Ronni
Well-known Member
- Location
- Nashville TN
**These are brutal words to read, filled with despair. I would apologize, but I have to get them said, spew them out, rid myself of them because they are poisoning me. I absolutely will NOT burden my kids with this rawness, they have way too much to carry already. The next support meeting is several days away. My family is on Facebook so I won’t post there and upset them. It’s early still, and also Thanksgiving Day, so there’s no way I will sully a friend’s day of fun and family with something so heavy.
But I have you all, and as wretched as these words are I know you wil, with kindness and grace, let me unburden myself here. I am sorry for the burden, but I also thank you for letting me set it down.
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10 days since I lost him. The grief and pain come in waves. Sometimes I know what gets it going. Sometimes I’m blindsided by it. It has a life of its own. It’s vicious and unrelenting and torturous.
It hits countless times a day and completely submerges me. When I finally claw my way above water again, I think “I can’t survive this.” I wonder how anyone does, how anyone can. I feel worn down to a speck, diminished by such profound anguish that I feel like a shadow, yet so heavy that I can barely move.
My life consists of moving from one wave of loss to the next, trying to survive each onslaught, and in between those waves I attempt normalcy. I console my remaining children, spend as much time with them as they and I want. I try and eat, and sleep, run a load of laundry, walk the dogs. All normal things when I know with utter certainty that I’ll never be normal again.
I live in a shadow world. A world of before, and now. My anguish is my reality now, while normal life feels fake and unreal, a brutal and savage reminder of before, when there wasn’t pain and agony and wretchedness.
This is hell. This, right here, what I’m living on a minute to minute basis, this is hell. It isn’t fire and brimstone after all, which would be a welcome relief. It’s a world and a life in which my son no longer exists.
There is no greater hell than that.
But I have you all, and as wretched as these words are I know you wil, with kindness and grace, let me unburden myself here. I am sorry for the burden, but I also thank you for letting me set it down.
———————————
10 days since I lost him. The grief and pain come in waves. Sometimes I know what gets it going. Sometimes I’m blindsided by it. It has a life of its own. It’s vicious and unrelenting and torturous.
It hits countless times a day and completely submerges me. When I finally claw my way above water again, I think “I can’t survive this.” I wonder how anyone does, how anyone can. I feel worn down to a speck, diminished by such profound anguish that I feel like a shadow, yet so heavy that I can barely move.
My life consists of moving from one wave of loss to the next, trying to survive each onslaught, and in between those waves I attempt normalcy. I console my remaining children, spend as much time with them as they and I want. I try and eat, and sleep, run a load of laundry, walk the dogs. All normal things when I know with utter certainty that I’ll never be normal again.
I live in a shadow world. A world of before, and now. My anguish is my reality now, while normal life feels fake and unreal, a brutal and savage reminder of before, when there wasn’t pain and agony and wretchedness.
This is hell. This, right here, what I’m living on a minute to minute basis, this is hell. It isn’t fire and brimstone after all, which would be a welcome relief. It’s a world and a life in which my son no longer exists.
There is no greater hell than that.