Iced Chai Latte

I can’t. I just can’t anymore. I just wanted a fucking iced chai latte and that was too hard. Trying not to cry all day long but every fucking thing is a reminder. Drove someone to an appointment at the hospital where Ariella was born. The best day of my life. Never in a million years would I have imagined that less than 12 years from that day she would no longer be here. She was perfect and healthy at birth, even though she was born by c-section. She was rarely sick and I couldn’t imagine that I would only get to be a mom for 11 1/2 years. And don’t tell me I will always be her mom. It’s not the fucking same. I don’t get to see her grow up. I don’t get to teach her to drive. I don’t get to hear about boys and take her shopping for a prom dress. I don’t get to send her off to college and help her plan a wedding. I don’t get to brush her hair and tuck her in at night. I don’t get to hug and kiss her. I don’t get to cook her dinner, pack her lunches, share sushi with her, watch her dance. I don’t get to read to her, read the stories she wrote, receive the cards she always made. I don’t get to help her with her homework, take her to musicals, take her on vacation. I don’t get to see how she would have turned out. I don’t get to see the amazing adult she would have become. I don’t get to continue the amazing mother-daughter relationship we had. I don’t get to have grandchildren. I don’t get to just be with her, every day. I lost everything. I am missing out on everything. And I feel guilty about it because I should be sad for her, for her life being cut so short but I am sad for me, for all I’ve lost and all I will never have. And yet I am wasting this life I have. Maybe I should try to enjoy life, go on living because she can’t. It seems wrong to not “live” when all she wanted to do was live. But it also seems wrong to live when she can’t. When she deserved it. Why should I get to live when she can’t?

The second appointment of the day was at an imaging center. The same center where Ariella had her follow up x-rays. I will never forget the anxiety walking into that place. My heart pounding, adrenaline pumping. Literally shaking. And that feeling would linger until we got the results. It was an x-ray done at this place that showed her relapse. While waiting there I tried to distract myself. I read and watched a show on my phone. But my thoughts always went back to all the times I was there with Ariella. And the tears would start.

It had been an especially rough few days. I just wanted my iced chai before heading home after a long day. In the parking lot. A Baltimore Symphony Orchestra bumper sticker. Reminded me of watching the BSO perform Peter and the Wolf at Hopkins when Ariella was there for her BMT. She was feeling so good. I just don’t understand what fucking happened. And I just want to go back and change the variable that made everything go to shit. Remembering the good times, remembering the bad, makes no difference. It all leads to my child dying. Sometimes remembering the good is harder because it only reminds me that this never should have happened. Cancer didn’t kill her. It was a perfect fucking storm of everything that could go wrong with the treatment. So the good times, even in the hospital because there were some, just serve to show how naive our optimism was. How we should never have done the transplant. Because that transplant took the life of the girl in the hospital who was just days prior dancing in the hallways, silly stringing her teacher in her hospital room and pranking her nurse with a scary clown mask. She wasn’t sick. She didn’t look sick. She didn’t act sick. But still she died. It’s not fucking fair.

All of that from a bumper sticker. But I wanted my chai and after navigating probably the world’s most awful parking lot I couldn’t leave empty handed. So I composed myself and went in to get my drink . But right there in front of me in line, a girl about Ariella’s age, with her mother. They were joking with each other. Laughing. Ariella could always make me laugh. Even when I was angry with her. Sometimes I had to hide my laughing because she did or said something she shouldn’t have that I found funny. Sometimes her tantrums (and yes, even at 11 she had tantrums, she wasn’t perfect) were so over the top I couldn’t help but laugh, even though that set her off even more. But she was funny and silly. She made weird and funny faces. A few days after she had her trach placed I was having her make funny faces with me. She made up songs that made no sense and if you told her she was weird she said “thank you.” I miss laughing with her. I miss the sound of her laughter. It was contagious. I have laughed since Ariella died but it doesn’t sound the same to me and it doesn’t feel the same. Many times I’m laughing at something I wish I could share with Ariella because she would also find it funny. My laughter feels hollow now. It’s tinged with sadness. It’s not as loud, not as strong, fades as quickly as it started.

I made it through the line though my eyes were tearing up. While waiting for my drink I decided to check my phone. I wanted to check in on the writing group I’m doing which is on Facebook. I opened the app and had some notifications and I made the mistake of looking at them. One was a beautiful post by the mom of another girl with Ewing’s sharing Ariella’s page and website. I loved that she shared it but I wasn’t expecting to see it and it made me cry. Another had shared a picture of Ariella and her cousins 3 years ago, before it all went to hell. And at the top of my newsfeed was a post with pictures of the Dancers Against Cancers hope stories who are now angels. Just one year ago we were in LA with Dancers Against Cancer (fabulous organization by the way, check them out) for the Industry Dance Awards. Ariella met and bonded with other hope stories and was reunited with friends met that previous April. I never dreamed just a year later she would be there again, but this time in a remembrance video.

I make it home, finally. To this.

Just one more in your face reminder. Fuck you Amazon. Kind of ironic though because Amazon has been my lifesaver. If I need something but am not up for going somewhere, I don’t have to. And you can see from this post why I don’t want to go anywhere.

I just can’t do it. I can’t go on without her. We had so many plans. So many things we wanted to do. It’s not fair that I get to go on living when she doesn’t. I don’t want to go on living. Why couldn’t it have been me? She had her whole life to live. She had so much good to do in the world. She was only just getting started.

There is nothing good that will come from this. There is no lesson to be learned from my grief. Anything I may have needed to learn or do did not require my child to die. At the end of each day I feel like “Yay, I made it.” But for what? What am I making it for? I just have to wake up and do it again. Day after day after day. Just going through the motions. Not enjoying it. Suffering from pain and heartache most of the day. Who wants to live a life in pain and yearning for the one person you can’t have? It just seems so daunting, so hopeless. I don’t know how to continue.

5 Replies to “Iced Chai Latte”

  1. You will never get over losing someone so special in your life. No parent should burry a child, unfortunately you and so many others have! You have so many emotions to go through and to live with, hurt, angry, guilt, memories, what would have been if?
    Hopefully you will reach a point in life where you will find peace for yourself!
    ❤️🙏

  2. The one platitude or cliché I do believe is you have to take it a day at a time. There is no cure for this. I hope that going back to work will help some but I know that’ll be very hard for you too. It is a purpose though, you do help the kids – they need you. It will never, ever be the same without Ariella – you can only wade through it all and hope that the day-to-day things we all have to do will eventually bring pleasure. Every single thing is fraught with memories. Lean on your friends and family when you need to, everyone who matters will be there wants to do whatever they can. That’s the one thing I do know for sure.

  3. I won’t pretend that I know what this is like for you – only through the sharing of your pain, I imagine. My heart aches for you.

    And as gut wrenching and painful as this experience is, I am relieved that you are using this blogging platform as a form of therapy. This I believe is partly “how” you’re getting through.

    I thank you for your bravery and courage in sharing your raw uncut emotions at such a delicate time of your life. I feel honored and privileged to part take in your journey. It’s going to be a long road that will eventually have a turning.

    You have a way with words, a gift. May your gift continue to be your refuge. Peace and blessings to you.

  4. Erica, my heart breaks for you. I cannot even begin to imagine what you are going through. It is not the normal progression to bury your child. I do hope at some point you find some peace. I’m so glad you’re using writing as an form of therapy but have you thought about talking to someone? Is there a grief therapy group available that you might be interested in? I know you have to take it day by day but this post has me so worried for you. How is your husband doing? Hopefully, you are drawing some strength and comfort from each other. God bless you and I will keep you in my prayers!!!

Comments are closed.