On February 4, 1993, my mother passed away.
In about two weeks it will be the 20th anniversary of that event. I find writing cathartic and I’m trying to figure out what to write. About a week ago, I buried one of my closest aunt’s and the event struck me in that one of the most jarring things about death is that “life goes on”. None of my children ever met my mother, my wife didn’t, and I only have a handful of friends who knew her. That life continues to move minute by minute and day by day makes me sadder each day but more accepting at the same time. It’s like a paradoxical tug on my mind between the understanding that each day her memory fades from the earth a little more and the puzzling peace that comes from knowing time is simply something I cannot control so there's no need to try.
I have thought about my mother each day between that moment and today. Currently, that’s 7,233 days and counting. For some reason that makes me feel strange, thinking about someone who died every day for that long. And then I think about my friends and family who have had their mother’s in their lives for each of those days between then and now. It’s very likely I am no different in my thoughts of my mother as they think on theirs – the only difference being she is no longer walking on the earth.
And as you read this, you probably can infer the internal struggle that continues to this day and I suspect shall continue until I join her in peace. Still, I desire to write something for that day that captures my thoughts and feelings but may be helpful to someone else. I’m not quite sure how to do that and figured I’d set it before a group of folks who don’t know me in that light and perhaps you all can give me an idea I hadn’t considered.
Thanks,
Don
In about two weeks it will be the 20th anniversary of that event. I find writing cathartic and I’m trying to figure out what to write. About a week ago, I buried one of my closest aunt’s and the event struck me in that one of the most jarring things about death is that “life goes on”. None of my children ever met my mother, my wife didn’t, and I only have a handful of friends who knew her. That life continues to move minute by minute and day by day makes me sadder each day but more accepting at the same time. It’s like a paradoxical tug on my mind between the understanding that each day her memory fades from the earth a little more and the puzzling peace that comes from knowing time is simply something I cannot control so there's no need to try.
I have thought about my mother each day between that moment and today. Currently, that’s 7,233 days and counting. For some reason that makes me feel strange, thinking about someone who died every day for that long. And then I think about my friends and family who have had their mother’s in their lives for each of those days between then and now. It’s very likely I am no different in my thoughts of my mother as they think on theirs – the only difference being she is no longer walking on the earth.
And as you read this, you probably can infer the internal struggle that continues to this day and I suspect shall continue until I join her in peace. Still, I desire to write something for that day that captures my thoughts and feelings but may be helpful to someone else. I’m not quite sure how to do that and figured I’d set it before a group of folks who don’t know me in that light and perhaps you all can give me an idea I hadn’t considered.
Thanks,
Don