Sunday, April 14, 2024

15 Years and A Million Left...



February 6th, 2024 marked 15 years without my dad.


Fifteen.


The word rolls off my tongue so smoothly and yet, it sounds foreign to my own ears.


Fifteen. 15. Fif-teen.


A decade and a half really isn’t so long in the timeline of the world.


And yet… Fifteen years is such a large chunk of time in my world.


And after that much time, I’ve realized that since my dad died, my life has been clearly cleaved into two. A before and an after. Two starkly distinct pieces of the same evolving person. And even though they belong to the same life, it feels as though they won’t ever fully connect. Adjacent puzzle pieces that don’t quite align.


It’s like I’ve lived a thousand lives since my dad died compared to the singular life I lived with him in it.


Before: I was a child, a teenager, a young adult. Part of a nuclear family of 5 with security and happiness and love. Extended family, friends, community as a part of our daily lives. Childhood, adolescence, the beginnings of adulthood. Elementary School, Junior High, High School. A semester of college. So simple and steady and standard.


It’s wild how after 15 years, I still sometimes cling to that person as though I could get her back — get that family, get that life back — if I just remember hard enough. If I can just remember each and every small detail, I think that life is still right at the tips of my fingers.


So close, I could grab it.


(Weren’t we just right there? Weren’t you just here?)


And yet… I often have to put a Hard Stop on these memories when I get too close. They can still be too painful; it can still be so raw.


I can still miss him too much.


After: Everything else.


A break up with Ray — my first love, the person who knew my dad, loved my dad, and was with me when I lost my dad. Ray has had his own demons to conquer and, at first, observing his journey to healing was heartbreaking to witness from a distance. At the time it all devastated me, but in hindsight, the experience helped to eventually set some of my pain free in ways I never imagined.


And then — Another love, another breakup; this one faster. It burned brighter and hotter and fizzled out quicker than it began. It was intense and enthralling, exhausting and draining, and I ended up needing every facet of what that relationship gave to me, both good and bad.


But finally — The love of my life. Landon. What a gift… What a dream. And sent at precisely the right time I needed to begin to heal my heart. I cannot thank my lucky stars enough. And even after 13 years together, he has always been open enough to allow me the ability to feel my grief while never allowing me to drown in it. What a gift.


And then, some more: A graduation from U of I with a Bachelor’s Degree. A move to Spokane. A graduation from EWU with a Master’s Degree. A career I’m 10-years deep in. Our bestest boy Jake. Buying our first home and having all the first-time homeowner and home-improvement questions. Losing Grandma and Grandpa and Uncle Jerry and Aunt Marcia. The birth of our sweet Maeve Magnolia.


My god, Maeve. She is truly everything. And my dad would have *adored* her.


It’s hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that soon, I will be at the apex. The crux. The midway point where I will have reached 19 years without my dad — The same amount of years I had with him. And after that, the scales will always be imbalanced on the wrong side: More time without him than I had the privilege of having with him.


It feels so unfair. This can’t be right. How did I get here so quickly?


(Weren’t you just right here?) 


It’s harder yet when I put Maeve into my shoes. She is 4. In just 15 (Fifteen. 15. Fit-teen.) years, she will be 19 years old, the same age I was when I lost my dad. I cannot imagine having only 15 more years with her; Maeve only having 15 more years with Landon or me. It’s so short. Too short. It’s not enough time. That would never be enough time.


And yet… My last 15 years have felt like an eternity.


Time — and grief — are difficult.


This was reiterated to me in the last year when my two best friends lost their dads within 3 months of each other. Both losses were semi-expected from illnesses, although the timing was a surprise for both. 


I didn’t realize how much being a source of strength for these two would bring me comfort (Yes! A function I can excel in because I know I have accomplished similar-yet-subjectively-harder undertakings before! And I was younger and less emotionally mature then, so I can definitely handle this now!) while also sometimes catapulting me right back to the numb, foggy-brained college freshman I was, dragging my feet from place to place in an effort just to make an effort through my grief.


What a strange way for my brain to react after 15 years of actively processing my loss.


Grief — and time — are difficult.


I wonder regularly what my dad would be like now. What he would look like. What he would think of the world and American politics and our social climate. I hate that I didn’t really get to know him as an adult, truly only as a child and teenager. If he hadn’t gotten sick, would we have had discussions about what I learned in college and grad school? Or would he have just sat back and mostly observed the conversations around him like he often had in my childhood? He would now be Baka Mike to 3 granddaughters… Would our lives have all unfolded the same way to give him those same 3 beautiful girls? Or would life have worked itself out a little differently with him around? Would he have retired yet or continued working past retirement-age like a lot of folks? Would he have new hobbies or leaned into the ones he already loved as his body slowed down? Where would he have taken my mom on vacation once all us kids were finally out of the house? How would he have handled the loss of his mom and Grandpa Jimmy?


What would he sound like?


It’s now officially been more than 15 years since I’ve heard my dad’s voice and the longer it’s been, the harder it is to come to terms with that. I hate admitting that I’ve forgotten what he sounded like… It feels like a betrayal somehow.


I won’t sugarcoat it — I’m jealous of my friends and family who have videos and recordings of the voices of their dads (alive or in the stars). I wish more than just about anything I had tangible, salvageable, re-playable evidence of my dad I could call on for comfort when I deeply miss him and my emotions are threatening to overtake me.


(Weren’t you just here?)


Unfortunately, I lost my dad in a time right before digital photos and videos and voicemails/memos were readily available. In fact, it was a time of technological transition where I’m sure I actually had quite a lot of photos and videos of him taken on my *fancy* CoolPix digital camera. However, the SD Cards they were stored on have likely since been lost to the annals of time (and the demise of old technology), so the actual footage is probably long gone. We didn’t have a camcorder growing up either, so there aren’t even old home movies on VHS I could get transferred over to a digital file if I wanted to.


One time in 2018, Landon and I were randomly tuned into Root Sports and the 1998 Seattle Mariners “Turn Ahead the Clock Night” game was being rebroadcast. I said to Landon, “No way! I was at that game in the Kingdome with my dad and my brother! I’ve got pictures and souvenirs to prove it!” And as he was prepping dinner from the kitchen, he jokingly called, “See if you can find yourself when the camera pans to the crowd!”


Lo and behold, not 30 seconds later, I saw an 8-year-old me sitting next to my 10-year-old brother and my very-much-alive dad in the stands. I paused the playback, dropped to my knees and sobbed. I rewound and replayed and rewound and replayed that clip over and over. I recorded it on my phone, zoomed in, sent it to my mom and brother and sister. “That’s us! I can’t believe it! That’s us!”


It was. It was actually us.


And, to date, that is the only video (no sound) I have of my dad that shows he was here. That he was mine and he was real and that the whole portion of my life where he was alive wasn’t just a figment of my imagination.


Because honestly, some days, it feels that way. When I am deep in missing him and I look at how different my life is now than the one I had when he left, I question whether or not I imagined the world’s best dad or if he actually existed like I remember.


(I know you were just right here.)



February 6th, 2024 marked 15 years without my dad.


Fifteen. 15. Fif-teen.


Up to this point, I've been nervous to ask for pictures or videos of my dad — or even memories/stories I haven’t heard yet. What if they don’t exist? What if no one shares? Who is going to save room in their mind for those memories when I, his own daughter, don’t even have the brain capacity to store them? I know myself and I am afraid I will wind up so much sadder to ask and get nothing in return than to not posit the inquiry at all.


And yet… If there is anything about my dad you’d like to share with me — big or small, good or bad — I would take any memory at this point.


And if not… Is there anything you would share with my dad about me if you could? If you don’t have a story of him, maybe there is something you would want to tell him about me if you had the opportunity? I don’t know, just trying to think of a way to still feel connected to who he was and who he still is, wherever he may be. <3 





Thursday, February 6, 2014

Five Years and Counting...

Dear Dad,

I can’t believe it’s been five whole years that you’ve been gone. Five long, painful, lonely, difficult, overwhelming, exciting, hopeful, important, beautiful years. So much has changed since you’ve been gone, and yet it seems as though just yesterday we were sitting on the porch watching summer thunderstorms together. Time is such a fluid entity--it ebbs and flows rather freely, leaving me confused and comforted all at once.

It’s hard to wrap my head and my heart around the fact that you never had the opportunity to meet Landon, the healer of my heart, the love of my life, my rock, my support, my once-in-a-lifetime. You were gone before you had the chance to shake his hand and tell him to take care of me. You missed out on the ability to get to know him as a part of our family and to take comfort in the fact that he will always have my best interests at heart. He loves me unconditionally, inspires me, encourages me to chase my dreams, and, more than anything, understands my (sometimes erratic) emotions. He not only helps me to carry the load, but he helps me unpack the anger and hurt and loneliness and tears when I need to. He is kind and patient and makes me whole again. You would have been proud to see me on his arm.

It’s difficult to think about the fact that you never got to meet your granddaughters, Elliot Delaney and Audrey Michael. They are smart, kind, beautiful, loving, energetic, and charismatic little girls and are a constant reminder of everything good in this world. It’s uncanny how often their expressions, especially when they are curious and trying to solve a problem or peacefully dozing off to sleep, mirror the face of a grandfather they never had the chance to meet. My heart will always ache knowing that you aren’t around to see them grow, but I am comforted by the knowledge that they will always know who their Grandpa Mike was through photos and stories.

It’s almost impossible to comprehend the fact that I was just six months into my freshman year of college when you passed away and now I am a mere four months away from earning my Master’s degree. Where has the time gone? I'm interning with a company I'm passionate about and I feel as though the possibilities for my future are so bright. I've pushed forward with my education to better myself and to constantly be learning and observing and participating in life, but somewhere in the back of my determination to finish this degree is the hope that you are proud of me and the woman I’ve become, wherever your spirit may be.

I love you and I miss you every single day, and while I would trade so much to have you back in my world, my heart no longer has the constant torment that devastated me with actual, physical hurt. Five years ago, I didn’t think that would be possible. Three years ago, I didn’t think that would be possible. And while there are days and weeks where the pain is more intense and the longing to talk with you just one more time is overwhelming, I don’t dwell on your absence anymore. There are infinitely more good days than bad and only time and the support of my family and friends have made that possible. I have grown and flourished so much in the five years you’ve been gone, but no matter how much I continue to change and develop, I hope you will always know the special place you’ll hold in my heart for the rest of my days.

I love you, Pops. Always.

-Ami




Monday, December 5, 2011

New Year // New Goals.

"Take into account that great love and great achievements involve great risk." -Dalai Lama

My oh my, I am a night owl. And I am going to regret this in the morning while I'm struggling through my law class, bright and early. But if my brain won't shut itself down, I may as well do something (semi) productive, right? :)

With the new year fast approaching, I've been thinking about what my resolution(s) should be. I always try the same things every year and fail... Miserably. No more Diet Coke! No more procrastinating! No more swearing (ha)! And I've come to realize, instead of adding something to my life to increase my happiness, I just focus on taking away the things that seem negative on the surface but honestly help make me who I am. Most people who see me everyday would probably be surprised if I didn't have a soda nearby and multiple curse words didn't come out of my mouth during the course of our conversation. As for procrastinating... I can only vouch for it by saying I work well under pressure and generally have exceptional results when I put things off until the last minute... Or perhaps that's my brain trying to subconsciously justify my bad habits. Who knows. :)

So instead of trying to pull pieces of myself away, this year I would like to add more positive elements to my world and not be afraid of making big changes. I get so comfortable sometimes, which is better than complacency, but I've come to realize my creature comforts could begin holding me back from the things I truly want in my life. I want to branch out--continue trying new activities, joining different circles of friends, putting myself outside my realm of normalcy--and be happy while doing it. For the past few months, I've really worked on this and I think I've been doing okay. But I can do better. And I will. And with my college graduation coming up in May and having the big, scary world looming right in front of me, I'm ready to hop on this new train and enjoy the ride.

In this same vein, I think I need to work on setting myself up for success but being okay with not achieving it. Or perhaps not achieving it right away. Friendships, classes, jobs, relationships... I've always tended to go with what has been right in front of me and available. Not necessarily easy, but available. I'm willing to work, and work hard, for the things that I want, but I don't always express clearly what I want. Or that I will make sacrifices and changes in order to find happiness in what I want. So I'll also be adding "get out on a damn limb and take a chance with telling someone how you feel" to my list of resolutions. Because life is too short to put on hold the people (and things, I suppose) that make me happy and make my world a better place. And not taking the risk of letting someone know what I'm thinking and how I'm feeling--whether it is about them personally, or getting a job, anything--will only mean I won't be able to work for what I want. I've just got to figure out where the line of good timing and being patient is compared to the line of being assertive and confident.

I hear resolutions aren't always easy. :)

Finally, I hope the people in my life also realize the incredible impacts of positive emphasis and positive reinforcement and don't keep trying to do away with the things in their lives they always felt were "bad." I'll be sending out good thoughts to everyone I care about and hope they find some light and try something new--Not just in the New Year, but for the last month of 2011, as well. Send it off in style!

Also, completely off topic, I cannot quit listening to the song "Turning Page" by Sleeping at Last. It is so beautifully composed and calming... And the lyrics touch me in a way that makes it hard to shake the smile off my face. :) If you're looking for a sweet song to fall in love with this winter, I'd recommend this one.



Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Expectation // Reciprocation

"Even after all this time, the sun never says to the Earth: 'You owe me.' Look what happens with a love like that--it lights the whole sky." -Hafiz, 14th century Persian poet

It's been awhile since I've blogged (more than a year... what?!), so I figured it was about time to start up again. :) Lately, I've just noticed so many people in my life demanding or asking things of others and it's caught me off-guard. Please don't get me wrong--I am the first person to ask for help if I need it. I think that's a major societal flaw we've created in ourselves: Being too proud or too ashamed to ask for help with something. I think it is important to count on and rely on others because we certainly can't do everything alone.

But that's not exactly what I'm talking about. I'm talking about telling someone at work they "owe" you because you're doing a kind thing and covering their shift because they would like to study for a test or show some school spirit and go to a football game. I'm talking about telling your friends and significant others they need to make time for you specifically because you take time out of your schedule for them and "it's only fair." I'm talking about demanding someone do an assignment for you in the future because you just helped them with something for class they didn't understand.

Why does our kindness always have to be reciprocated? I admit, it's nice to have someone offer to cover my shift when I agree to cover theirs--but it's not necessary. Is appreciation not enough for us anymore? Do we always have to get something in return? This concept confuses me and doesn't make sense in my brain. I've always been the type of person to offer a place to stay, a hot meal, a listening ear, the shirt off my back--whatever you need--without expectations of reciprocation (thanks for raising me to be pretty selfless, Mom and Dad!). Along with that, however, I do not expect most people I interact with to be the same way. We're all unique and have strengths and weaknesses, and perhaps me give-give-giving without ever take-take-taking is MY weakness and why I often get treated like a doormat. But I would prefer to have people think of me with "she is a really caring, giving and reliable person" as opposed to "she
does have all those qualities, but... only when she gets something in return." I want to be remembered as a beautiful person--compassionate, positive, enthusiastic and happy (please reference picture below) and I think that would be hard to do with constantly feeling like I'm owed something.

Maybe I'm crazy; I just think it's okay to show kindness without expecting repayment. And I wish a few more people in my life thought along those same lines, just to salvage and maintain the relationships they bring down with their demands. We all enjoy respect and appreciation from others, and frankly, those two things are usually enough for me. :)

**Upon discussing a similar topic with a couple of my ladyfriends, Charlotte's response was "You're like, the best girlfriend ever. Seriously, why don't you have a boyfriend? Actually, screw boys. I'm anti-wiener right now."
^^^Those kinds of laughs are the best kind of repayment for being a good friend -- happiness. :)

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

nanny diaries pt. 1




"i feel the capacity to care is the thing which gives life its deepest significance." - pablo casals

so for the past two and a half weeks i've been nannying for my niece in hillsboro, oregon (right outside portland). she is the cutest, happiest, funniest baby i have ever seen, though i'm probably a bit biased. :) for a six-month-old, she is real smart, very attentive, and pretty advanced--sitting up on her own, scooting across the room, learning to drink out of sippy cups. she rarely has meltdowns (though she is teething and tends to get cranky from time to time) and thinks pretty much everything is hilarious, especially when you dance and act crazy. and though it's not always easy constantly being responsible for another human being and being so far from home, i've learned a lot of things...
1) when the parents say you need to carry a burp rag around everywhere, they mean everywhere. it never fails--the one time you don't grab it, the baby will barf everywhere and you'll be left scrambling trying to figure out what to mop it up with until you can get back to the burp rag.
2) bodily fluids and excrements really aren't as gross when you're dealing with them compared to just thinking about them. they sounds worse than they are. it's pretty simple to change a diaper, use a wet-wipe or two and be on your merry way.
3) everyone in the world should really wash their hands more. after dealing with a baby who puts everything in her mouth, i cringe to think where most of those things have been and how dirty they are. although she's fine and doesn't get sick, the thought of it is still kind of gross and i've taken to washing my hands much, much more than i used to.
4) it's amazing how quickly a little human can be integrated into your life. you just learn to adjust and assimilate them into your routine and it's not as difficult as i thought it would be. they're pretty self-sufficient when you keep them entertained and keep an eye on them so they don't hurt themselves.
5) nap time for baby does not always mean nap time for adult. though i've been lucky and have been able to sleep mostly when ellie does, that's not always the case. chores and homework and responsibilities still have to be taken care of and sometimes the ONLY time you have to do these things is during nap time. and though that means i'm tired a lot, it's still a lot more fun to play with a happy, well-rested baby instead of a crabby one. :)
6) baby cheeks are the most kissable things in the world.
7) finally, though i don't want to have kids for a long, long time, taking care of el has made me realize i'll probably be a pretty good mom one day. i love her and take care of her like she's my own and i'm always so proud of her when she makes new developments. i get so excited when she recognizes me and smiles when i walk into the room now and i love being able to play with her and watch her grow. she's a peach and i can only hope that one day my children are as awesome as she is. :)


Thursday, May 6, 2010

immersion story.

as promised, i'm posting the story i wrote for my semester-long immersion project in my narrative journalism class. it's fairly dramatic, but welcome to the life of my family for the last year or so. :) this piece was voted in the top three in my class of 25, a pretty big honor considering i was probably the youngest person there. so here we go... it's long, but it reads fairly quickly.
*sorry the format is a little off... blogspot wouldn't let me indent or center or anything. lame.


The evening started with a phone call.
I waited in line at Cosmo’s CafĂ© for my 12-ounce vanilla chai latte when a call from an unsaved contact in my phone came through. I have never answered phone calls from numbers I don’t recognize—if it’s important, they can leave a message has always been my philosophy—but for some reason unknown to me, I answered that particular call.
It was from a high school friend asking what was going on outside my house in Lewiston. An ambulance, a fire truck, two police cars and a wave of people surrounded the American four-square as police carried out a gun and fingerprinting kit.
“Are you sure it’s my house? Do you even know where I live?” She did. She knew exactly where I lived.
I hung up the phone and called my mom, fear squeezing my heart into mush and a knot forming in my stomach. No answer. Re-dial. Voicemail again.
The two friends I was with tried to placate me: “It’s probably nothing. Just an accident.” I called my then-boyfriend, Ray, and asked him to swing by my house; he was in Lewiston that Friday. He dropped everything and did as I asked. He later told me something in my voice let him know I instinctually knew the news that was coming.
While I prayed to God, a God I still don’t know exists, that someone had broken into my house and my dad had shot them in self-defense, my nerves were livewires and my heart was a kick drum, waiting for my mother to call me back. I tried to pay attention to the swim meet we caught the tail-end of, but all I can remember is the aquamarine color of the pool and the way my stomach jumped to my throat when the name “Mosquito” popped up on my phone. She was calling me back as the meet ended.
“Mom, what is going on?” I relayed the information my friend had divulged on the phone and was met with silence. “Mom, what the hell is going on?” Tears rocked my voice and my legs wobbled as I made my way through the doors to the frozen February night.
“Am, your dad shot himself,” she said quietly, trying to deliver the crippling news as gently as possible.
Collapse. Gasp. Heave. Focus. Breathe.
“Is he alive?” Silence. Dread. Pain. “Mom, is he alive?”
“Your daddy is gone, Am. I’m so sorry.” There were no tears in her voice, just agony.
My phone flew across the concrete as my forehead hit the ground. My heart was collapsing into a hole in my chest, physically hurting as it shattered, screaming for release from the pain. My brain switched from hyper-speed to numb in a matter of seconds—my father, my eccentric, quirky, reliable daddy, was gone.
- - - -
I packed my bag in a blur. I remember thinking “how am I supposed to know what to pack for a funeral?” I was angry. I was shocked. I was scared. I was in misery.
Tears continued to flow while my mind was 30 miles away—down in Lewiston where my mother called my brother, Jordan. He was in his apartment in Moscow getting ready for an evening out with his friends. She called once and he rejected it—it was a Friday night and he wasn’t looking for a conversation with Mom. When she called back immediately, he had to answer.
My mom said she told him the same thing she told me and too many other people over the course of the next week: “Daddy’s gone. He shot himself.”
“I was just in shock pretty much,” Jordan said. “It took me a few minutes to process it. I don’t know, it really hit me… It was very unexpected.”
My brother threw his bag together and waited for me to get to his apartment. I had only seen him cry one time—when I was 9 years old and diagnosed with diabetes—but the instant our eyes met, sobs ripped through each of us as we hugged in the parking lot. We gripped each other tight and held onto one another for minutes: We needed something solid to grasp as our world fell apart.
- - - -
Every light on the main floor of the house was on and the front door was open. February air shocked each time it blew in, but closing the door would have been pointless because so many people were in and out. The television was still on while the paramedics and police milled around—my dad had turned it on, though not the lights, and my mom had no inclination to turn it off.
Everything else was quiet: the police, the paramedics, my mother. She was completely broken up but trying to hold it together with everyone around. It was the calm before the storm—My brother and I were 30 minutes away, and everyone was just waiting. Waiting. Waiting.
Waiting for when we all had to see one another and deal with the situation.
My dad was taken out through the basement door and through the back yard. The neighbors were already peering through the darkness to our house, my mom didn’t want to give them more to talk about. She never saw him again after she found him in our basement coal room, sitting on a box, slouched over with the barrel of the gun on the left side of his face. A couple pink drops were on his sweatshirt but she saw no other damage—just defeat.
- - - -
My father had been sick for months, possibly years, before he committed suicide. Since my graduation from high school in 2008, he had lost weight and was easily confused. He claimed he was having trouble hearing but, in hindsight, I don’t think he could process and understand what people were saying to him. He had a hard time making decisions, like what kind of toppings to get on a pizza, and was detached from everything. It was difficult for him to read the newspaper and fill out forms at the doctor’s office. He went to work about 15 times between Thanksgiving and Feb. 5, the day before he died, and sometimes did not last the entire day. He lost his interest in driving the convertible, something he enjoyed from the day he bought it, and always complained about his head and his stomach hurting.
He wouldn’t get mad anymore. He wouldn’t get sad. He wouldn’t get excited—his emotions were flat. He had become a shell without any of us realizing just how empty he was. My mom got angry with him the day before he died because he came home from work after an hour of being there, and he wouldn’t fight back.
“I tried everything,” she said. “I tried getting mad to get a response. I tried being positive to boost his spirit. Nothing. I cried when I had gotten so frustrated with him and all he could do was hold me and say ‘I’m sorry, I’m so sorry.’”
- - - -
The ride from Moscow was silent. My roommate, Jordyn, and our friend D.W., who were both with me when my mom called, drove my brother and I to Lewiston and were able to just let us be in the back seat. No words of comfort, no soothing music—just the gesture of taking us home when we needed it most was enough. I held my brother’s hand the entire way, a huge step in our constantly-fighting-like-siblings-do relationship.
As we rounded the corner of our block, he squeezed my hand tighter than before and we were both thinking the same thing: What are we going to see? We had no idea where my dad had shot himself—Jordan thinking the living room because it was where Dad was most comfortable, me thinking the kitchen because the cleanup of linoleum and countertops would be easiest.
There was nothing different about the outside of my house except the light in the living room was on and the shade was not drawn as it normally would be at night. No police cars. No ambulance. No gawking neighbors. No hearse. Everything was eerily normal until my mom met us in the front yard and reality set in. Again, there were no words. Just sobs and shudders and labored breathing.
Inside the house was the same: My boyfriend held me as I cried, my brother held my mom as she cried, my grandma tried to comfort whoever she could. Once the initial questions were out of the way—Where did it happen? Did he leave a note? Is everyone okay?—the real question became clear: What the hell do we do now?
- - - -
My mom had one more phone call to make that night, to my half-sister, Tiffiny, in Portland. Tiffiny had been estranged from my parents in the year leading up to our dad’s death for personal reasons unknown to me. She sent him a card on his birthday, Jan. 13, but had not spoken to either of my parents since her birthday in December.
My mom called Nick, Tiffiny’s husband, because he is more level-headed and was better able to handle the initial call. They were out to dinner with friends and Nick feigned sickness to leave quickly. When she heard the news, Tiffiny said she had a panic attack—she couldn’t breathe, she couldn’t speak and she had that feeling of “Oh God, I’m going to puke. Oh God.” She and Nick, with the help of a couple friends, packed their bags and left that night. At some point they pulled over on the side of the road to sleep and arrived in Lewiston the next morning.
My sister said she felt physically emptied—like an actual piece of her had died and was missing. It seemed surreal, like she was outside herself and watching herself in film. She kept telling herself it wasn’t real. We all tried to tell ourselves it wasn’t real.
- - - -
Saturday morning was hell.
A sleepless night and a crushed heart made for puffy eyes and wild emotions. I drifted in and out of sleep until 7 a.m., spending part of the night in my parents’ room and part of the night in my own. I couldn’t believe my mom was sleeping in her bed—the bed my father had occupied less than 24 hours before and would never sleep in again—as though her world had not just been turned upside-down. I barely had the capacity to recognize her strength—my mind was so filled with anguish—but even then I saw her survival instincts kicking in.
Phone calls, text messages and visitors poured in at all hours of the day. Sympathy, pain and tears came with each, intensifying and solidifying the fact that we were not just having a horrible nightmare. My father was gone and I had no explanation. No note, no clues, no help.
Just heartache.
I was trapped inside an emotional bubble. Tears sprang from my eyes without warning—I didn’t even bother to wear makeup that day. I could laugh about memories of my father being shared, still expecting him to walk in the back door any moment. I replayed over and over, to a sickening degree, the scene my mother found the evening before. I couldn’t eat, I couldn’t sleep, I could barely breathe without wheezing from pain. I didn’t know when the ache would end, but as the days stretched on, I wondered if it ever would.
The funeral was held Thursday and the church hit capacity. Friends and family poured in from all over to pay respects to my father—he had no idea how many lives he touched. The priest used an analogy in the eulogy to annotate how my father died, sparing the word “suicide,” since it was a Catholic church. He described it as being trapped on the fourth floor of a burning building with all doors blocked. Do you jump out the window or sit and wait for the fire—the depression, the helplessness, the agony—to consume you? My father jumped in hopes of something better rather than waiting to be taken over.
After the funeral, the mourning in our family continued for weeks. Though we put on good faces and returned to school and work, it was clear each of us was still shaken. Eventually the mourning faded and grieving took its place. We each had internal demons to battle on our own, some more trying than others. There were days when we were not motivated, days we were so depressed ourselves it was a struggle to get out of bed. My mom summed up the feeling in a single phrase: “It’s the saddest I’ve ever been, but I don’t want to die… I’m not without hope.”
- - - -
The man my father was when he died was not the dad I had growing up. He used to be a stable force, a reliable perfectionist who gave heart and soul without ever talking about it. He was at every baseball game, every dance recital, and every parent-teacher conference. His family always came first and he was proud of us.
My dad was quirky—during his “mid-life crisis” six years ago he grew his hair out and got a perm—and he had a unique sense of humor. He never said much—he just thought a lot and came out of left field with comments that would leave you scratching your head as he chuckled to himself.
He enjoyed things as unique as himself. He once found a piece of drift wood shaped like a hand giving the middle finger and anchored it in the garden facing the neighbors… He hoped they’d get the message. He caught dozens of praying mantises… And froze them. Thawed them. Sculpted them. Then hairsprayed each into place and mounted them in glass cases as art forms.
My dad was a packrat and loved to tinker around the house—but if something couldn’t be fixed with duct tape, it couldn’t be fixed at all. He was creative, artistic and quietly romantic. When he saw a rose in the garden worthy of my mother, he’d clip it, place it in a vase and set it next to her chair in the living room. He was social and a good conversationalist, but he had insecurities. He always wanted to be the “cool” guy, so when his quirks made people laugh, they were laughing with him, not at him. He felt deeply, but was not much for sharing his feelings out loud; he was better able to show his love than talk about it.
He loved 70s rock-and-roll music and spending time outside. The question of why my dad, a relaxed and easy going free-spirit, ended his life has plagued everyone he knew for over a year, and we are just now reconciling the fact we may never get an answer.
- - - -
According to the Suicide Prevention Action Network, Idaho had the 10th highest rate of suicide in 2006, the most recent statistic year available. In 2008, 81 percent of Idaho suicides were completed by men; 65 percent of those suicides involved a firearm, 13 percent higher than the national average. The availability of guns in this area, as well as the finality of their use, contributes to the reason that particular method is so often chosen. Working age men in Idaho (18- to 64-years-old) commit suicide at a rate of 25.8 of 100,000 people, the third highest demographic of people in the state.
The death of my father fits into each of those categories. Though it is a slight comfort, in a macabre and morbid sort of way, to know he was not the only one to feel suicide was the answer, the statistics still don’t explain why. Why could my father, who could not even decide on pizza toppings, decide to irrevocably take himself away from us? Why couldn’t he wait for the results of his blood work to come back before he acted? Why couldn’t we deal with whatever the issue was and keep him here? Why couldn’t he have asked for help?
I asked myself these questions, as did the rest of my family, every day for months. We assume he was scared of what the doctor would tell him at his follow-up appointment. He was afraid it would be cancer, or something equally as emotionally and financially taxing on the family, and he wouldn’t want to put us through that. He felt he had no other choice. He was always one to do things his own way—suicide was just him being orderly. As my sister put it, if you felt like you were becoming someone you weren’t, and you felt awful all the time and had no hope of getting better, would you consider ending things on your own terms so you wouldn’t burden anyone else? It wasn’t selfish… It was selfless. He had to have been braver than any of us could grasp to pull that trigger—no one can understand that feeling of being on the brink unless they have been there.
We tortured ourselves—like all survivors of suicide—with no true explanations until we realized no matter how many times we ask “why,” we will never get the real answer. The one person who could give us the insight is gone.
And we are left picking up the pieces.
- - - -
The effects of suicide radiate out in levels. The ring of people closest to the person lost is hit the hardest. The children, the spouse, the parents, the siblings—they lose an entire piece of themselves. The next level—the friends, the co-workers, the acquaintances—lose a person they will never forget. Another level out—the friends of family members, the friends of friends—see the repercussions and do what they can to help. The furthest level out—strangers—hear the story and sympathize with the inner rings.
Our friends do not treat us differently than they did before my dad died, though they often think their words and actions through more carefully. They don’t throw around the phrase “it made me want to kill myself” as liberally as most anymore, and they make certain on Dad’s Weekend, his birthday, Father’s Day and Feb. 6 we are taken care of and distracted. They pick us up when we are down and always lend listening ears when we have the urge to talk, but that’s how it has always been and the consistency is a comfort.
My family acts much in the same way. Regardless of the gaping hole in our lives, we still treat each other with the love and respect we always have. We look out for one another and we take care of each other. As a family, we have dealt with the situation as well as anyone can expect. Our bonds have tightened; we think our decisions through more and consider the effects our actions will have on one another and the people around us. But as my brother put it, it’s almost better to keep our relationships with one another as they were before rather than over-exaggerate them and try to make them stronger—they need to be natural, not forced.
- - - -
Each person in my family and those close to us has dealt with the loss of my father differently. I chose the path of standing up and speaking out: I gave an interview to the Argonaut three months after it happened and spoke at a suicide prevention seminar on campus close to the one-year mark. After each, I had strangers approach me on campus to applaud my bravery and tell me how much my strength touched them. It is easier for me to talk about it and put it out in the open, rather than compartmentalize it and bury it, only to have to drudge it up later. I take solace in my friends and family and devote energy and attention to schoolwork to keep myself occupied. I look for the positive things in my life to remind me it is OK to be happy, and I talk to my dad any time I need to.
Jordan would rather not talk or think about the situation if he can help it. His close friends know how our dad died, but perhaps not the method. About 15 of his fraternity brothers attended the funeral, and his friends and co-workers have offered to help in any way they can, but they recognize he prefers to not talk about it and just leave him be. Like the rest of us, my brother still thinks about our father every day, but he doesn’t dwell on it and he doesn’t get depressed anymore.
“It happens. Shit happens. I mean, if there was a backward button that would be awesome. But it’s just one of those things. The guy in the sky had a plan.”
Tiffiny finds comfort in her husband and her daughter. Though having a baby was the most life-changing and special thing to happen to her, it broke her heart for Ellie to be born less than a year after our dad died.
“I hate that he isn’t able to be a grandpa and hold Ellie and play with her and stuff like that. That breaks my heart. But then I wonder if he would be able to be that grandpa I think about because of how sick he was. And that’s a different sort of heartbreak.”
She said her faith has also helped her heal, knowing she can put some of her worries and hurt into God’s hands and trust He loves her and has welcomed our dad into Heaven and looks over him.
My mom uses her stubbornness, her tenacity, to keep this situation from beating her. She has a sense of pride and doesn’t want to give people more to talk about than they already have. She has a grandchild to watch grow and children to see succeed. She said she doesn’t know what else to do—it’s either get up and put one foot in front of the other or curl up in a ball and wither away.
“I can’t do that. I can for a few days—we all have our moments—but I guess I’m just too stubborn. I know people talk. Hell, we gossip when we hear things. But eventually that will be tamped down. I’m too damn stubborn to let the gossipers have any more ammunition to gossip with. I am not going to be a victim.”
- - - -
My family has often been told since the tragedy how strong we are—but the outside world has not seen us at our worst.
People aren’t there to see me cry while hanging shelves in my apartment because my dad isn’t helping like he should be. They aren’t there when I write to him in a private journal, when I beg the universe to give me one more day with him. People aren’t there when I wake up from nightmares, chest heaving, sobs forming, trying to re-repress the images my unconscious drug up. They aren’t there while I cry, thinking about future events my father will miss. At these times I try to be stoic… and fail in my attempts.
People aren’t there to see my brother step up to be the man of the house and take care of the jobs my father used to. They aren’t there to see him help my mom where she needs it while stepping back to try to make her more independent. They aren’t there to see him wish our father would see him graduate from college in May or be the one to walk me down the aisle instead of him.
People aren’t there when my sister feels the need to be the strong sibling because she is the oldest, the anchor. They aren’t there when she holds her 5-month-old daughter, knowing she will never meet her Grandpa Mike, and hating that fact. They aren’t there when regrets pour in with the pain as she thinks about the rocky relationship she had with our dad when he died, and struggles to maintain her strength.
People aren’t there when my mother sits, overwhelmed, trying to figure out how to replace the roof, replace the furnace, pay the bills and support a family without going into bankruptcy. They aren’t there when she has to fix something around the house with no guidance or experience. People aren’t there when her self-confidence is drained because she doesn’t have her companion, her teammate, anymore to back her up in decisions she makes and endeavors she pursues. They aren’t there when, more than anything, she wants a hug from my father, but has to make do with his pillow and calming breaths.
We each have regrets in regard to my father. I wish I had called him earlier that day like I had the urge to—the sun was shining, I was out of class and I missed him, but I figured he was either at work or home sleeping and I didn’t want to bother him… I figured I would see him soon enough.
My brother also wishes he had called him more recently than his birthday, though they never had a relationship where they talked every day, so at the time it wasn’t strange.
My sister regrets not reconciling with him sooner. Since my father was such a stable force in our lives and he’d always been there for her before, why wouldn’t he be there when she was ready to resolve their issues? She was wrong in thinking that and now has to tackle a weight on her shoulders the rest of us are not burdened with.
My mother regrets fighting with him the night before, though they didn’t go to bed angry. She also regrets not giving him a kiss good bye that morning when she left for work—he looked like he was sleeping and she didn’t want to wake him—but she said she doesn’t regret the last thing she said to him on the phone was “I love you, good bye.”
I suppose our weaknesses are relative, but they seem to ebb and flow freely.
- - - -
The morning of Feb. 6, 2010, one year after my father took his own life, my mother sat on the couch, heating pad on, her legs curled underneath her. The newspaper was folded and set aside, already read, and her attention was through the front window with the blinds open. A blanket spilled across her lap and she held my father’s Niagra Falls mug of coffee in both hands, poised at her mouth, ready to drink at any second.
Eyes Close. Inhale. Sip. Swallow. Exhale. Eyes open.
It was the same scene as 18 months earlier, minus one major element.
My mother and father woke up to read the newspaper, drink coffee and begin their day with one another for almost 23 years. Despite the lack of companionship, my mom’s routine hasn’t changed.
She has fallen back into the same day-to-day pattern as before, however lonely, because it is all she knows. She hasn’t missed a day of work to grieve since the week she took off after my father died. She comes home each night to watch television and work on projects around the house when she has the motivation. The routine helps her get from point A to point B to point C through the day, though it keeps her from being more social because it is now so ingrained into her lifestyle.
There have been changes. My mom no longer wears her wedding ring, though not by choice—she sliced her ring finger while cooking a few weeks after the incident and the pain still keeps her from being able to wear her ring. Perhaps that is my dad’s way of keeping her from wearing anyone else’s ring. She spends many nights eating cereal for dinner because cooking for one is not satisfying. She imagines herself finding another companion, but doesn’t see another marriage in her future. She spends more time on the phone with us now and has re-arranged the living room furniture to suit her preference, rather than my father’s.
But his clothes still hang in the closet and sit on the chest at the foot of their bed. His jerry-rigged contraptions continue to keep our house functioning and his truck still sits in the garage, ready to be driven. His trinkets litter the house and his duct-tape-bandaged wall upstairs remains unfixed. His presence is everywhere, even though he’s gone. And though our routines have all picked back up and settled into place, it is his comfort that keeps the normalcy in our lives, even when our world has changed entirely.

Monday, April 5, 2010

not my typical blog post.

so this isn't insightful or artistic at all in any way, just a heads up... :)

i'm writing a longer piece for my journalism class about the journey my family has taken the past year with the loss of my dad and the stigma suicide holds over society. i plan to post it here when i'm finished (it'll be about 15-20 MicrosoftWord pages long if it all goes according to plan...) in case anyone is interested in reading it. i may post a couple pieces from it i just wrote to give a little emotional and dramatic teaser, so stay tuned.

life is very complicated and dramatic right now, but i'm still a happy kid and keeping busy with school and social endeavors. i'll try to write one of my normal posts soon, if school ever gives me the opportunity. :)