Wednesday, March 2, 2011

(ring-ring)  My wife's cell phone went off.  What the...it's 5:45 in the morning, who'd be calling now?  And I was going to sleep in a bit...
  She answered, after looking at the caller id, "Hi, son, what's up?" "What!"  "Honey, get up.  Tim's dead."  (It wasn't Tim, it was Ken, his biological father and roommate.  He had woken up and found Tim on the floor.  He had been dead for some time.) 

That was the end of our lives as we knew them, and the start of a new one.  One where we no longer had a son.

It's been six months since we got the news.  Six months to the minute that I officially start this blog.  Somehow that feels appropriate.
Six months.  How can it have been so long, where has the time gone?  That's not a paradox, it's been an entire lifetime for us, but the pain is so strong it still feels like it just happened.  

After we got that call, the first thing I did was call my boss and tell her, "I won't be in today."  "Okay.  Why?"  "My son is dead."  "Oh, well, I'll see you in a couple of weeks."  She knew Tim lived across the country, and I'd need a long week to take care of things.  I then got dressed and went to my doctor's appointment.  (That's why I was going to sleep in -- I was taking that morning off to go see him, but it was a mid-morning appointment.)  He was quite sympathetic, and was surprised that I was there.  But logically I knew I had to take care of myself, too - and it was a consult based on my latest blood tests.  (Good news, folks -- red yeast rice and fish oil can indeed help with your cholesterol levels!)  Oh, and I had to cancel my next-day therapist's appointment, they charge $50 if you give less than 24 hours notice of a cancellation.  Later that day, though, I saw him in passing as I took my wife to her psychiatrist's appointment (one which we definitely needed to get her to) and told him what happened.  
  Somewhere in there, I was able to make airplane, hotel, and car rental reservations.  We were in Florida the next night.  And I wonder why anyone would ever want to live there.  We set one foot outside the West Palm Beach airport at 10:30 pm, and suddenly felt like we were swimming in the air.  Talk about humidity!  In fact, the whole week the weather was like something out of Hell -- hot, humid, heavy rain, thunder and lightning -- which somehow seemed to be right.

  Unless you are also a parent who has lost a child, never - NEVER - tell a grieving parent, "I know how you feel."  You don't.  You can't.  Our children are our future, our investment in the survival of our species, the continuation of our bloodlines (okay, that one doesn't apply to the step-father, except by proxy).  They are what we want the world to know us by.  They are our hopes, our dreams, our (insert cliche here.)  But they are.  They are what we live for, they are what we die for.  For them to die before us is just so against the natural order of what we are, that the loss of that future makes us wonder what we have left.  Of course, we can't follow our children.  Okay, we can, and some have - but does that honor them, or shame us?  

  Oh, you may notice I'm free-associating here a bit.  Well, I do that.  It's how I think.  I have A.D.D. -- which was one reason why Tim and I related, I could understand his A.D.H.D.  We both would sometimes range all over the place in conversation, but it worked for us.  God, I miss that boy.

  I think I'll stop for now, it's hard to formulate what I want to say.  But stay tuned -- I intend in the future of this blog to explore my feelings as that happen, and as they happened in the past six months.  I will question the nature of our existence.  I will laugh along with my grieving parents as I post "things not to say to a grieving parent."  (Example: "I know how you feel, I had a goldfish that died once.")  I will open up to honest discussion through comments (but retain the rights to edit, being the blog owner.  Hey, if you want first amendment speech, write your own blog!)  And on this journey, I hope to find some healing myself.  And perhaps help share what I've learned with others, to maybe help them in their processes.




4 comments:

  1. Hi Bill,

    I want to say how happy I am that you are able to get this out. I cannot begin to fathom what you thought,think,felt or feel so I offer no words but a congrats on letting it out.

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  2. As a parent, and husband I can empathize. When we experienced a miscarriage, it was devastating, but i know it is not even close to the loss you feel. being a parent and grief do, unfortunately, share 1 common trait. they are impossible to teach or prepare adequately for. I doubt I could handle what you did. it would surely throw me off the deep end. The one thing i have heard and felt through family loss is remember the best of life and never dwell on the worst.

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  3. I can in fact say that I know what you are feeling. I lost my daughter almost 20 years ago. Hang in there and be good to yourself. Allow yourself to work through the grief that you are feeling. Do not let anyone tell you what you should be feeling.

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  4. Tim was my prom date and I will never forget that night. He was such an amazing friend! I am so sorry for your loss.

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