairytale, small painted wooden chalets, misty lakes and seering mountains. Despite my pain, I felt lifted and calm but it soon became obvious that the fjords weren’t going to ‘cut it’ for a ten-year old. We had chosen excursions carefully together – cable cars, hairpin bend coach trips and the ubiquitous aquarium, so I was hopeful that we would both get something from the trip. However, my grief and his boredom, tiredness and an inadequate gift shop made a nasty combination and soon my patience was on the wane.

I began to regret the ‘adventure’ and struggled to keep the tears at bay. I didn’t have the energy or will power to try to engage with the information from the guide. I wasn’t the old Mummy who could conjure up some fun with a discarded biscuit wrapper or make up spontaneous silly stories when irritation and strop were looming. I was the New Me, still Mummy, but so exhausted on every level, so crushed by the new existence, grieving openly when appropriate but generally trying to hold it together with a butterfly thin exterior. I couldn’t do it anymore, I’d had enough. I wanted it all to stop. Right there, Right then, in the endless dank mist on the top of Mount Ulriken.

Not unsurprisingly the world didn’t stop, we cried and hugged, used up some krona on a packet of Pringles (the ideal souvenir from the sparsely filled ‘Gift’ shop) and made our way to cable car to sniff some strangers armpits for the tightly packed descent into town.

Although the reality of travelling with a ten-year old had knocked the shine off what I hoped would be a chance to bond again, I knew it had to work for me. I needed to find something in the landscape, in the achievement itself to give me a foothold in this new life. As we snaked our way through the villages I began to feel a change creep in. I listened carefully to the guide’s stories of the floods and fires and simple folk going about their daily task of being Norwegian. I knew I needed to embrace this day-to-day living and since February had thrust me into ‘the moment’ I’d found it easier to just go with it, to exist moment by moment and to simply ‘be’. So there, half way up a mountain in Aeslund I turned into Scarlett O’Hara and found myself thinking “the land, the land – I must go back to the land!”

Of course if you knew me you’d realise how silly a notion that really is. I don’t ‘do’ soil. The obligatory tomato plants I grew with my son couldn’t be fully harvested because by the time they were ripe they were in the throes of a ‘web-fest’ and I don’t ‘do’ things with eight legs either. Also I have a gardener. (Before you get ideas about me floating around in acres of lush rolling grassland, with a paddock in the lower field and someone called Giles who’s “just fantastic” with the horses….let me explain that the garden is small but the back injury previously refered to keeps me away from faffing about with a Flymo or any associated implements.)…..But in my head I had a new life in the hills, wearing layers of white petticoats, rustling around the kitchen, making something hearty out of the fruits of fertile soil I’d so lovingly tended. Maybe this was the way forward? Something simple, meaningful and pure.

These spiritual musings ended abruptly as we pulled into the rainy car park, hissed and clunked up to all the other coaches and disembarked. Dozens of us, all kagooled and camera-d, wrestling with rucksacks intent on consuming the next new vista.

A friend recently said, ” there must have been some great times?” Well, not exactly, that’s too stong a word. We had ‘nice’ times. I choose the word intentionally – nice – nothing more nothing less, times when he wasn’t grumpy and I wasn’t teary. Like playing table tennis and losing too many balls either to the sway of the boat or our incompetence and narrowly missing the perfect shot into a fellow traveller’s Guinness. We laughed and it was funny.

However, it wasn’t funny and I didn’t laugh when the small side zip on my posh frock wouldn’t do up. I was jittery anyway, going to a formal night, what a stupid idea and if the zip didn’t work soon I was going to burst into tears, put on the tv and get room service. My son tried valiantly but it was an adults grip I needed…one particular adult. The symbolism was too painful, but he really wanted to meet the Captain so I tried one last thing. I took it off again, zipped it up and managed to squirm and wriggle myself into it with zip already closed – Success (…courtesy of the death diet). Survived standing around with the sparkly glossy types while my son played impatiently on the sweeping staircase and I tried my very best to ignore the flirty, sipping, hairflicking fun that was going on all around me.

We saw the Captain, I shoved down another beautifully presented proper meal (shock to the system given I’ve been living off garlic bread, pasta and the odd uneaten fishfinger for 6 months)…and bed, another day ticked off.

So what was it all about?

It wasnt a cruise, a holiday, or a change of scenery. It wasn’t as a non-widow said “a chance to leave it all behind” (yep, that’s it Grief, I’m off. You stay here on the settee with your own box of tissues, look after the place and I’ll see you in a week. Off I skip swinging my bags with not a care in the world, doing a great Gene Kelly as I glide and twirl towards the taxi.)

Hmm, not really.

It was a chance to reconnect with something, it was a pilgrimage, it was a voyage to find a part of me that I desperately needed. I know my son can’t see this and he may not for many years. Though on the surface it didn’t tick his boxes he will benefit greatly and long-term.

In doing this journey, at this time I found a tiny spark of something, an atom of me that didn’t die with my husband. Something timeless, something pure. The part of me that knows I can go on and that I have to. The benefit to my son is that despite the hideous drawn-out fallout that I’ve had since our return and the second by second struggle to get through the memories of his birth, despite it all I found what I need to make a life for us and this is where it starts.

Eleven years ago I couldn’t walk. A damaged pelvis was compounded by an eventual cesarean, recovery would be slow, agonizing and complex. Eleven years yesterday I gave birth and began the tortuous road to health that left me housebound and isolated for 6 months. I lived on the bed and everything else stopped. Everything I recognised about myself had gone and my focus was on my baby. I became my mothering instinct, every breath was about that responsiblity. Despite the pain and the limitations I would do whatever it took to look after him.

I look for symbolism everywhere. I join the dots backwards, I see patterns.

Eleven years on not much has changed: I take small painful tentative steps in this unreal, scary new world. It hurts every day, every breath sometimes. But I do it, with each step I get stronger. This is how it is…..and though my son -my whole world- is pushing at the boundaries and racing away to the next essential phase, I’m right back there where I belong, doing whatever it takes. Holding him and holding on.

Emotionally, I carry him as a newborn.

x