Michael Z
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern Wisconsin
If you need a break, rather than planting, just buy some plants when the time is right to make things a bit easier.
Ha ! you may live to regret saying that....Well if you ever can make it, know that our guest accommodations have your name on them![]()
Honey, you are grieving. Grieving is a process that can not be avoided. Your push-through reaction to the bumps in life's road is part of your problem right now because that only delays recovering from grief.In Nashville, the apple blossoms and day lilies, redbud and Crepe Myrtle, so many other trees and bushes and flowers, are evidence of Spring’s imminent arrival. This is the time of the year that I have always looked forward to, because it meant I could start planting.
My patio pots would be first. Lantana and daisies, lambs ear and asparagus fern, sweet potato vine and coleus are my go-to’s. I’d plant my favorite herbs in my herb pots by the kitchen door, till and prep the vegetable garden to receive whatever vegetables we decided on for this year, hang huge Boston germs around the patio area.
……..and I want none of it.![]()
I’m still so sad. This is so hard.
But I have always been a firm believer in the “fake it till you make it” approach, though that saying has become so hackneyed that it’s lost all meaning. I guess I just mean that I’ve tried to never be a “wallower.” I work hard to not give in to that impetus to just fold when the going gets rough. To push on through in spite of everything.
I’ve grieved for 4 months. I’m still grieving and I guess I always will. But life keeps moving forward and I have a husband and kids and grandkids who are more than worth living life for.
So help me will you? Help me find the motivation to keep going, to plant this spring, to do what ai can to enjoy the sun and flowers, to make the most of whatever time I have left. It’s the least I can do for my family.
Emotional tears make you feel more vulnerable, which could improve your relationships. Crying often connects people, whether it’s out of grief, love, passion, or another strong emotion. Crying may cause others to be empathetic and compassionate toward you, softening anger or unpleasant emotion that caused the tears to flow in the first place. Why We Cry