I can’t. I can’t. I can’t do this. I can’t live like this. This life. This existence. I don’t want it. It’s horrific. It’s lonely and painful and desolate. It’s numbness and shock and confinement. The pain is overwhelming, it threatens to suffocate me. My arms ache to hold my girl. There are times the pain is so immense that I literally pull my hair, scratch at my skin, anything to try to detract from the anguish. I scream from the top of my lungs. Wail and cry and beg G-d to take my pain away. But nothing comes close to offering any kind of release. It builds up and builds up and builds up but has no place to go.
I don’t write as frequently as I used to. It’s not because I don’t have anything to say. These feelings, this heartache, hasn’t gone anywhere. I have plenty to say. But it’s all the same. Nothing has changed. The darkness still envelopes me. I still cry every day, multiple times a day. I still have visions of driving my car off the side of the JFX or slamming into a tree at full speed. I would never actually follow through but the thoughts plague my mind whenever I am at the wheel of my car. I still count the minutes until I can reasonably go to bed because sleep is the only escape from this nightmare. I can’t be silly, frivolous. I’m no fun anymore. I am in a constant state of sorrow. Joking around, having a good time, making small talk, being carefree, are all foreign to me. I go out, I see people, but there is no true enjoyment. I function. I exercise. I go to work. I cook dinner. I get out of the house. But there is no pleasure in any of it. This is a life sentence. Decades. I have decades of this. It is crushing and soul sucking.
Memories flutter through my mind. Brief movies of our all too short time together. Ariella as a newborn with her full head of dark hair and her daddy’s mouth. Crying whenever she was put down. Ariella as a toddler, wearing my boots and carrying my purse through the house. Visiting Ariella in school during American Education Week. Seeing her in a world that was usually her own. One that we did not get to witness very often. She had her own life in school. A life with her teachers and friends that we didn’t know much about. Playing soccer, doing gymnastics, and shining on stage when she started to dance. So many memories. So many. But not nearly enough. There will never be enough. When those memories dance through my thoughts I find myself in complete disbelief. This is my life now. I am living in a constant state of disbelief. I cannot believe that that little girl flooding my mind is no longer here. I cannot fathom that our lives turned out this way. I always felt so very lucky. Life came easily. Bad things, truly bad things, didn’t happen to us. Even when Ariella was diagnosed I thought nothing worse could happen. We would have a horrible year but in the end she would be just fine. Because nothing bad happens to us. And now I can’t imagine anything working in my favor again. And yet I still can’t believe it. When I’m cooking dinner I can’t believe she’s not in the next room doing her homework. When I’m getting ready for bad I can’t believe that my night won’t end without reading with Ariella. When I’m driving home from work I can’t believe that I don’t have to stop on the way home to pick her up from school. There is so much unbelievable about this and yet it happened. It’s real. A life sentence, as I mentioned, when I would much rather be sentenced to death.
I know, I know – I wish there was something, anything I could do to help ease any of the pain. I love you and David so much.
Oh Erica… I love you guys so very much. Wishing I could do something to help you. This is so not right.