Monday, December 27, 2021

Love, Loss & Lullabies

I blame it on love. 

If it weren’t for love, I’m imagining that the sad times wouldn’t be so sad and the happy times wouldn’t be so, well, so happy. But they are and I blame it on love. 

It’s been a crazy year for everyone, all around the world. My little corner has been no exception. 

My mother died earlier this year. She was 90 years old and old people die. I get that. I struggle with the knowledge that she was not only ready to die, she wanted to die. Her cause of death was not wanting to live anymore, and I find that difficult to understand. Maybe she just got tired.

I think of my mother to have been somewhat like a phoenix, rising from the ashes time and again. She had a difficult childhood, but she rose above all of that and made a life for herself. She loved and buried two husbands. She raised four children and loved us all and then loved three stepchildren, too. She struggled with depression but loved herself enough to keep putting one foot in front of the other when times were tough. 

I was her first born and I know that she loved me even before I was born. She loved me when she ironed the shoelaces on my baby shoes, and she continued to love me all through my life. I think that she probably still loves me. I still love her. 

My mother didn’t always know what love looked like and she didn’t always get it right. I blame that on her childhood. She tried, though, and she kept trying and she kept loving. That counts…a lot. 

Loving can be painful. The shards can rip through your heart. The cuts are deep. The scars are messy.

Inevitably, loving means losing. Loss happens in lots of ways, but when the one you love is gone, you grieve. You grieve for what was. You grieve for what wasn’t. You grieve for what could have been. 

When my dad died, I remember thinking that it never really hurt less it just hurt less often. Then one day, it did hurt less. Sometimes that takes weeks. Sometimes it takes months. Sometimes it takes years. 

Moving through grief is never easy, but sometimes you get to sing lullabies. 

Four months after my mother’s death, a little man came into my life. Weighing in at 9 lbs. 6 oz., Thomas John, my new baby grandson, arrived on a summer’s eve. 

Life would never be the same. 

Thomas’ early months were a whirlwind of medical appointments. I was the chauffeur and health advocate. When we weren’t on our way to an appointment, my grandson and I got to spend a lot of time getting to know each other. 

From the early days of walking, bouncing and singing lullabies to more recent times when I have quite literally walked for miles and miles pushing his stroller, chatting up a storm with and singing more lullabies to this amazing little creature, the lullabies and the love have slowly tempered the loss. 

I still grieve the loss of my mother. I still miss her. I still sometimes cry when I think of her. 

Things with Thomas have settled down. He amazes us daily and we celebrate the milestones – first Christmas, first word (Mama), first bow tie, first solid food. 

On one of our recent morning walks, I took along a small lap quilt that my mother had made for me many years ago. It was a cold morning and I wanted something to throw over the stroller when Thomas fell asleep. 

As I walked along looking at the quilt, I thought about my mom. I thought about the fact that a quilt that she had made was now protecting the great grandson that she had never met. I didn’t know whether to smile or to cry, so I did both. 

I have someone new in my life to love and to whom I can sing lullabies. Sometimes it helps with the loss and sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes, life is just complicated. 

I blame it on love.


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