Grateful, yet Grieving

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Walking with a Limp

January 26, 2020 by Pam Luschei

Anniversaries are usually celebrated. This past week I remembered the day my husband died two years ago. The second anniversary of my husband’s death is a remembrance. There’s a mix of gratitude, filled with thoughts and memories, mixed with tears. While the first year of grieving is about surviving, and getting through all the firsts, the second year is recognizing the reality of “this is my life now”. Grieving takes on another element; less intense, yet with a sense of distance away from the event. What appears is a door that holds all your memories, while there is a another door that is unopened with a sign that says, “Your Life Now.”. I’m beginning to open that door, little by little, to peak around the corner as I create a different life. There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think of my husband and miss him. He will always be the love of my life. This past week I found some of the cards he gave me for Valentine’s Day, my birthday, our anniversary and the last Christmas card he gave me. I smiled and cried as I read his words that he loved me. Those cards are gifts to me now; reminders of his love and the years we had together. C. S. Lewis said, at the death of his wife, “The death of a beloved is an amputation.” The loss of a loved one is like having a missing limb. There’s an adjustment to doing everything differently. I had an aunt who had an amputation of her leg and wore an prosthetic leg. I was about 13 or 14, when I asked if I could see how she put her leg on. She said, “sure”, and showed me how she manipulated her own leg and attached the prosthetic leg so she could walk. My aunt walked with a limp, but she was walking. As I think back on that memory, I’m recalling how she did what she had to do in order to walk, to move about and live her life. Similarly, I am learning to walk again, with my own limp into a different landscape that what I had planned.

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January 26, 2020 /Pam Luschei
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Memories and Traditions

December 12, 2019 by Pam Luschei

When you experience a major family loss, the void is massive and deep. The way you did life with someone for so many years is like losing a limb. It’s painful and always present. With the holidays come numerous triggers with a boatload of memories that coming flooding back. Surviving the holidays last year took courage and planning to navigate the unfamiliar course of grief. Somewhere back in the fall, my children and I decided we had to plan a trip to get away for Christmas. The plan developed and became something to look forward to. We knew that our first Christmas was going to be tough. Our getaway took us to a completely different environment, without the familiar traditions of home. However, in our getaway, we still carried on the tradition of attending a Christmas Eve service. The church settings were different, but the message of the baby born in Bethlehem was the same. Having a plan and making it happen was helpful.

A change of environment proved to be a place where we could also reflect and recall our memories together. With tears of sorrow and gratitude, I was able to retell my favorite memories of my husband when my children were little, and listen to their memories as well. It was a way to remember and honor the one we missed.

Being able to talk about your loved one and what you miss is a treasured gift. Yes, there will be tears. Get a tissue box and let them flow. Your tears express your love for your loved one. No need to apologize.

In The First Year of Loss?

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December 12, 2019 /Pam Luschei
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