Monday, March 20, 2023

Bridging the Gap

Our Mom was paralyzed in a car accident 29 years ago today.  She didn’t realize that today was the day because she was playing Bingo.  But, her kids did.  

My younger brother and I remember the knock on the door in the wee hours of the morning.  We were the only ones still living at home.  I was 16, he was 14.  My sister was newly married and my older brother was in boot camp at the Naval Training Center in Illinois. 

It was our Uncle and Mom’s best friend at the door.  Mom had been in an accident.  She hurt her back, so she was flown to the nearest city with better doctors, is what I remember.  But, I also remember thinking she just wouldn’t be able to lift anything heavy for awhile.  

That turned out to be true.  But, how true, I had no way of knowing.  

My brother remembers a yellow envelope with her belongings, cut rings, and money covered in blood. I remember seeing her in the ICU, how bad the room smelled, metal coming out of her head and arm, asking her how she got some random abrasion, and hearing her robot voice say she would walk again. 

I left the next day for Disney World for my planned Spring Break trip with my high school choir.  I didn’t want to go, but staying wasn’t helpful to anyone.  She came home from the rehabilitation hospital three months later.  My brother and I became caregivers, and adults who looked like children.

Today, 29 years later, I’ve been very unlike me.  Fighting tears most of the day, actually.

I heard River of Dreams on Saturday while I was making dinner.  I heard it because I put it on my Spotify playlist awhile ago, because it reminds me of my Mom.  She used to play it on the piano and the piano itself would come to life.  But, Saturday, while standing in my kitchen, it brought my walking, piano-playing Mom and my little girl self into Room 167 at the nursing home, and I wept for all of us.  

So many losses over such a long period of time.  If you’re 29 years of age, you’re still young.  But, if you’ve been in a wheelchair for 29 years, or caring for and loving someone who has, it seems like a different kind of 29.  Maybe like dog years, where 1 year is really 7 years.  Or something like that. 

But, I need to write today, because I’m still surprised by my emotions, which tells me I’m not as smart as I think I am.  Especially after sooo long, and after Saturday.  I thought I got “it” out of my system.  Whatever “it” is, exactly.  

After talking to Mom today, and realizing that today is just another day for her, I think I am figuring it out.  

Today, I am sad for me and my brother, and for losing the last few years of our childhood.  I am sad for my older siblings, too, but in a different way.  We all bear and have borne different kinds, levels, and layers of suffering because of our Mom’s accident and the upside-downness that follows.  Where we went to college, or not.  Where we lived, or not.  How far we dared to dream, or not…

Even now, she is often at the center of our thoughts.  Our emotions vary widely, depending on what is happening with her, what she needs, or what we wish were different.  

But, because her suffering is and has been so great, her children’s suffering, as it relates to her own, remains unseen.  She is like a ship making her way through the ocean.  We are tied off in little inner tubes bumping along behind her, riding the waves as they come.  

It’s not that she doesn’t care, she just can’t see us back there. 

I was recently trying to convey some uneasiness I had about some changes in her health.  She said, “Well, how do you think I feel?”  

She’s right, of course.  

But, that didn’t keep me from feeling my feelings, just like it hasn’t for 29 years.  But, there’s often no place for them because her suffering is so giant and unending, it hogs all the room.  So, I stuff them, and cry for her instead because there’s plenty to cry about.  

And now I know something else.  I am familiar with pain created by a gap in understanding.  

I am writing a story about what life is like after losing a spouse.  I am an interesting author for such a story, because I have not lived that life.  I hope I never will, but am not naive enough to think I won’t.  But, I meet weekly with people who are.  I hear their stories and recognize their great suffering because their spouse died, but also that their suffering is unnecessarily greater because it is not seen nor understood.  

After today, I understand my motivation and my ability to write about someone else’s suffering a little better.  I see them and I see a gap.  

I don’t like gaps.  They’re unnecessary.  Love and compassion and listening and trying to understand can close them, or at least come close.

Dear Mom, Josh, Mike, and Michelle, spouses missing their spouses and all who live with a gap in understanding,

I see you.  I hear you.  I love you. And I want to understand…

P.S. Heidi, same goes for you…

Love, 

Me

 



12 comments:

  1. My name is Connie. Your mom & I would celebrate our birthdays together when in high school. What a wonderful thing u wrote! I had already moved away & didn’t know about her accident. Give her a hug for me so sorry for your pain.

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  2. Beautiful! Love you and you writing! You have been big piece in my healing journey.

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  3. Oh, Heidi, God has blessed you with so many gifts and your empathy and gift of writing to share strong emotion communicates so beautifully and helps so many of us. Love you sweet friend. Keep writing please.

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  4. Very nice; powerful words & emotions

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  5. Thank you so much for sharing with us your feelings of grief over your mothers accident and injuries. You are a great writer and a wonderful support to your mom and our group! You have given us another wonderful example of how to live with, except and cope with grief in our journey.

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  6. Heidi, I love you! I can’t say I understand how you feel but I know that pain and loss somehow brings all of us closer together! I do love your gift of expressing. Jan

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  7. Your mom and dad were the first people we met after moving to Wamego. We found it hard to find a place to live at that time and when we did we had two weeks to wait till our rental was vacant. We would eat nightly at the Meat Block . Your parents invited us to stay with them rather than stay in a motel. We did that and I would help with Michelle and Mike while they and my husband worked. It was a friendship that lasted years! I tell you this to just show you another way your mom has impacted my life. I’m a widow now and can tell you sometimes life just doesn’t seem fair! Please hug your mom for me and tell her I think about her all the time.

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  8. Sending love & hugs. Helen

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  9. BEAUTIFUL, my friend. Gaps are like the opposite of Thin Spaces, right?

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  10. Heidi I have no way of knowing what you went through but seeing what you have become you should be so proud. We all have a cross to bear some are just heavier than others.

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  11. You and your Mom are remarkable people...

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  12. Dear Heidi, that horrendous gap! Feels like an endless pity. We may not ever understand the gap. Family, friends and people with a heart so big, they always have love to spear, like you. These are the people and the reasons why we can carry on.
    Love you and will always be grateful for you, for your writing, for what you do, and for your love and courage to say: I don't understand.
    Malu Satyro

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