Monday, March 29, 2021

Healing

 

Slowly, ever so slowly, my healing has begun. 

And it began not with isolation or aloneness, but with people. As I return to parish ministry and interact with PEOPLE; first on Ash Wednesday, then with new neighbors, now with Palm Sunday and the rituals of Holy Week ahead of me, I sense a new beginning. 

I know that all this time I have been covered, bathed, in loving thoughts and prayers from you as Sabine requested in her obituary: 

 I hope you who read this and know the man who is the love of my life, the breath of my spirit, and the heart, soul of my very being, David, will care for him. Give him your love, your ear, your time, your hugs, and your uplifting support. I would have stayed here forever (if I could) just to be with him...”

Thanks to all of you who have responded to Sabine’s request, who have given me your love, listened and cared for me, and who have given me your time, hugs and support, You are the balm of my healing.. 

I thank you deeply, very deeply...



Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Alone?

 

One of the great dilemmas (and challenges) of widowhood is having to live alone after enjoying the blessings of a lifetime of companionship. Like many men, I enjoy getting together with the guys. But getting together with a woman is another (and I will have to admit) more enjoyable experience — sorry guys! 

Sabine knew me well and knew me deeply. We talked about this. She said that if I died first, she would not be interested in partnering again. In fact, because of her cancer, she said she would simply stop treatment. But as for me, she knew that I needed the friendship of women. So here’s my thoughts on this dilemma as I surf the waves of grief which currently dominate my life.


some say

you

now must

learn to 

live 

alone

why I cry?   

why must I now

be alone?

should i not

seek a

companion 

the

presence of a 

woman? 

i have lived with

women

all my

life

and now

to be without 

this presence

(vive la difference) 

within 

my aging life

really?

are you serious? 

you impose death

to me

alone

if you 

cared for me

loved me

why would you deny

me this?

why would you?

why sentence me to

that solitary 

torturer? 

the executioner 

called

loneliness?

(Sotto voce:

would she 

who

deeply 

loved him 

without condition

wish 

this for for

him

or

see him

happy

companioned 

laughing once

again?

he may be old

not

dead

yet).



Monday, March 22, 2021

A Time to Weep

 A most strange day yesterday... a time to weep; a time when tears suddenly started flowing down my face. Why? They flowed not in response to any event or words but, perhaps. to an aching heart... a gripping of the very core of my body. Was it anticipating next week? The holiest time of my Christian faith? Was it remembering Ecclesiastes 3:4 “A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance”?

Holy Week

 

ahead 

the holiest of weeks 

the triduum 

dreaded 

yes 

that’s the word 

dreaded

it sits lonesome

bitter in my mouth 

what did we eat 

the night before 

you died? 

our last supper 

i am sorry 

but that next day 

cannot be a 

good day 

a good friday 

the day I helped 

you climb your cross 

watched you 

die 

cancer-crucified 

i took you down 

wrenched out

spikes

no longer           

binding 

your beloved body 

you

washed and anointed

now

i sit with the marys 

and joanna 

and wait 

and wait 

hoping 

praying

for an 

easter 

morn.

Saturday, March 20, 2021

On the Road and Back

                                                Overlooking Maggie Valley, NC
                                                     St Petersburg’s Dog Beach

                                                                 Dogwoods

This past week I have been on the road tent-camping to Florida to visit family and then north into the Smokies near Asheville, NC to visit friends on a mountain overlooking Maggie Valley. Mocha and I are now back home after 3,000 miles in a 14 year old F-250 (I apologize to the environment!).

I have always loved to drive and this was a way for me to get some thinking-time, alone. Still trying to figure out who I will be without Sabine. The night on that mountain the temperature was in the low 30s — (Mocha became party to a “one-dog” night!)

My grief has slowly changed from desperation to a periodic numbing sadness. They say that without love there can be no grief.  When you love another you will grieve them when they are gone. I know that. But what about a a big, huge, enormous 40-year love?

I wrote this poem as I drove north into the mountains and saw my first dogwood tree. It suddenly overwhelmed me. Memories...

——————————

dogwoods

early spring greeters

beckon me

remind me of

a hiking week

in the smokies

(before kids)

now decades later 

i motor by

delicate white

flowers

bark at me 

they call out 

like choristers

scattered among

a forest

still asleep

ah!

that week

we trekked

surprised each time

we saw

those fresh 

flowers 

they

stood out

in radiant beauty

like you

yes like you

i stop

weeping

aching and

missing you

so much.





 

Thursday, March 11, 2021

On Friendship and Happiness


This morning while thinking and pondering about friendship and happiness, I found some answers... some consolation in the following wisdom quotations most of which were posted by Maria Popover, quoting the Poet David Whyte, in her newsletter, Brainpickings.

“HAPPINESS is something to do, someone to love, something to hope for” — Immanuel Kant. 

“FRIENDSHIP is a mirror to presence and a testament to forgiveness. Friendship not only helps us see ourselves through another’s eyes, but can be sustained over the years only with someone who has repeatedly forgiven us for our trespasses as we must find it in ourselves to forgive them in turn. A friend knows our difficulties and shadows and remains in sight, a companion to our vulnerabilities more than our triumphs, when we are under the strange illusion we do not need them. An undercurrent of real friendship is a blessing exactly because its elemental form is rediscovered again and again through understanding and mercy. All friendships of any length are based on a continued, mutual forgiveness. Without tolerance and mercy all friendships die...

“HEARTBREAK is unpreventable; the natural outcome of caring for people and things over which we have no control… 

Heartbreak begins the moment we are asked to let go but cannot, in other words, it colors and inhabits and magnifies each and every day; heartbreak is not a visitation, but a path that human beings follow through even the most average life. Heartbreak is an indication of our sincerity: in a love relationship, in a life’s work, in trying to learn a musical instrument, in the attempt to shape a better more generous self. Heartbreak is the beautifully helpless side of love and affection and is [an] essence and emblem of care… Heartbreak has its own way of inhabiting time and its own beautiful and trying patience in coming and going...

 “Heartbreak is how we mature; yet we use the word heartbreak as if it only occurs when things have gone wrong: an unrequited love, a shattered dream… But heartbreak may be the very essence of being human, of being on the journey from here to there, and of coming to care deeply for what we find along the way...

“There is almost no path a human being can follow that does not lead to heartbreak” 

— Poet David Whyte in “Consolations.”

And so, I rest... now almost three months since she died. It is now time for me to wander a bit... and to be grateful for the forty years we had together. I pray that gratitude will overcome my sense of deep loss. 

Stay tuned.



Tuesday, March 9, 2021

A Note to Myself

 


“Dear David, I know you are hurting and lonely. Believe me, I can feel it, too! But you need to wake up you old fart! Do you have such a high opinion of yourself that you do not understand how OLD you are? You are becoming delusional! Do you really think that some woman who has nursed a dying husband through years of sickness or finally learned to happily live alone, would be interested in becoming a close friend? Come on, wake up and smell the roses. After all, you only have a few years left on this earth. Make good use of each one — each day!

“What you need to understand is that for the rest of you short life, no relationship could even come close to the one you had for forty years with Sabine, NEVER! (And, incidentally, do you want to get close to another person and then have to grieve another loss in your life?)

“David, you cannot go back. So stop it, Cease! It’s your choice. Either you rot away or go forward. And going forward is going to be ALONE. Do you hear me? You must understand this; first in your mind, then in your heart. You will never have another Sabine or anyone close to her. You will never replace her.

“So you need to hunker down, accept what has happened to you and, at the same time, continue to safely negotiate this pandemic — and your present fragility. When you can, interact with people at concerts, theater, church, and other groups. Remember, you are not only suffering the loss of Sabine, but also the people-starvation created by this pandemic. Sabine got you through the pandemic by her consistent bright, understanding, and cheerful presence. What would she telll you now? 

“You must make it through the rest of your life alone — without her. Alone. Stop being such a mess. It’s okay to cry and grieve. But remember the biblical story of the sick man near the cleansing waters of Siloam? What did Jesus tell him? ‘Get up off your mat and seek your healing. Quit making excuses!’ 

“By the way, it’s okay to ask God, an angel, or a friend for help! Isn’t that what Sabine would tell you?”

Sunday, March 7, 2021

Chatting

 


 

this morning

In the shower

i talked with you

again

(remember those times

we bathed 

together

laughing

giggling 

how we were 

saving the planet?) 

today i shared with you 

all that had happened 

since you left 

the garden wall collapsing 

home improvements 

selling the property 

kid problems 

(will they ever cease?) 

but 

you already knew 

about all that 

didn’t you?

so an old man 

chats 

in the shower 

sharing his life with 

his dear departed wife 

hear him laugh 

cry 

understand how 

he loves her 

hear him thank her 

again and again

for the most wonderful

loved-filled 

adventurous 

forty years of his life 

yes he loves her 

still 

chatting while 

showering 

look how it makes 

this world 

(and perhaps yours) 

more beautiful

Friday, March 5, 2021

Anticipation

Fond memories.... thankfully, they stay with us. Sometimes they deeply hurt us because we sense their loss, but I never want to let them go.

Anticipation

 

this morning

i walked our old

running loop

5 miles it was

we ran it for

years

later

we set off 

together but in

opposite directions

you with Mocha

and me tackling the 

big hill

half way

we always

met

this morning

i found myself 

there 

once again

looking for

you

anticipating our

familiar

meeting spot

suddenly I realized

you would

not be

there

i stopped

breaking into 

a deep deep

cry 

sobbing

you would never

be here

nor would you 

be

ever 

again

then (thinking 

of you)

i kept

walking.

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Waiting

 


Could this be someone we know? Could it be me? Surely not. The poet is merely making a generalization... Really?




____________________________

Waiting

 

watching

wondering

fishing

he waits

a lonely man

for sure

a man who’s always

loved the

presence

emotions

thinking &

scent

of

women

now alone he

wonders

can it be again?

no

perhaps not

maybe he just

needs 

to savor the years

he had

after all

this aging chap

hasn’t many

more

left.

 

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Le Miserable

 

 

Why am I feeling so miserable? 


When I dig into this feeling of “miserableness” and its cohort, loneliness, it seems that Mr. Covid plays a central role. Before the pandemic, those of us who lost loved ones were comforted by gatherings of friends — rites of burial, pot-luck dinners, invitations to connect. But not so today, on top of losing a loved one, we who mourn are virtually left alone during this time of medical isolation. Many have experienced the horror for leaving a loved one at the door of an emergency room and learning about their death later by telephone. Thankfully, that did not happen to me and I grieve for those who did.

 

In the past, friends sat with you, cried with you, and listened to stories of the departed loved one. In the Jewish tradition, relatives “sit in shiva,” they come together and visit with the bereaved person for seven days. We who have lost loved ones this past year have not had that opportunity — to sit with those who mourn.

 

So, I think that’s what is going on within me. This stark, cold absence. For forty years, I rose in the morning with Sabine, had coffee, and we talked about our life together and the coming day. Often, as I sat in my morning meditations, she would rise and I would hear her footsteps shuffling along as she went into the kitchen. How sweet that shuffling sound remains in my memory.

 

For the purpose of maintaining our physical health, we have jeopardized the mental health of many of our fellow Americans. It is the dangerous (yet necessary) trade-off we have made during this pandemic. Yet, I struggle with this trade-off. It is not that I have been left alone in misery — I have “podded” with my best friend and his wife, my children have visited and helped me, other friends have called, brought food, and encouraged me through word and prayer.

 

But the feelings persist… I realize that the friends we have were couples and now I feel like a ‘third wheel;” odd man out. Like many men, I seem not to have many female friends who don’t also have a husband or partner. The one close female friend I had died a few years ago. (Come to think about it, death has been all around me these past few years: Sabine, her mother, and a close colleague.)

 

Yesterday. I wrote the following poem to try a and explore these feelings. At my age, I am not looking for sex, but rather someone to hang out with and be the best of friends. It just might be too late in life to experience this once again. I know I must learn to be alone. It will not be easy.

 

 

Adrift

 

yes do call him

caregiver-at-large

adrift 

after many years

care-er w/o

care-ee 

like a magnet

seeking

connection

no longer physical

love

but endearing 

companionship

a woman friend

where thoughts 

feelings

can be shared

adventures embarked

still 

yet

time flows sand-like

through his

aging 

fingers 

he worries 

while

memories of

his beautiful

life call him to 

dance 

In a home now 

occupied 

by one.