recently, i decided to tap into the incredible wealth of thoughts, insights and experiences
of the people around me. i wrote to a buncha different people asking for their insights
on different subjects. i hope to be posting one of their responses each wednesday.
this is our third offering in the series. it comes from my friend and mentor, pamela jones.
i just call her 'po.' and po, from the bottom of my heart, i thank you for this offering.
it screams of exactly why i love you so. what an honor to share you here.
i just call her 'po.' and po, from the bottom of my heart, i thank you for this offering.
it screams of exactly why i love you so. what an honor to share you here.
What are friends for?
When my dear friend, terri, asked if I
would be a part of a project where she offered us questions and we
responded with our views, I thought it sounded like fun. Along with
some other amazing people (if they are terri’s friends, they must
be amazing), I would get to share a viewpoint and also enjoy reading
what those other folks had to say. What would my topic be? World
Peace? Kindness? Creativity? No such luck. Instead, her email
read:
“are you okay if i go to the loss of
your son? …and what i'd like to ask is what are some of the
insights that you gained thru all of that?”
What are friends for?
Real friends are for encouraging us to
be our complete selves in the midst of all the events that make up
our lives. Real friends are for opening us to the opportunity to
take stock and sort out the experiences that have made us who we are
– and who we are becoming. With that in mind, I will do my best to
answer in less than a thousand pages what insights I have gained
through the loss of a child. If anyone is reading this who is in the
midst of such a loss, I want to say up front that it has taken years
for these insights to develop and a great deal of time for the
rawness of grief to give way to peace. I remember being alternately
angry at words like those I will share here and feeling inadequate
that I could not put my grief, my anger, and my sorrow aside to feel
such resolution. This is where I am now, not where I was then; and I
will share with you the words a friend spoke to me at that worst
time: “Someday, when you have finished grieving, you will use this
experience to help someone else who is going through the same thing.”
I can’t begin to tell you how angry that made me and how true it
was, when the time came that I was ready. Do not judge yourself for
anything while you are grieving. Grief has no rules. Take your
time. Feel your sorrow, and just keep breathing until the world sets
itself upright again. And it will.
Our lives are made up of days and
months and years when one day seems pretty much like the other. We
meander through a friendly world and enjoy the time we spend
exploring what it means to be human. But there are days that set
themselves apart from the others. They are the days that mark events
that alter the way we view the universe, for better or worse, and
sometimes divide our time into “before and after.” The birth of
a child, the loss of a parent, a move from one location to another,
times of great joy and times of great sorrow, and times of great
insight. My life will forever have two segments called “Before
Brett died” and “After Brett died,” because his arrival, his
short stay, and his departure have changed me irrevocably.
I come from a family with great
longevity. I grew up in a household with a great-aunt who began
talking to me about death when she was in her seventies. She wanted
me to know that she would not live forever; and although I protested
with many tears, she insisted that I listen. “Don’t cry at my
funeral,” she would tell me. “Promise me. And I want you to
sing my favorite hymn.” I was eleven years old when she extracted
this promise and twenty-nine when I delivered. She died on my
birthday in 1979. At the time, I thought it was kind of crappy that
she chose that day to move on; but in the time after my son died, I
found comfort in that simple coincidence. One year later, in
February of 1980, my boys went out to play Olympics with their
friends. Brett was six years old at the time and looking forward to
his seventh birthday on March 11. As they crossed the quiet street
in front of our house, everyone saw the car that came slowly down the
hill – everyone but Brett. The car that hit him was going 20 miles
per hour. The driver was not impaired. It was an accident, pure and
simple; and it changed my life in an instant. That instant set in
motion a series of unfolding insights that continue to appear to this
day.
Here they are:
1. I had studied Physics and learned
that two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same time. Now
I learned that when one object was a small boy and one was a large
car, the car wins.
This may seem harsh and without any
maternal love, but it was important, with my world turned upside
down, to know that the universe does not alter its order to suit the
individual. I needed my world right-side-up, and I needed to
understand that I wasn’t singled out.
2. I learned that life is not linear.
It spirals and loops and turns all over the place, but usually those
loops are so subtle that we don’t even notice them. Now I learned
that the linear view – we are born, we grow up, we grow old, we die
– was not always accurate.
I had to consider, for the first time,
that life was not so simple; and this expanded view has helped me
time and time again. When we place people in the constraints of a
linear timeline, we set ourselves up to judge. I have grown in
compassion as I have seen others whose loops and spirals have taken
them to sad places. I can relate.
3. I have learned that some loops and
spirals are surprisingly sorrowful and others are surprisingly
wonderful. Now that I recognize them, I experience joy at times I
might have overlooked before.
Imagine my surprise, when I married my
sweetheart, to learn that his son – MY son – had been born the
day Brett was buried. And he was just turning six. Sometimes the
universe sees a boy who needs a mom and a mom who needs a son. Loop,
spiral, joy!
4. I have learned not to fear death.
Now I suppose this one has morphed from
one form to another to fifty more over time. In the early days of my
grief, I stopped fearing death, because I didn’t see why it
mattered if I continued to live. Fortunately, this stage of anguish
lasted a very short but intense time. Thankfully, I had good friends
who propped me up and helped me go through the motions of living
until I began to feel alive again.
One morning, several weeks after Brett
died, I had a dream that seemed so real that I was right there in it.
I suppose my subconscious had picked up the sounds of my surviving
children playing in the early morning, and I found myself in the
boys’ bedroom. Brett was there, playing with his little sister.
“Oh! You’re here!” I said in surprise. As I moved toward him
and tried to give him a hug, he backed away, smiling all the time
until he disappeared into the mist in the corner of the room. There
was something in that smile that said, “I am okay. You can’t
touch me, but I am here.” If I close my eyes, I still can go to
that dream; and it has brought me great comfort.
I have come to believe that losing my
great-aunt Essie on my own birthday was another looping spiral that
calls me to remember her – and her wisdom – every time I turn the
calendar for another year.
5. I have learned that grief, in all
its raw truth, tells us lies.
If you are grieving right now, remember
that you cannot judge the remainder of your life based on the anguish
you feel right now. I told myself many lies during those days. I
could not go on without my son – and here I am, more than thirty
years later. I could never risk loving another child, because the
pain of losing him was so great – and I have added five more
children to my family since that time. I was a terrible mother,
because I had let one of my children die before me – but I am a
world-class mom who has brought her children back from the edge and
made it possible for all of us to cherish the memory of their
brother.
6. I have learned that grief is love,
turned inside out.
We cannot grieve deeply unless we have
loved deeply. Every tear I cried, every moment of raw pain, every
memory of times that never could be again expressed how deeply and
passionately I had loved my little boy while I had him here. In
time, I figured out that he wanted me to go on being happy and being
the sort of mom to the rest of my kids that I had been to him. I
learned to turn my grief inside out and live each day as a tribute to
the depth of love we had shared. This changed my life.
7. I have realized that every single
day there are mothers burying children.
I have a heart and compassion for every
one of them that my linear view had blocked before Brett died. It
never really entered my awareness that a mother whose child dies in
the poorest slum in Calcutta feels the same pain that I felt – that
life circumstances which might make it a more frequent occurrence
really do not matter to the heart of a mother. And I pray every day
for mothers and children who stand at the edge of the abyss.
8. I have learned how important it is
to get the message out to people about death not being a monster that
chooses you and attacks and robs you of life. Instead, it is a part
of the continuum of living.
By learning to embrace all of life,
including the fact that it is finite, I have been able to stand by
people who are near the end. This gives me, and I hope them, great
peace.
I hope there is something here that
resonates with someone who needs to hear it today. When my son died,
my view of the world was radically altered. I raged and grieved for
a time; but the day finally came when I had to admit that it would be
a difficult choice to make if I were offered to have him back and
give up all I had learned or to lose what had become myself and know
that I could not touch him just one more time. I suppose the
decision to embrace all his death had taught me was an easy one to
make, because the universe does not allow such choices.
9. In the end, we must choose whether
to live our days stuck in sorrow or to be fully alive and grab hold
of all that life puts before us.
Thirty years ago, I never could have
imagined
- That a year later I would be there for my best friend’s mother when her son died at age 32
- That I would go on to love five more children
- That I would walk with each of them, at their request, to visit the cemetery
(when they were
just about Brett’s age) and tell them about their brother.
- That people who were nearing the end of their lives would show up, again and again, and share with me the grace and wisdom they learned along the way and allow me to be there when they reached the end.
- That all of this would prepare me for my father’s last days, and that I would be able to reassure him as he prepared to leave this world for the next.
10. I leave you with the greatest
realization, the one that encompasses all the rest. Love never dies.
When the dust settles and the wind blows our grief away, it is the
love that remains. If you are missing someone you have cherished,
honor their memory by loving fiercely, wherever you go. A dear old
friend, in her 90’s at the time, told me “the most important
thing is to be remembered.” Live, love, and remember. Very close
by, beyond a thin veil, the people we love are watching. And
smiling.
Pamela Jones
www.pamelasteadjones.com
www.pamelasteadjones.com
5 comments:
My breath was taken away, my heart hurt and then healed reading Pamela's words. . .such a loss and yetwhen such learning, loving, growing, keeping on. . .so much wisdom shared - I am practically speechless - thank you Pamela for sharing and thank you Terri for sharing your Po!
Such truth... I wish I could get an RSS feed of Pamela's blog, but didn't find one available...
I have been touched many times by Pamela's wisdom. It never fails to find a place in my soul that needs a hug. With a grateful heart to her , her words and a mothers love..
~mm~
Thank you Terri for inviting Pamela to post on your blog.
Thank you Pamela for your wonderful post. I have not lost a child, but being a military Mom, I have so many dear friends who have lost a child.
Your son would be so proud of you.
<3
Good morning! Just wanted to pop in here and thank you for taking the time to read and give feedback. When it comes to living, we're all in this together. Thanks for being there with me. Linda, I'm sorry about the RSS, but I haven't figured out how to make that available. If you are a facebooker, I do post notifications there when publishing. Feel free to friend me. <3 you all.
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