It's been minutes since you died. It's been a lifetime. The past year was seconds. The past year was an eternity. Twelve and a half years ago you were added to our family. Our family was whole, was one. Eleven and a half years later you were taken away. But we are not equal to what we were before you were born. The only change in the equation is you. You weren't here, and then you were, and then you weren't. And now we are less than we were before you came into our lives. Because now we know what we are missing. 1+1=2 2+1=a family; everything 3-1=0; without you, nothing else matters No matter what or who we add to our family, it will never be complete again. We will forever now be just a compilation of parts, that do not form a whole.
Grief Doesn’t Go Away
Grief doesn’t go away. It doesn’t end. It changes, shifts shape, but it is always my companion. This is true even with the grief I have for my father. He died over 4 years ago. The grief for him is not as heavy, not as all encompassing, but it is certainly still there. And though my dad died younger than he should have, I knew one day I would have to live without him. But knowing that doesn’t change the ache I feel when I’m missing him. It’s just not as oppressive as it used to be.
With Ariella, it’s different. You never expect to outlive your child. My grief for her is still oppressive, and yet this grief has also shifted. The feeling that I cannot possibly survive this has lessened, because I have survived for a year. It’s been devastating and suffocating, but I’m still here. So I know I’ll survive, which somehow makes it worse. Because I don’t want to survive this life. I don’t want to live without her. I still cry at some point every day but there are now small moments in time when she is not my first thought. She is still the first thing I think about when waking up and the last thing I think about before sleep. And the majority of the day is spent missing and wondering and just plain hurting. But it is somehow different. Instead of the constant, nonstop sharp pangs of grief, it is a constant ache accompanied by large waves that threaten to knock me over and drown me. I have gotten use to this pain, to this heaviness, to this always knowing that I will never be complete again. I have not gotten used to these waves that come at me at unexpected moments, set off by the smallest trigger or memory. Though the pain is always there, those sharper waves catch me off guard. They are hard to recover from.
Grief changes a person. Especially with an out of order death. I am not the person I used to be. I was always more serious than silly, but was definitely more carefree. I used to sing at the top of my lungs in the car, dance around the house, play games, joke around. I don’t do those things anymore. I’m not lighthearted anymore. I most definitely am not a fun person anymore. It’s not guilt. I know Ariella would want me to have fun. She would want me to live, to enjoy life, to have experiences. But I just don’t want to. It’s not in me anymore. Fun. I don’t know what that is. I have times that are pleasant. But nothing that I would call fun. There is always something missing. What a complete change from someone who laughed a lot to someone who barely even smiles. Real smiles. Smiles that reach my eyes. Smiles that mean I am actually happy in the moment. Even the moments where I may seem happy, when I laugh, are not real. I don’t know how to explain it, but there is always a part of me that is not engaged. That is held back. The part of me that indicates how I truly feel, how I really am doing, not how I say I am doing. I always had anxiety. But it has gotten so much worse. For me this quarantine has been a blessing because it means I don’t often have to go out, I don’t often have to make small talk, I don’t often have to worry about being sucker punched by a song, a memory, a thought, or anything else. The anxiety, along with the grief, is ever present. Grief is fickle. Some days I don’t care about anything, meaning that nothing really matters. The things people complain about, the everyday worries and activities, etc. None of it matters and I just can’t be bothered to care about the small stuff. And as they say, it’s all small stuff. Other days the smallest annoyance or aggravation can set me off. Spilling something, a stain on my shirt, a delayed delivery of something I ordered. All things that don’t matter when the most important thing is gone, and yet somehow they sometimes matter more. Because why can’t something go right?
I have been at this post for several days now. I just can’t seem to finish it. I can’t seem to find the words. I want to write. I NEED to write. But I think I’ve lost why I started this blog in the first place. There were several reasons but first and foremost it was a way for me to get out my thoughts and feelings, for me. I didn’t want to talk to anyone (mostly still don’t) so my words had nowhere to go but on paper (well on the computer). Even though I wasn’t talking much about my grief I had/have all these feelings that need to get out lest they bubble up inside me and cause an explosion. Secondly, I wanted to have a place where one day I could hopefully look back and see how far I’ve come. Clearly I’m not there yet, I am still in a very dark place but maybe one day, years down the road, this blog can reflect some moments of happiness amidst the sadness and pain. Thirdly, I want this to be a place for other bereaved parents to come to, to realize they are not alone in their grief and in their thoughts and feelings. Maybe one day it will be a source of hope for those newly bereaved parents but right now it’s a way to connect with others that relate. Finally, I wanted to try to explain, to make others understand, what I am going through. I realize that is futile. Words are not sufficient to make others understand. There are no adjectives strong enough to describe the despair and pain and heartache and sadness and heaviness and sorrow and guilt and anger and grief that a bereaved parent experiences. There is no understanding from those who haven’t also lost a child. And I certainly do not want others to have this level of understanding, because that means they too are mourning a dead child. I would not wish this on anyone. But this lack of understanding, though no one’s fault and certainly not for lack of trying to understand (from some), makes being a bereaved parent a very lonely place to be.
I am not sure what I am trying to say here, except that I am forever completely and irreparably changed. Those who are here for me, that want to be here for me, need to understand that. I may go out, join the rest of the world as we slowly come out of quarantine. In fact I have started, with going to outside gym classes. I may even smile, and laugh when I find something funny. But I will not let loose. I will not be carefree. The sadness and pain will be lurking, even if not obviously visible. “Normal” situations feel so very wrong to me. Guilt isn’t the word but it just does not feel right to go about living. To go out with friends. To have dinners with family. It’s like living in a parallel universe or an alternate reality. Like an out of body experience. I am watching myself in those moments, wondering how it can be real. How can this be my life? How can one go on and have normal, everyday moments when their life has been completely destroyed? It seems impossible. I think it is impossible. Because even though I live those moments, I am never fully participating. As painful as every moment is, every day, multiple times a day, I am in utter disbelief that I had a child, my child had cancer, my child died. I still can’t fathom that my perfect world was shattered. That the two things I want most in the world, Ariella and to be a mom, are gone. That I can’t have what I want most no matter how much I try to wish it into existence.
The other day, David and I were driving home during sunset. The colors in the sky were exquisite and the light was just stunning. One of those sunsets where Ariella would have asked us to stop so she could take a picture. I can acknowledge the beauty in this life. But there is so much pain in seeing the beauty because I’m missing the person I most want to share it with. How can so much beauty exist alongside so much pain?
A Letter to the one who made me a Mom
Dear Ariella,
Today is Mother’s Day. As much as I would like to ignore it, that doesn’t seem possible, or right. After all, you made a mom. You were the one who gave me homemade cards and picked out special gifts. You were the one, the only one, to call me Mama, Mommy, Mom, and when you were feeling snarky, Mother. Because of you I am a mom and because of you I always will be.
The thing is, I don’t feel much like a mom. I will always be your mom but it is very surreal to be a childless mother. I don’t get to do all the mom things anymore. I’m caught between worlds and have seemingly lost a huge part of my identity. I don’t know where I belong anymore. My grief is not just about missing you. It’s also about missing being a mom, to a living child. Missing the daily activities and routines of being a parent. Missing that unconditional love and having someone to nurture and take care of.
This is my second Mother’s Day without you. But last year was such a blur and didn’t really register. The grief was so new, and so raw and the day didn’t matter. This year I want to tell you how grateful I am that I got to be your mom, even with all the pain that came later. I am so lucky to have you as my daughter and I would do it all over again, even knowing the devastating outcome.
You were the one who gave me my most important job and most meaningful role. So you can imagine why I am having such a hard time finding my way. I don’t know who I am anymore. I have changed. Become unrecognizable, even to myself.
But for you I will try to find myself somehow. I know that’s what you would want for me. Nothing can replace you and nothing will. I will always be missing you. Thank you for choosing me to be your mom. For that I have been blessed.
I love you always and forever, to the moon and back, times infinity.
Love,
Mommy
572,040 Minutes
525,600 Minutes. How do you measure a year in the life? I’m sure many are familiar with this song from Rent. How do you measure a year? 12 months, 365 days, 88,330 hours, 525,600 minutes. And actually, this year has been longer, by a day, by 24 hours, by 1,440 minutes. 527,040 minutes without my girl, my world, my reason for being. 527,040 minutes filled with pain, etched with sorry, heartache, and despair.
A lot can happen in a year. On the one hand, this year has dragged and dragged. Each day longer than the next, looking forward each day to bedtime so I can go to sleep once again and not have to think or feel. I look back at this year and cannot imagine doing this another 40 or more times. It has been excruciating, with so many triggers and landmines coming at me day in and day out. Constant reminders of what we had, what we lost, what we will never have. Lost milestones, missed experiences. There was so much more that she wanted to do. So much more that we wanted to do. And this year is just a tiny fraction of what we have to endure for the rest of our lives. On the other hand, I find it hard to believe that it has been a year already. Somehow, I survived. I made it. Mind you, I don’t view that as a positive. Survival is exactly how it sounds. Getting by, living, getting through each day, going through the motions. I don’t feel any sense of accomplishment or peace or comfort in having made it through the first year. There is no joy, no contentment. No relief that I survived the first year. All I feel is dread, looming over me. Of what life continues to look like moving forward. Of how much more we will continue to miss out on. Of how much I miss Ariella and will continue to miss Ariella. When she died she left a hole that can never be filled, no matter how many years, days, or minutes. As time goes on we will face more milestones and more experiences that she should have had. At Ariella’s unveiling the rabbi mentioned how we made it through all the firsts. The first holidays, the first birthday, the first of everything after her death. Is that supposed to be some kind of relief? I don’t think it gets any easier moving forward. In fact, I think it is going to get harder.
So how do I measure this past year? In tears, in breakdowns, in heartache, in sleepless nights. In rainbows, in butterflies, in searching for signs. In deaths of children, in funerals, in celebrations of life. In bears, in fundraisers, in grief, in memories of a better life. Measured in loneliness, isolation, futility, and despair. In quarantine, in masks, in days working from home, in rolls of toilet paper. Measured in loss of some friends and family, but also in gains of new friends and supports. But mostly, in missing. In missing Ariella. In missing her beautiful smile and infectious laugh. In missing her eye rolls and bear hugs. In missing our game nights and movie nights, sleepovers and girl trips to New York. In missing her hand in mind, her voice, her pranks, her exuberance. In missing watching her dance, watching her grow, watching her become more independent. In missing helping her with her homework, doing crafts, cooking for her, driving her all over. Along with the missing, is wondering. Wondering what she would be doing right now. Wondering how she would handle the quarantine (not well, I imagine). Wondering what book she would read, what project she would start, what craft she would create. Wondering what her hair would look like now, how tall she would be, what she would be learning in school. That’s what this year has been. 572,040 minutes of sadness and missing and wondering.
I can’t forget love. As the song goes, “measure your life in love”. There has been so much love this year. The love David and I and all our family and friends have for Ariella. The love that has been expressed for Ariella. The love that has been shown to us, not just this year, but since 2017, when Ariella was diagnosed. The love that continues to surround us even though we don’t always show it in return. The love doesn’t make it better. It doesn’t make up for the missing and the wondering. But it does remind me that no matter how alone I feel, there is always someone there.
So here we go with the next 525,600 minutes.
Yahrzeit
So here we are. Nearing the dreaded day. Just five days from Ariella’s Yahrzeit (the Hebrew date anniversary of following the death). Got the reminder email a couple days ago, like I need a reminder to remember the date that my life ended. Even if I wasn’t thinking about it, my body just feels it. I still cry daily, but these past couple of weeks have been brutal. I cry at everything and nothing. Riding to Coldplay on the Peloton yesterday morning and tears were streaming down my face for most of the ride. This morning on a ride This is Me from The Greatest Showman had me in tears. The lyrics for one, but also because Ariella loved that movie. I have no idea how many times she watched the movie but that music was our soundtrack to life for a while. Images again are flashing in my mind of Ariella in the ICU. It’s been almost a year and the pain isn’t any less and the memories and images are just as vivid. The pain will never lessen. It’s learning to live with the pain and the loss. And I still don’t want to. I don’t think I will ever be at peace or content. And living like this is miserable. I’m not so worried about coronavirus because I wouldn’t care if it took me. I don’t care about not leaving the house, not being able to go places because it’s easier to be at home. At home I’m not confronted with the happy lives and perfect intact families of everyone else. At home I can escape life.
I am not in a good place. Really I haven’t been in a good place since May 9, but I’m back to where I was in the days immediately following. I actually think I’m in an even darker place now. Life just feels so dark and bleak and empty and meaningless and the pandemic is triggering all sorts of memories, emotions, and PTSD. I’ve had people reaching out, wanting to talk and have virtual happy hours and I am not up for any of it. I don’t want to talk to anyone. I can’t make conversation and small talk feels so offensive to me right now. I don’t even want to communicate through text. I don’t care about any of it. I just want to be alone. The best part of this quarantine is not having to go out and make small talk with anyone. However, we had planned to have the Unveiling on May 3 but it doesn’t look like that’s going to happen. This really upsets me. I’m not sure why that upsets me so much. It will just be postponed. Maybe because it’s how we were going to honor her a year later. Maybe because it’s supposed to be done within the first year and I feel like I’m letting her down. I’m sure that sounds ridiculous to those who don’t get it, and believe me, I don’t want anyone to get it. But these ceremonies and traditions are the only things left that I get to do as a parent. So they are very important to me.
Plenty of people are grieving right now. Grieving losses of experiences and memories they were hoping to make. And I get it. But it’s temporary. No matter how long it lasts, in the grand scheme of things it’s just a blip. A period of time that people will recollect as scary and uncertain, but also with plenty of fond memories. And once it ends, everyone gets to go back to experiencing new things and making new memories. So please remember that. Missing prom, missing graduation, having to postpone a wedding, is not the end of the world. It’s sad and disappointing, but a few years from now it won’t matter. We couldn’t go to the funeral of a friend of Ariella’s who recently died because of the restrictions. In a time where a parent needs as much support surrounding her that they can get, they couldn’t have it. We have friends with a very sick child and what they hope for right now is that this ends soon so their daughter can have some more experiences before cancer takes her. When this ends, David and I are still grieving. The experiences Ariella missed and the ones we missed as a family are never going to happen. When life resumes for most, it won’t for us. There aren’t more experiences to be shared, more memories to be made. This is it. Our grief is permanent.
I am not Okay
If you were to ask me how I’m doing you would get one of several answers, depending on current mood and how honest I feel like being. Surviving. Hanging in there. Taking it day by day. But the truth is, I’m not doing well at all. I know I’m not alone in that. Plenty of people are not doing well. But it’s not the same. For the better part of 2 years we had to constantly be on guard. Make sure Ariella’s counts were okay before making plans. Plans cancelled at the last minute. Vacations cancelled. Witnessing Ariella miss out on the things she loved so much; dance, camp, school. The things we are all missing now. But the difference then was we were alone in it. We were missing life, yet life continued to go on around us. Constant reminders of what we were missing while we were camped out in a hospital room or stuck at home. I know that if Ariella was here it wouldn’t be a walk in the park. I know there would be frustration and complaining and attitude. I understand why parents are anxious and stressed and worried. But you’re not alone in this. There is a solidarity, a comfort in knowing the world is right there with us. I can’t speak for David but I felt very much alone throughout Ariella’s diagnosis and even more alone now, despite the support we have. Because there are few that understand how this situation affects someone who has already experienced significant trauma. PTSD is very real and very prevalent among bereaved parents. Everything about this is triggering. The fear of loved ones becoming ill. The constant reminders of hospitals, life support, ventilators, masks, all of it. Hearing people complain about homeschooling, being stuck with their kids. As I said, I know it’s not easy. I’ve been there, home or at the hospital with Ariella, when she couldn’t go anywhere. It was hard, especially when she knew her friends were doing things without her. But it was also fun, and rewarding, and special. We got creative and crafty. There were game nights and movie nights. Lots of time spent reading together. Please just keep that in mind when about to post on a public forum about how terrible it is. It is terrible in a lot of ways. And there is nothing wrong with venting frustration. But not in a public forum. When so many people wish for a second they were in this with their loved ones, whether a child, spouse, or parent.
It had been questioned if the cure is going to be worse than the problem, in the context of the economy. I have a very real fear about the cure being as bad as the problem, not financially but in terms of mental health. This isolation is going to take its toll on a lot of people and I worry about the emotional suffering people are having to endure. As I mentioned, those who have experienced trauma are likely to be experiencing PTSD or other symptoms of anxiety. Anxiety symptoms are ramped up for those who already had anxiety and those who didn’t seem to worry about anything are now getting a taste of what it’s like to live with anxiety. The world is on edge. Everyone is at the very least unsettled, but there are I’m sure a large number of people having difficulty coping. Even as an introvert I am missing the social interaction and connection. The gym was my release. It was the first thing I got back to after Ariella died and has been the only thing that has made me feel okay. I am grateful to my gyms for doing live stream workouts, but it’s not the same. And though my leg is healing, I still can’t run, which was my ultimate way of forgetting everything else and just being in the moment. I think in the end, some will come out of this much stronger, but others will be traumatized and continue to suffer. I was already suffering, not sure how much more of this fear, uncertainty, isolation, I can handle.
Pandemic
I can’t not write about this. This pandemic provides a fascinating study in human behavior. David and I did our weekly shopping Saturday morning. We go to Trader Joe’s and are always there on the early side. But this day we wanted to be sure to be there right when they opened. And we were. Along with the rest of the community it seemed. But I was pleasantly surprised. The shopping itself felt frenetic, but mostly due to the sheer number of people in the store. The aisles are narrow and it was hard to get around. But most people were reasonable (other than the guy that was running through the store and slammed into David with his cart) and not hoarding (except for the lady with 10 packs of meat, all of the frozen vegetables, and multiple gallons of milk). David found a pack of toilet paper that we didn’t need, made a joke about selling it and put it back on the shelf. No one around us then fought for that last pack. Overall the mood in the store was pleasant. Making jokes for some levity, understanding we are all in the same boat (except that one lady who didn’t seem to give a shit), and just getting along. Though they had to have been exhausted and frazzled, the Trader Joe’s employees had big smiles and were friendly and helpful, as usual. We were able to get everything we needed that Trader Joe’s carries, except cabbage. We knew we would also have to go to Wegman’s to pick up some things Trader Joe’s doesn’t carry. I was pleasantly surprised there as well. Though there were people in the store it wasn’t nearly as frenzied as Trader Joe’s. Of course the store is bigger so everyone was more spread out. A lot of things were picked over but again, with the exception of a couple of people with cases and cases of water, most people seemed to be reasonable and rational. In the media we see the worst. We see the worst in people, we see the worst case scenario, we see the panic. We see so much of the bad that we often overlook the good. But the good is there and the good is how we are going to get through this.
In my previous post I said I wasn’t worried about the virus. I’m not. But I’m extremely unsettled, as I’m sure most of us are. All the talk of ventilators and ICUs and lungs and breathing brings me back to exactly one year ago, when that was our life. I was already thinking and thinking about that time and am having the same feelings, same anxiety, same emotions. More than just remembering, I am living it again. The only thing that has kept me sane was exercise. Going to the gym is not the right thing to do (and as I am writing this Governor Hogan just issued an order closing all gyms among other things) and I hurt my leg running a couple of weeks ago so I can’t run. I went for a walk but it just doesn’t have the same affect. Without exercise I feel even more restless, unsettled, anxious, and stressed. I am desperate and actually ordered a Peloton bike. Won’t be here until the 31st though. Without working and with no place to go, there are so many more hours in the day to fill. Much more time just to think, be alone with my thoughts. It’s not a good thing. As challenging as I know the next few (or more) weeks will be for parents, I would give anything, ANYTHING to be in that position. So please, please just stop complaining about being quarantined with your kids. You are not special, you are not the only ones in that situation, and complaining doesn’t get you anywhere. The individual complaints are just plain ridiculous. Because this affects EVERYONE. David and I were supposed to go to Boston in a couple of weeks. See some friends and support another foundation. We don’t have much to look forward to so when we do, it helps us get through the days. It’s disappointing, yes, but everyone across the country is dealing with disappointment. Instead of complaining, think about how you can help. How you can make things better. And be there for those who may find this even more crippling because of their personal life experiences.
I started this post talking about human behavior. And you see all types in times like this. Those who are helpful and those who cause harm. Those who worry about the greater good and those who are selfish and will do whatever the hell they want because this is a free country. But along with that I think mental health gets lost. Anxiety is serious and does lead to some of this behavior we are seeing. The feeling of having no control and trying to exert whatever control we can over a situation. I learned in February 2017 that no matter what we do, we do not have ultimate control. But for others, this may be the first time they really feel a sense of that loss of control. Some have the capability to take this in stride, go with the flow but others may not. So do what you can to help. To not make things worse. To be there for those who may not be doing so well.
Isolation? Fear? Been There, Done That
The country is in a state of panic. Mass hysteria. And I feel nothing. Do I worry about loved ones? Sure. But am I at all worried about myself? Not the least bit. I’ve lived through this. The fear, the need for quarantine, the worry I could pass something, anything along to my immunocompromised child. The worst for me has happened. This doesn’t phase me one bit. Other than the fact I’m wondering if there will be anything left at Trader Joe’s tomorrow when we do our weekly shopping.
This is serious. Of course it is. But yet people seemed to have lost their perspective. They seem to be more upset about what they are missing, or what their child is missing, rather than why they are missing these things. I completely understand the disappointment. I understand children, high school seniors, college athletes, being devastated about missing experiences and events. What I don’t understand is the complaining about it from the adults. Pain and disappointment are a part of life. This is temporary. Instead of complaining about how awful it is (not that people are dying mind you, but that your plans were cancelled), be grateful that this too shall pass. Be disappointed. Be sad. But stop fucking complaining about it all over the place. There are much worse things, like people actually dying from COVID-19.
I have pretty much given up Facebook (on the personal side, I of course still keep Ariella’s page going). Yesterday I made the mistake of going on. I went on to check if the schools had done anything because it is often on Facebook before emails are sent to staff. And what I found fascinating was not the number of complaint posts (and there were many) but who seems to be panicking and complaining. The cancer families I follow, the ones who should be panicking the most, who should be upset about more quarantines and isolation, are the ones who seem to be taking it in stride. Because this is their lives. They live this daily, virus or not. What I saw from them is the same thing I am feeling. Anger. Anger that this has been declared a crisis leading to immediate funds for vaccine and treatment development. Not denying that this is a crisis. But so is childhood cancer. And yet it is not taken seriously. There is no outrage. There are very limited funds to develop treatments. If the response to childhood cancer was similar to the response to the coronavirus, maybe just maybe there would be better treatments rather than decades old toxic chemo. What’s the difference? The difference is that coronavirus reaches everyone. Childhood cancer affects children and is “rare”. Yet more kids have died from cancer. So I’m not worried or panicked but I am furious. I am furious that childhood cancer does not get the attention it deserves because it doesn’t affect as many people.
I am also outraged over the behavior of many. Cleaning out stores. Stealing equipment that health care providers and the immunocompromised people actually need on a daily basis, not just in light of the virus. Hoarding supplies. There are still a lot of unknowns but it seems to me that most of us will be okay after a little inconvenience. And that inconvenience is necessary to protect those that may not be okay if they contract the virus. Acting selfishly, worrying only about yourself, is disgusting in these times. I read somewhere that people were having trouble finding baby formula. That is scary. If people would be reasonable. Buy items in a reasonable manner rather than clear the shelves. Then everyone would be able to get what they need.
I say I’m not worried. I’m not. But I understand it. If Ariella was here, I would be scared for her health. So I understand worrying about loved ones. But I just don’t get this mass hysteria. That scares me much more than the virus.
Hope? What’s That?
One year ago today was Ariella’s last day of school. Ever. Of course we didn’t know this at the time. When she hugged her friends goodbye we never could have fathomed that it would be the last time some of them would see or talk each other. They made her cards and gave her gifts wishing her well with the bone marrow transplant. They said they would miss her and couldn’t wait for her to be back in school with them. We knew she wouldn’t be going back for that school year. But we never in a million years thought that she would never get the chance to go back. That she wouldn’t finish middle school, go to college, get married, have a family. A cancer diagnosis forces you to face your child’s mortality but that is then pushed aside by hope, and optimism. The thoughts that Ariella may not survive were there or course but I never fully believed that she wouldn’t make it through. You can’t think like that as a cancer parent. Our child is going to be the one to survive. With every bad scan or relapse the possible mortality slaps you in the face again. But then life gets in the way again. In between the treatments and bad times were plenty of good times, fun times. Thoughts that your child may die are not at the forefront, though they do hang out in the background rearing their ugly heads at random, or not so random times. But we were able to go on living and enjoying life, even after Ariella relapsed. We were worried and scared but always thought we would get through it. That she would get through it. We never got to the point where we lost hope, because we still had options for treatment. And then she was eligible for the transplant. The hope carried us through. Because how can you live that kind of life without it?
I am now living a life without hope. I have no hope that life will work out in my favor anymore. I have no hope that I will be okay. I have no hope of ever being happy again. Because what I want most, Ariella, to be a mother to Ariella, has been stolen from me. I can’t live another 40 or more years without my daughter and be okay. Or be happy. Living a life in pain, in constant sadness, in yearning, in missing the one you love the most, is no kind of life at all. It is dark and frightening, overwhelming and daunting. I don’t want this life, one as a childless mother.
Every day I walk through the halls of schools. I see students getting books from their lockers, sitting at their desks, socializing with their friends. I work directly with children, some close to her in age. And I picture Ariella in school. In her uniform, getting in trouble with the teacher for talking, gathering at the lockers with her friends. And it shatters me again and again. Not to where I want a different job, because I don’t. I like my job and I like my students and I enjoy working with them. But at the same time it is often incredibly difficult. I wish I didn’t have to work at all. Some bereaved parents find they need something to keep their days filled, but I just find it exhausting. So fatiguing to pretend to be okay when I’m not. I can’t find the words to describe, but it still doesn’t feel right to me to do anything seemingly normal when my life is upside down. I still can’t see the point in any of it. Nothing matters. I was never much of a talker but I talk even less now. I don’t like small talk, I don’t want to make conversation. Because most small talk is pointless and a lot of conversation is outright painful. It is all just so futile and I just want it to be over. I’ve read in some articles that suicide rates are high among bereaved parents. And I get it. This life just sucks.
February
It’s here. It’s well underway. February. The month that started it all. It actually started a year prior, in February 2016, with the death of my father. He died on the 25th and was buried on the 29th. I hate that it was such an unusual day. I’ll never be able to look at leap day as anything other than the day I buried my father. February 2017. Diagnosis day. Biopsies. Scans and tests and procedures. Appointment after appointment. Waiting. More waiting. We knew we were dealing with cancer but it took weeks to confirm the actual beast we were facing. Waiting to start treatment, worrying that the cancer cells were rapidly multiplying, taking over while we had to wait to find out what type of cancer, which would determine the treatment. Central line placement, pneumothorax, chest tube. All of this before treatment started, which finally began in March. Did that delay allow those microscopic cells to start taking off through her blood stream, unable to be detected by chemo? Or was it our delay? Brushing off her pain as an injury that would get better with rest? Or was she doomed to succumb no matter when we caught the cancer? February 2018. Fraught with anxiety. Recently off treatment, in between scans. Everything still so fresh in our minds, worrying about relapse. We got lots of congratulations at that time, but I just couldn’t fully celebrate. Because I wasn’t convinced the cancer wouldn’t return. February 2019. Started out so hopeful. Radiation did the job it was supposed to do. Ariella was cleared for bone marrow transplant. More tests and scans. More appointments. And some optimism and hope mixed in. February 11, spent all day at Hopkins for blood work and baseline tests and such. February 18, admitted for what we thought would be 4-6 weeks. Starting the pre-transplant radiation and chemo. Actually managed to have some fun in the hospital. We (thought) we knew what we were in for so were making the best of the situation. February 26, the day we were all waiting for. The day we hoped would cure her for good. The day that set her death in motion. Bone marrow transplant day. What people often call a “re-birthday”. I would give anything, anything to roll back the clock to that day and change things. Not do the transplant. Or do it a week earlier, or a week later. Anything that could possibly change the outcome. Ariella didn’t end up in the ICU until March but February started it all. And it kills me to think about what could have been, had it all gone well like we expected. Why? Why did this happen?