No Control

I went to a shooting range the other day. I had never in my life held a gun before, unless you count a Nerf gun or BB gun. I was nervous at first, handling this deadly weapon. Such a powerful feeling, to feel the heft of the gun in my hands. For the first time since Ariella’s cancer diagnosis three years prior, I felt truly in control of something. Nothing like a cancer diagnosis to make you realize how little control we actually have over our lives. Sure there are plenty of things we can control, but ultimately, we are not in control. Anything can and does happen no matter the precautions we take. But at the shooting range, facing that target, I was the one in control.

Shooting a gun requires intense focus and concentration. There was no room for the stray thoughts and images that are usually burned in my mind. This was the only time since Ariella died that my mind was clear of everything but what I was doing in that moment. For any other activity in which I am engaged, no matter what it is, my mind is pulled in multiple directions, leaving only a part of my thoughts with the task at hand. My ability to concentrate has significantly declined. My memory is shot. Mornings I typically get the coffee pot ready for David after I pour my coffee. The other day I put the coffee in but not the water. One night when cooking dinner I was looking for the Parmesan cheese. I was looking everywhere in the fridge, knowing we had an almost full container but couldn’t find it. I resigned myself to not using it but when I turned back to the counter, there it was, mocking me. I had zero recollection of taking it out of the fridge. I start things but don’t finish and feel incredibly scattered. In fact, I started writing this post a week ago but couldn’t put down more than a couple of sentences at a time. I have plenty to say, just can’t seem to translate that to actual writing these days. Strangely enough the one thing that I can usually concentrate on is reading. I still get distracted and may need to read a paragraph more than once, but I can get through books as long as they hold my interest. So while reading doesn’t keep the pervasive thoughts completely at bay, it does help.

None of this has gotten any easier. In fact it continues to get harder. I am just missing out on so much and each day is another day I’m missing Ariella. Each day is another day of experiences and living that I don’t get to share with Ariella. Each night I lay in bed, missing the days when Ariella and I would cuddle together with books. My whole identity was taken from me and I’m struggling to move forward living a life in which I find no meaning. Before Ariella died I wouldn’t have said she was the only person or thing in my life that gave me purpose. But now that she’s gone, none of the rest of it matters. Anything else that may have given me reason before, just doesn’t cut it now. Pretending to live life is exhausting. I don’t want to do this anymore.

So Tired

I am tired. So very tired. Even when I get enough sleep, which doesn’t often happen these days, I never wake up feeling rested. Most nights I fall asleep without issue but staying asleep is another story. I toss and turn and have vivid dreams and I cannot remember the last time I slept through the night. Even when I take something to help me sleep I wake up feeling like a truck ran over me. On top of this debilitating sadness gripping me at my core, I am so horribly fatigued. I function, I go through the motions, but barely. I know I look okay to the outside world but I am two separate people. The fake me, the one that puts on a mask just so I can survive, and the real me. The one who no longer cares about anything, life included. The one who is silently screaming. The me that is numb to everything, except the constant pain, the constant missing. That I feel intensely, constantly, with no reprieve. But joy, happiness, contentment I am numb to. I don’t feel pleasure or peace or enjoyment. I feel completely dead inside. Every day I still look forward to the time I can reasonably go to bed so I can finally (try to) sleep through it all.

I haven’t written in a while. Not because I don’t need to, or because I’m doing better (whatever that means, and I’m not). It just feels so pointless. It’s all doom and gloom and nothing’s changed and I just want out of this life. I survived Ariella’s birthday, survived the holidays. But so what? It’s not like I would get through those days and all would be okay. There is always another date, another milestone, another something ahead. There are triggers everywhere. Reminders everywhere (as if I could forget). She is everywhere. But she’s not here. Where I need her to be. And because of that nothing will be okay again. Destined for a life of sadness and pain and longing. People who have been down this road swear that happiness can be found again. I believe it. But I don’t believe there will ever be true, untainted happiness. Happiness not accompanied by pain. And the thought of that is dispiriting. I have a very bleak future ahead of me and I still fantasize about driving my car off the road. I would never do it but I understand suicide now. I never did before. I never thought things could be that bad. But I understand how someone can be in so much pain and feel so hopeless that they would want to end it all. When life has seemingly lost all meaning, what is the point in living? Especially knowing you are subject to a lifetime of pain and heartache. So this is where I am.

The Holidays are Over. Now What?

The holidays are behind us. The merriment, festivities, celebrations are over. Should be a relief, yes? After all, holidays without a loved one are anything but happy and joyous. So if we can get through those days we can breathe a sigh of relief, right? WRONG! Now that the holidays are over we are approaching the dates. Diagnosis day. The day my father died. The day Ariella was admitted to the hospital for her bone marrow transplant. The day she got the transplant. The day she went to the ICU. The day she was intubated. And you all know the rest. The hours and hours spent in the hospital from February to May. The initial joy, hope, and optimism leading quickly to worry, fear, and devastation. The weather changing the seasons shifting, while we were trapped in the hospital room praying and praying for a positive outcome. Months of our lives, never for a second thinking that Ariella would never see the outside of a hospital room again, until that final setback. Until there was nothing more that could be done. Until we had to make the decision to stop treatment, stop life support, and say goodbye to our daughter. How can life turn that quickly? How can the vibrancy and exuberance of a child be snuffed out too soon? With no warning? We knew she wouldn’t feel great after the transplant but we never imagined the nightmare that awaited us. If only we could. Maybe we would have made different decisions, done things differently. The “what ifs” slay me.

We are in a new year, a new decade. One in which Ariella never lived. Evidence that time continues to move forward no matter how much I will it to stop, turn backwards, reset. The only comfort is that the passage of times means I’m that much closer to being reunited with Ariella. That time cannot come soon enough. I don’t know how I am going to get through these days, these years, these decades without my girl. This was going to be an exciting year. Ariella’s Bat Mitzvah. Entering the last year of middle school. A cruise finally taken that we had to cancel when Ariella was first diagnosed. Dancing and getting back on stage again. Two years ago, 2017 into 2018, we celebrated Ariella ringing the bell for finishing treatment, just to relapse 5 months later. In January 2019 Ariella rang the bell after finishing radiation and scans following radiation showed no evidence of active disease. We were thrilled she was eligible for bone marrow transplant and were optimistic that if we could just get through that and her recovery, that 2020 would be a fantastic year of health and joy and no evidence of disease. 2018 was supposed to be that year for us, but her relapse took care of that. 2019 was then supposed to be the year that she was cured. Instead of celebrating life and new beginnings in 2020, all I can think about are the countless years ahead I have to get through.

I’ve realized this is a common theme among bereaved parents, especially of those whose children died within the last year. I’ve seen many posts about how they just wish time would stop. They don’t want to enter a new year without their child. They don’t want the evidence that time moves forward, that life goes on. But the other common theme is being glad to be one year closer to being reunited, one year closer to no longer having this pain, one year closer to no longer having to live without our children. I have no idea what this year holds for me. I have had several tell me they hope this is a better year. But how can it be? Because even though Ariella died last year, her absence is forever. I guess a better year would be one without a tragedy, but it’s still a year in which Ariella never lived. And honestly, I’ve been through, am still going through, the worst thing a person can experience so anything this year throws at me will never compare to experiencing the loss of my daughter. I was never big on New Year’s Eve but I did look forward to the fresh start of the new year. But now I just don’t give a shit. Whatever happens, happens. Just another 12 months to suffer through.