Loss

My grandmother has hours left. I knew it was coming, but at the same time I didn’t. Not the exact time. Certainly not in the exact way it is happening. She is in pain. She is a version of herself as the Alzheimer’s continues to take hold. That part is hard to accept. I wish we were all guaranteed peace and comfort at the end of life. I wish we were owed a mind full of beautiful memories. But life doesn’t make us promises other than perhaps that loss is inescapable. No one makes it out of this life alive. I hope so deeply that when she passes this life and enters the next that she feels weightless and free. I hope my grandfather is there to embrace her. I hope it is a world beyond our wildest dreams.

I know loss is part of life, but somehow knowing it doesn’t make it easier. The pain is there waiting. It is a faithful companion. It is a full body experience. The tears. The pit in my stomach. The knot in my throat. The mind focused on the memories and the absence of those I will get to make with her in the future. I’m gambling with the universe as I’m flying to try and make it in time to say goodbye. I’m struggling to accept the lack of control I have over this situation. I am trying to will her to hold on longer as if I have that power. Because it is easier for me to believe that in some version of reality I do. That if I want to say goodbye to all those I love, I will get to through sheer willpower.

Day to day life allows us the luxury of pushing the inevitable loss into the back of our minds. It allows us the luxury of pretending that we have more time than we do. To put off the pain. The tailspin of emotions I’m currently experiencing. I told myself I didn’t have to feel this pain yet. I thought I had at least another month. No news is good news. I suppose this is self-preservation or else life would be too much to bear. Or maybe it is a gift if we allow ourselves to see it as one. Maybe I’m not so much pretending as I am continuing to live in the finite time I do have. If all we did was use our time to prepare for the end, we simply wouldn’t be living at all. Honestly, I probably would stop getting out of bed.

It is during these times of loss that I reflect on my own life. Where I’ve been. Where I am now. Where I am going. What it is I want. I don’t think I have any idea where I am going and frankly, I’m not sure I want to. We are not very good at predicting the future. Maybe it is beyond our ability as humans. We just have to focus on the day we have. To lay one brick at a time and hope it turns into a path.

I think I know what I want though. I want a life full of raw emotion. All of them. The full range. The ones that make me laugh so hard I’m crying and those that make me cry so hard that I wonder if I’ll laugh again. Perhaps that is a weird thing to hope for, but to me, it will mean I’ve lived a complete life. A free life. A life uninhibited. A heartbreaking, soul-healing, amazing, awful, ordinary life as described in the poem that I began this blog with.

As you know, I’ve already mastered how to numb myself. And I want to continue to unlearn that skill. To slow down and embrace whatever is coming up for me. The sadness. The anger. The frustration. The shame. The joy.

So right now, I am embracing sadness. The gut-wrenching kind. And I’m so fucking grateful, because it means I’m alive. And if I’m lucky enough I’ll live 87 beautiful years like my grandma. I’m feisty like her so I think my odds are good.

Thank you for 36 years of memories, Grandma.

***She passed about 10 minutes before I landed, shortly after I finished writing this. Rest in Peace, Grandma. I miss you already.***

Cue ‘Time Will Tell’ by Gregory Alan Isakov

Expectations

During the holidays, I’m reminded of how far the space is between the life I live in DC and the one where I was raised. It is not always easy to be the one who left. To create a path for yourself that deviates from your family of origin. It can make you feel as though you live two different lives, that there are two different versions of you. On the plane ride over I transform into my childhood self.

There is so much beauty in how I was raised, and I have so much for love for my family. On a weekly basis, I was surrounded by family. Cousins, aunts, uncles, and, of course, the grandparents at the center. We were our own village. We celebrated everything and mourned tragedies together. With a large family, we had our fair share of tragedies. I am grateful for this built-in support network, for the togetherness, for this deeply ingrained sense of protection.

But there are costs to a strong, family-centric childhood, especially one with its fair share of groupthink. And togetherness does not necessarily mean connection.

In my family, and I imagine in many others, there was right and there was wrong, and we were expected to conform. The expectations were heavy. Sometimes they were spoken and sometimes they were not. But they were known whether or not there were words attached to them.

Going against the grain, deviating from the norm, was not celebrated. It was met with disdain. I could feel the disappointment. The tension was suffocating. What is wrong with this person? This person must think they are better.

For much of my life, I did whatever I could to meet expectations. I did what I was told to do. I called and checked in on who I was supposed to. I went where I was supposed to go. I did not push back even when I wanted to. I went with the program. I was the giver and the high achiever. Do you need something? I’ll get it. Do you have something to say? I’ll hold it.

I craved acceptance and this was what I believed I had to do to get it. Who am I if I’m not doing something for others? I craved the attention I received when I did things for other people. I needed to feel like I was enough.

I feel I should clarify that I do not think meeting expectations and doing things for others is inherently a problem. However, in my case, it did not always feel I had a choice, not if I wanted to be loved by others. My family valued harmony over individuality. I learned to value harmony and avoided conflict at all costs. Over time, it became difficult to know why I was making the choices I was. Was it for me? Was it because I wanted to do x, y or z? Or was it because of someone else? Because it is what they expected of me?

Expectations are a problem if they leave you with zero space to make your own choices. They are a problem if you wear them as an identity. My self-worth was tied to what I was giving to others and how I was performing according to other people’s expectations. THIS was the problem.

Tying your self-worth to others, even your family, is a trap. Always. Creating a role for yourself where only perfection is acceptable is destructive. Always. And I’ve had to work for years into adulthood to rewire my brain to see it this way.

I am the person who left the family unit to pursue a life different than theirs. For 12 years, I’ve had to convince myself that it is okay to have made that choice. It is not selfish. It does not mean I think I am better than anyone else. It does not make me a bad person. I am loveable even when I do not conform. Even when I do not meet expectations.

Whenever I am home, I am even more aware of the choice I made and of the space between who I was and who I am trying to be. I am told what I will be doing instead of asked what I want to do. I am reminded that I am different. That I’ve gone down a path less traveled. For my family, they think that is DC, but I know the more important path has been the one inward. That is what has changed me.

This last trip home for Thanksgiving was difficult. I did not feel accepted. I did not feel seen for the person I am today. I spent most of the time doing things for others, but not feeling any appreciation for it. I am realizing that the appreciation I want is not a thank you, it is space in these relationships to be myself.

I may never get this from some of the people I want it from. Is it frustrating as hell? YES. But that’s okay. I’m learning to detach, that there is value in just owning what you can control. Your needs, wants, and desires.

I want to take up space with all versions of me. And guess what? All those versions are enough. 😊

Cue ‘Closer to Free’ by Bodeans