Tracy BradshawDear Sawyer, I rummaged through your toybox and gathered a stocking full of cars, monkeys, a Taco Bell kid meal toy, spinning tops, and a mini Mr. Potatohead. I found the clock floor puzzle that you loved, your tub of Legos, your purple and black pajamas, and many more things to place under the tree for Christmas morning. Sawbear had a big Christmas, and I cried as I missed you and all the past Christmases we shared. While I am very grateful for the eighteen years that we got to celebrate Christmas together, it is just about impossible to focus on being grateful when I still feel robbed. I busied myself organizing the ornaments and taking pictures all the while remembering you with these small treasures in your hands. With each careful hanging there was a memory, and I let myself go there. I basked in the flood of memories, smiling and crying at the same time. Thankful and robbed, appreciative and angry, happy and sad, the feelings were extreme and hit simultaneously. Having your collection out made me miss you more and grief was heightened. Maybe I needed that this year, I don’t know. I love you, Sawyer. I miss you, and I miss you decorating the tree with me, getting so excited over finding the pickle, hiding your beaded candle ornament you made at preschool, getting cookies ready for Santa, opening too many presents, playing with new toys, building with blocks or Legos, putting together puzzles, spending more time together, and living our traditions. Love, Mom |
First Blog Post
Losing a child doesn’t permit you to ever be the same person you were before again. It is forever losing parts of your life. The past becomes memories that each have different meaning now. The present becomes exhausting, discouraging, and heavy to carry. The future holds both shattered dreams, uncertainty. You lack a piece of the meaning being a mother had. Even with other children, losing one leaves a huge hole in your identity. There is a common constant thread which is that you hurt in ways and depths that you never could have grasped before as possible. The dark tunnel of this journey doesn’t always show a distant light at the other end.
Grieving mothers need support that no one can understand until they are forced to travel the same path. It is different for a other than a father. We are the caregiver and nurturer. We have most likely carried and given birth to our child. The journey is not the same for a mother whose child was lost suddenly as it is for the mother that has watched their child battle a disease. Nor are feelings the same for a bereaved mother of a child of a young age lost to cancer who can protect them from knowledge about what may lie ahead. As a mom of a young adult fighting of the vicious beast of cancer that wasn’t an option for me. That mother also has a child that doesn’t understand what is happening, why they feel are going through surgery or scans, staying in the hospital, being made to feel sick from the “treatment”. My son Jordan was diagnosed at the age of 22. He was 5 mos from graduating college, practically sitting front and center to every nightmare ahead via google search. I dealt with too much knowledge creating anxiety beyond what anyone knows. Jordan his so much, so well because of his humility and a love for his friends. He tried to protect others from his pain. But as his mom, in the trenches of his care, the research for that 1 break that might cure him, I was right beside him at 2, 3 or 4 am when he woke me “freaking out”.
As I close this 1st post, I know that you may think it doesn’t apply to you because you don’t have children yet or all of yours are fine. But I would truly appreciate it if you would allow me to prepare you, just in case, someone someday that you care about is walking in my shoes. Just in case, that something which I would never want any of you to have to endure happens and you yourself are thrown on this same road with your child. But know for certain that I am here willing to help you with what I have learned and experienced because I wish I had someone like me available to hold my hand and listen to my thoughts when I became a grieving mother that understood this world all mothers of child loss now live in.
Sometimes
A Katie Helms
Sometimes I act like it’s ok…
Like I’m cool with it…
As though I understand…
As if I’ve made sense of it all….
You being gone…
So far…
and So Long…
But I’m not really strong…
I don’t stand so tall…
I don’t comprehend…
My mind doesn’t rest…
I’m not passing this test…
I miss you so much…
I’d just like to touch…
And hold you again…
my child, my love, my hopes and my dreams…
my future, my past, till I see you at last…
I will keep myself busy…
And try not to think…
I will try to help others…
I will try not to sink…
I will pray and ask Jesus
For comfort Again…
For Peace in my heart…
For my brokenness
To mend…
and Then…
Tomorrow…
I will miss you some more…
and Jesus knows…
Yes, He knows…
That…
Sometimes I act like it’s ok…
Like I’m cool with it…
As though I understand…
As if I’ve made sense of it all….
You being gone…
So far…
and So Long…
Butterfly Shadows
Mildred J. Foshie
(grandmother to MacKenzie)
Butterflies
Mildred J. Foshie
(grandmother to MacKenzie)
Unconditional Love
Sharon Carmichael
“I will lend to you awhile” He said
A child to call your own.”
“To nurture and to care for,
Until I call her home.”
“To know her is to know, unconditional love,
This child of mine.” I say
“Thank you God for entrusting me,
With such a gift, I could never repay”.
“I searched far and wide,” He said
For a special family, for who she could belong.”
“Just love her with all your heart,” He said,
And help her to grow strong.”
“She has special needs” He said
And needs a Mama, Strong and True.
To walk with her, and hold her hand,
On this path, she has to go through.”
“She also needs a sister,” He said
To love and stand always by her side.
She looks at her sister, with love, and proudly tells all who listen,
“That’s “My Sister” with a smile.
“Thank you, for this family,” I say
That you have given me to cherish.”
But how can I endure the pain,
When you call her home to rest?”
“I don’t understand, “I say
Why so soon, she had to go?
I thought we had many more sunsets,
To watch as we grew old.”
I miss her smile that greeted me,
With the dawning of each day.
Whatever am I supposed to do,
Without the smile, that lit my way?”
My heart is broken, I feel so lost.
My life stretches before me, never to be the same.
There is an emptiness, that can’t be replaced.
My tears, they fall on my pillow, like rain.
“I know you have questions, Why?” He said
And I know My child, you are in pain.”
“ I see every tear you cry, And catch them,
As they fall down your face like rain.”
“Just know, as you were with her,
As she drew her very last breath,
I was also there to greet her,
As she came into my outstretched arms to rest.”
“Now she is singing in the Angel’s choir,
That beautiful smile upon her face,
I know you couldn’t imagine her to be,
In a more loving place.”
“I Thank God, “I say, “even through my tears”
“For this child of mine from above.”
“For to know her, was to have a gift,
From an Angel that gave me,
Unconditional Love
Mother’s Day Trail Message
Debra Reagan
May 15, 2007
This article was originally published on www.opentohope.com, a website whose mission is to help those who have suffered a loss to cope with their pain and invest in the future.
The first Mother’s Day without our son, Clint, was approaching. He had passed away the summer before, but the weight of grief was still heavy. So far, we had made it through each day by taking one slow, encumbered step at a time. Each morning for several weeks prior to the upcoming holiday, I noticed a little sports-type car parked near my car in the parking garage at work. Apparently, it was parked there on a long-term basis because it started to gather dust. After a while, the thick dust became a target for graffiti- some of which was amusing, and some was distasteful. One was even a negative message to a mother. Despite the fact I did not appreciate some of the comments written on the car, it reminded me of Clint and the activities of young people. The car remained there unmoved and untouched day after day. Considering the anxiety of the impending holiday, I did not give the car too much thought.
When the dreaded Mother’s Day arrived, my husband, Alan and I decided a hike to the top of one of our favorite peaks in the nearby national park. We had been avid hikers, but now even the simplest activity seemed to take more effort and energy than we had. We have had some adventures on our hikes, but this time our only goal was to get past another painful holiday without our youngest son and perhaps to be tired enough to finally get a few hours of peaceful sleep that night.
Just as we arrived in the trail parking area, approximately 35 miles from our home, we decided to take a different route to the top of the trail than the one originally planned. After several hours of uphill hiking, our bodies were beginning to feel the aches and pains. We were beginning to doubt we could even make it to the top because we knew this was not an easy hike. Then we came upon the following message written in large letters in the dirt, Happy Mom’s Day, Love from Your Sons. I was taken aback, and my heart began to beat a little faster. I thought, “Could this be for me?” The rest of the hike my thoughts bounced between belief and disbelief. I could not remember Clint using the words Mom’s Day instead of Mother’s Day, but it would be like him to shorten it. Another point that raised doubt in my mind was the signature of sons instead of son. Then I thought to myself, “After all I do have two sons, perhaps Clint had included his brother in the message.” I had a point and counter-point for each thought. Nothing like this had ever happened to me before. I thought to myself, “I don’t want to miss a message from my son. But on the other hand, I don’t want to seem like a foolish old woman.” I pondered many thoughts. I could not imagine who else could have left the message, because we had started hiking early and had not encountered any other hikers. Also, none of our family members or friends knew where we were hiking that day.
With little discussion about the message, we continued our way to the top. Once there, we had our lunch. Inside the fire tower, someone had left a book about the area in memory of his or her family and others had turned the book into a journal for recording messages. We left our own little message and cleaned up our lunch items. On a clear day, this hike offers some spectacular views, but this was an overcast day. A little disappointed by the lack of views, we started down the trail. Just then the clouds parted, and the sun came out. For that brief time, we enjoyed God’s beautiful handiwork displayed by nature. The cloud cover returned and silently we hiked back to our car somewhat contented and exhausted. Yet, the nagging doubt of the message remained in my mind.
When we arrived home that evening, we found a card in the mailbox from a friend of Clint’s. The sweet and thoughtful friend had written on the outside of the envelope, “Happy Mom’s Day.” This touched me deeply. I thought, “Could this be my confirmation? Was the use of Mom’s Day instead of Mother’s Day a sign?” The rest of the weekend my thoughts continued to bounce. I wanted the trail message to be for me, but how could I be sure?
Time does not stop for grief and a new workweek began. As I pulled into the parking garage and started to swipe my entry card, I had the quick thought, “If the message along the trail really was for me, the distasteful messages on the car would be gone because I shouldn’t pick and choose which messages are for me.” I park in a large multi-level parking garage, so at this point I could not see the dusty message-laden car. As I turned the corner and continued, I chuckled to myself about my absurd thoughts. “Of course, the distasteful messages would still be there and the whole weekend was just filled with coincidences.”
As I got closer I could see the car was still there, but to my shock all the writing on the car had been wiped clean. It did not appear to have been moved or washed, but it had been cleared of any writing. I had not said anything to anyone about the car or my thoughts, not even my husband. So, I smiled, wiped away the tears, and enjoyed the warm feeling of connection. I joyfully thought to myself as I walked into work that morning, “Okay, I get it. The message on the trail was for me.” For a while that day, the burden of grief would be a little lighter.
Hop John
Pam Ooten
Poetry from 2016
David Arnold
This is what I woke to spinning in my head this morning. It is about a group of mothers that have 1 thing in common the loss and bereavement of a child.
Yes there really is a group here in the surrounding area where these moms meet to help one another find a new path without their child in their life…..
The Listening Hearts
When a woman gives birth to a child her heart grows bigger in every way. As her children grows she prays everyday to keep them from harm in hopes that they will grow strong.
Then one day there comes a knock on the door, it’s the worst nightmare a mother can hear as she falls to the floor, she was given news that the child she did bore was found living no more.
Her heart gave out as she started to shout, what will I do, I can’t live without you?
As the days grew longer the nightmares got stronger and she found herself not wanting to live any longer.
Then along came a friend that said, “let me lend you a hand, I want you to meet other mothers like you that do not know what to do.”
These mothers they meet to find answers they seek, instead of the hand they find a new friend whose heart is broken just like them.
They listen with understanding and compassion to every word you are passing for they too, are hurting like you and are needing a new heart and asking, where do I start?
Listen, do you hear that beat?
It’s other mothers that are here now standing at your feet, and they greet you with kisses on the cheek. It is these other mothers who have lost their child’s hearts too and they now welcome you.
There is a bond that no one other than a mother of the Listening Hearts can hear as they tell you that you my dear are always welcomed here!
Listening Hearts where moms find others in a similar struggle, a bereaved heart that is missing a beat from losing a child.
Franklin
Jon Franklin
One:
He left at noon
With love in heart,
14 hours and miles ahead
He drove until
The road turned dark,
And he needed a boost again
He filled up
One last time,
Stretched his legs and cleared his head
Put himself
Back on the road,
While most were asleep in bed
Chorus:
Then he found another angel
Not the one he’d set out for
She held her hand out to him
And pulled him out of that old Ford
Maybe He thought about his family
Maybe his heart fell for his friends
Maybe she said no need to worry
One day you’ll be together again
Again
Two:
She held him tight
When she found out
Begged him not to go
He told her, Mom
I think I’m in love
This is the only way I’ll know
She played their favorite song
Asked him to wait just for a while
He promised to be back
On Christmas Day
Then he gave her that last smile
Chorus:
But he found another angel
Not the one he’d set out for
She held her hand out to him
And pulled him out of that old Ford
Maybe He thought about his family
Maybe his heart fell for his friends
Maybe she said no need to worry
One day you’ll be together again
Bridge:
Now he knows first-hand amazing grace
And he’s heard how sweet the sound
Met his savior face to face
Once was lost, but now he’s found
Chorus:
He found another angel
Not the one he’d set out for
She held her hand out to him
And pulled him out of that old Ford
He’s probably running streets of glory
He’s probably dancing down streets of gold
Probably hugging everybody that passes by
Seeing the things that no one knows
He often thinks about his family
His heart falls for his friends
But he knows there’s no need to worry
One day they’ll be together again.
Again.
End.