Yesterday the anxiety returned. By bedtime, I could barely catch my breath.
I struggle with seasonal depression. But I'm from ND and that's not rare for our
northern climate. Our winters can be
long, and harsh, and suffocating. I can
usually feel the heaviness settle in about mid-November -- right before
Thanksgiving. I sludge through the
holidays (so thankful I truly LOVE Christmas).
January is usually a blur. And I hold my breath through February. Especially the last week. The last week of February is always the
hardest, as I find myself slowly sinking even farther under an ocean of
heaviness that I just want to give in to.
Because it is easier - and more
comfortable - to rest in the depths than it is to fight my way through it.
And then comes my birthday. I hate my birthday. I never look forward to it. I try to ignore it. And I can't wait to get past it because then, oddly enough, I can breathe again. I have never understood this. I just knew it was the way it was.
And then comes my birthday. I hate my birthday. I never look forward to it. I try to ignore it. And I can't wait to get past it because then, oddly enough, I can breathe again. I have never understood this. I just knew it was the way it was.
Until today. When the proverbial light bulb came on. And a quick Google search brought up the
photograph below.
5 days before my 14th birthday, my baby sister died. At age 2 1/2. I can't remember the exact date of the
funeral but it had to have been only a day or two before my birthday. She died at home under the care of Hospice,
in the arms of my mom, and surrounded by the few friends and family that had
stuck with us through a very long and isolating 2 1/2 years. We knew it was coming. An odd lot of humanity gathered in an uneven
circle and breathing quiet shallow breaths, as we waited and listened for my
sister to breathe her last.
What I do remember:
1. As soon as they
said my sister was gone, I gave her one last kiss, I got up, walked out of the
room, and went to bed. I just wanted to
sleep but people kept coming into my room to see how I was doing. I said fine.
I felt the urge to lie and pretend I was a hot mess because that seemed
more appropriate but I didn't. Even
though it seemed kinder than admitting that you are relieved and that your only
thought is that hopefully now, somehow, your life can return to some kind of
'normal'.
2. I remember getting
up the next morning to find all of my sister's stuff gone. I walked up the stairs to our living room and
the silence and emptiness took my breath away.
Her bed, medical equipment, blankets... everything that had taken over
the main floor of our house for so long... was just gone - as if the last 2 1/2
years had never happened. I just stood
there... hanging on to a breath that I would still be holding on to 32 years
later.
3. My mom took me
shopping for a dress for the funeral. At K-Mart.
And we bought the ugliest frilly, pink, polyester dress I had ever
seen. And I was angry. I remember thinking that my sister wouldn't
even recognize me in the dress (I was a bit of a tomboy). And she wouldn't care if I wore a dress
or not. I didn't wear them when she was
alive. Why should I have to wear one
because she was dead.
4. Almost all of my 45
classmates came to the funeral. They
took up 3 pews of the large Catholic church.
I don't think I could ever express how much that meant to me. And it was a bit of a revolt because our
school principal originally said he would not excuse the absences of the
students who left school that day to attend.
(This was the same principal who gave my mom a hard time about letting
out of school to go to grief counseling.)
Thank you for sticking up for me (even though some of you probably did
come just to get out of school. But if you think a funeral is more fun than
going to class... well, whatever.) It is
probably one of the only times in high school that I ever felt like I mattered
to anyone.
5. The funeral was
completely awkward. I was 13 (14). That age is already awkward enough. But as I sat at the after service reception
with my friends, I had no clue what to do.
I felt guilty for not crying. I
felt guilty for laughing. I felt guilty for wanting to eat more Jello -
and for refusing to eat the funeral hotdish.
I wanted to throw off the ugly pink dress and go back to school with my
friends and just pretend that none of this was happening.
6. I remember that
life never did get back to normal. Our
family was a shell. What was left of us
- me, my mom & dad - would retreat to our individual corners of the
house each day. No one really
talking. No one really living. My dad and I slowly emerged - my mom never
recovered.
7. I remember that I
never cried. Oh, I cried about boys, and
school, and classes ... and life. But I
never cried about my sister. In part
because for almost 3 years, I was told by well-meaning folk that I needed to be
tough. Don't complain. This isn't about you. Don't bother your mom with your feelings or
problems - she's got enough to worry about.
I did that for so long and, like the perfectionist that I am, I did it
perfectly. If fact, I did it so well
that at times I still know how to do nothing else. I am
a tough nut - for better or worse. 32
years later... I still have not cried.
But I also never cried because I was relieved for my sister. She was born 3 months prematurely - and survived - in a day and age that when babies with much smaller obstacles died because there just was not the medical technology that we have now. She was a miracle. She came home after 3 months. And a month later contracted spinal meningitis. She recovered but her heart was severely damaged and she was now blind, mostly deaf, and would fight epilepsy and encephalitis the rest of her short life. She had beautiful blonde hair that would never be allowed to grow out more than a few inches before a doctor would have to shave it to do another surgery to replace the shunt in her head because she had either grown out of it or it was not working properly. We had to suction out her lungs several times an hour to remove the phlegm and fluid build-up. And even with heavy meds, grand mal seizures would shake and seize up her innocent and frail body - sometimes several times a day. And so when my sister left us, I knew she was free. Free from it all.
But I also never cried because I was relieved for my sister. She was born 3 months prematurely - and survived - in a day and age that when babies with much smaller obstacles died because there just was not the medical technology that we have now. She was a miracle. She came home after 3 months. And a month later contracted spinal meningitis. She recovered but her heart was severely damaged and she was now blind, mostly deaf, and would fight epilepsy and encephalitis the rest of her short life. She had beautiful blonde hair that would never be allowed to grow out more than a few inches before a doctor would have to shave it to do another surgery to replace the shunt in her head because she had either grown out of it or it was not working properly. We had to suction out her lungs several times an hour to remove the phlegm and fluid build-up. And even with heavy meds, grand mal seizures would shake and seize up her innocent and frail body - sometimes several times a day. And so when my sister left us, I knew she was free. Free from it all.
I have a visual of my sister in
my mind of her running through a field of daisies - free to run and laugh and
soak in the sights around her with her long blonde locks lifting in the
breeze around her. And in later years, I
know that she was joined by her nieces and nephews - the 4 children that my husband I lost
through miscarriage. They keep her
company, playing and rejoicing and waiting to be reunited with those of us still
left behind.
What is the point of all this? I am not sure. Except for the epiphany that life is not
random. That for every shadow that seems
to hover over us there is a reason that that shadow is there - whether we
recognize it or not. And shadows only
exist when light is only allowed to glance off of something from one
angle. But when we put a spotlight on
something and expose it fully to the light - the shadows disappear. And hopefully, when the shadows flee so will
all the heaviness that comes with them.
And then finally, maybe finally, I'll be able to breathe in
February.
