Do I Want it to Get Better?

“Where you used to be, there is a hole in the world, which I find myself constantly walking around in the daytime and falling into at night. I miss you like hell.”
― Edna St. Vincent Millay

It has been two months, ten days and a double handful of hours, minutes, and seconds since you left me. I do miss you like hell. You were my sunshine, and the skies are much grayer since you left.

Family and friends check in to make sure I’m okay and always ask, “How are you doing?”

I appreciate their concern, but I don’t know how to answer the question. “I’m okay” is the lie I often tell them because I don’t think people want to hear, “Somewhere between numb and devastated.” Whatever I answer, I usually get the unsolicited but well-meant comment, “It will get better over time.” Will it?

I appreciate the advice but one of the voices in my head asks, “Do you want it to get better and for clarification, what is ‘it’ exactly?”

An honest question deserves an honest answer. I don’t have one. I’m at a loss. I want the pain to go away but I honestly don’t think I want the hole in my heart to heal. I think for the pain to go away memories must fade like an old black and white photo. You were so much more than a faded black and white photo. You were my “technicolor” darling.

My life was without color, and I was never whole until I met you. You were the tie that binds and a colorful psychedelic painting. I’ve gone back to incomplete and unraveled and as bland as boiled chicken. I don’t like the feeling that I’m not dead but not alive either. I am in a halfway house for grievers it seems.

Truthfully, I don’t want to not be thinking about you. I don’t want to not be missing you. I want you to be the first thing I think about when I rise in the morning and the last thing I think about when I go to sleep. You deserve that along with the thoughts that come to me throughout the day and in dreams at night.

I’m sure people are worrying that I’m spending too much time alone wallowing in self-pity. I’m not. I’m not alone. You are still here. I carry you with me, right next to the hole in my heart.

I remember going to parties or gatherings and following you around like one of our puppy dogs. We would always find ourselves in an unpopulated corner of the room talking to each other, ignoring everyone else. You were always the most interesting person in the room and tit was comforting feeling your hip pressed against me and your arm hooked in mine. I carry you with me but the thought that I will never hold your hand or hug you brings back the unfathomable pain.

I try to stay busy. You certainly left me with a gracious plenty to do but as I work my way through bins and boxes, it is like one of our adventures. I never know what I’m going to find next, I just know it will remind me of you or something we did.

“So”, the nagging voice in my head asks again, “do you want it to get better?”  No, I don’t if it means the memories of you will diminish in any way. Maybe I can just hope for getting different rather than getting better.

***

Just before my wife’s passing, I published a “cookbook of stories” described as being Southern fried in the renderings of fried fatback. These are short essays and recipes from the South. Download or purchase in paperback. Food For Thought. http://tinyurl.com/yrt7bee2

6 thoughts on “Do I Want it to Get Better?

  1. It’s your choice to remember and still move forward with some normalcy, or to remember and pity yourself.
    There IS a time for everything.
    Humans need mourning.
    Humans can NOT simply forget.
    Humans need other humans.
    That which you are choosing to do is selfish but necessary. It has its time.

    If and when you finally choose to have fun again and to find some new motivation for getting out of bed each day, I hope you’ll remember this. You did Linda the biggest favor by surviving her so she didn’t have to experience this.
    Carry on sir.

    James Griffin
    Crop Adjuster Contractor
    406-788-3262 (cell)
    406-378-2589

    Liked by 1 person

  2. What you are feeling, and how you expressed it here, is heart-touching, filled with love, and so relatable to anyone who has lost a beloved one.
    There is no time frames or set ways in which to grieve. Everyone is different. Your grief is certainly still so new, so raw, so painful. 😦
    I think grief will always remain in some way or some form, but it can be woven into our lives in a way that we can eventually handle.
    She is with you and always will be. Keep sharing your memories and stories of her…maybe down the road a ways, you can even type them out or write them down. I think that would be an important treasure for you, for your family, and for friends.
    You are not forgotten. Thought and prayers surround you and uplift you.
    (((HUGS))) ❤️
    PS… A quote that has helped me: ”You will not ‘get over’ the loss of a loved one; you will learn to live with it. You will heal and you will rebuild yourself around the great loss you have suffered.” - Elisabeth Kubler-Ross

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  3. If I lost Carolyn, I would feel the same although I don’t know it like you. Be strong Coach. You have had a blessed relationship and deservingly so. Be grateful and smile so she knows you are ok – love ya and sure appreciate you !

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