Monday, May 30, 2022

Memorial Day for Every Kind of War

 Memorial Day is an odd combination of memorial services for fallen soldier/military, and a day off to spend with family and friends.  It's a tough day for me, not because of any direct connection to a fallen soldier (although my children's grandfather is buried at Arlington, having been killed in action in Korea when their dad was an infant) but because of my hometown's Memorial Day celebration.

My son really wanted to be in the military.  Not only in honor of his grandfather, but in honor of his favorite aunt who proudly served in the Army.  He was never able to take the final step to enlisting as his illness always got in the way of judgment and opportunity.

We honor our service members here in town.  We celebrate their service and their sacrifice.  It's a community wide event.  My kids and I always participated in the local events.  And so of course on this day I can only think about my son in the high school marching band, marching in the parade, or riding his scooter to the park for the city-wide fireworks show, or watching the Jazz Band from the high school and telling me how he was aiming to play bass in the band.  Like the military, Jazz Band never happened due to his challenges.

Today, many years later, there is still a parade with the high school marching band, still a fireworks show where the kids show up with their friends and have a good time, still the Jazz Band playing to the crowds.  

As much as I enjoy the celebrations, it is hard to not be sad.  He was there.  Now he's not.  I am as alone and grieving for this loss as much as any parent whose child was lost in a battle far away from the hometown.

As I've written before, a Gold Star Mother (one who lost her child in war) is honored and revered.  But a mother who simply lost her child to another type of battle is ignored.  I am resigned to that, on every day except Memorial Day when I see his smile and golden hair either marching down the main street playing  the marching band version of the french horn, or riding his scooter around the park while the festivities are going on.  Today, on Memorial Day, I remember that I lost my son to a different kind of war -- a war of illness, of drugs, of evil nurses who prey upon the vulnerable.

His death as a result of a different war does not diminish my respect and honor for all the servicemembers who sacrificed.  Any loss of a child is the deepest kind of loss.  Whether by war, or gunfire, or evil nurses, or drugs, or stupid accident, it is the same outcome:  days and nights of mourning, mostly in silent in a world that would rather not remember the pain of losing a child.  

I'm grateful for Memorial Day, even with the pain, as it is a reason to publicly remember my son.  As the military heroes are remembered, so too are our children we have lost from other, more local wars.  Today, while at the park listening to the Jazz Band, I see him sitting beside me, sharing his aspirations, always wanting to move forward to new goals.  He lost his life in the battle of life.  Not while wearing a uniform, and so not put up on a memorial pedestal, but while trying to find his way despite so many obstacles.  Regardless, like the soldiers in battle somewhere far away, he was still my son, his battles cost him his life, but still his life mattered.  I will remember and honor that spark, that spirit, that joy that he brought to me and to so many others, for my entire life.

I close this post with his favorite parting phrase: Peace Out.  


Saturday, November 14, 2020

Bookends

Time it was, and what a time it was, it was
A time of innocence
A time of confidences
Long ago, it must be
I have a photograph
Preserve your memories
They're all that's left you
   - Simon and Garfunkle

It was November 14.  So long ago.  My best friend Heidi and I were sophomores.  We had attended a fancy reception for all the pre-law students.  Just awful.  We returned to the dorms fairly disgusted with the rich college kids we were surrounded by.   We came back asking ourselves, what were we doing with those people.  We knew in 30 years they would be no different than they were tonight.  Effetes.  Privileged.  Smug.  We didn't want to fall victim to that.

Feeling at odds with our chosen college/career path, and out of sorts with the world, we changed out of our formal wear and into jeans.  The night was clear and comfortable, and Heidi and I decided to go for a walk.  

We came downstairs to the dorm reception area, and there he was.  Long hair, oversized tape recorder slung over his shoulder,  mic in one hand, silly grin.  "Good evening, ladies, the weaker sex,  most of whom are women..." he said in his best DJ voice.  It trailed off after that because we were SO upset at the levity in contrast to the pomposity we had just experienced.  Heidi shoved the mic back into him, saying, "what do you mean, women are weak!!" and we walked out, intending to walk under the stars in the clear night air and calm ourselves.

Shortly into the walk, just a few dozen yards from our dorm, she decided she wanted to go on alone.  I honored that.

And that changed my life.

I returned to the dorm, having really no place else to go, and "he" was still there.  I was fascinated.  My dad was a musician and growing up I had been in radio stations, live music venues, recording sessions and the like, so a guy with a tape recorder was not really so out of place.

We bonded instantly. I've often tried to understand why, but it defies logic. We were different in so many ways, and yet, oddly, had much in common.  Both orphans.  Wickedly smart.  Terrific sense of humor.  Later, we would talk about having been together in a previous life.  I came to believe it.  

We got married almost five years later.  Until the end, we celebrated two anniversaries -- November 14,  and then our wedding day on April 5.

It was a tumultuous life, full of highs and lows, fabulous great experiences and terrible nightmares, music and drama and the law, but it was a life I could not have had with anyone else.  Despite all the good and bad, and the joy and anguish, the bond that was instantly ours on November 14 never went away.

And so, when his spirit left this plane many years later on July 23, I was devastated.  Despite difficulties and depressions, Steven through it all was my rock, my best friend, my biggest fan and greatest cheerleader.  Even in our darkest days, he would support me in my work and cheer me on.  When I needed advice, he always gave it.  I knew whatever I needed was just a phone call away.  And I like to believe I was the same to him.

The end came as a shock.  It was a sudden illness that he ignored and by the time he realized the gravity, and reached out for help, it was too late to save him.  

I recall being in the hospital surrounded by his family, being offered comfort, and also being offered pharmaceuticals because I was so distraught.  But what I remember most was the sense of being utterly alone. Such a big part of my life and my identity was now gone.

I soldiered on, if for no other reason that to comfort our children, but they found no comfort and they suffered greatly with the loss.

Only now, years later, can I think back on my life with Steven, and have gratitude for all it was.  And understand that the pain was part of  our growth and that the good part needed the bad part to appreciate all we were and all we had.  Now, for me, there is no "bad" or "good" -- it simply was our life and I wish it had not stopped so abruptly.  There's so much I would love to share with him now, including the memory of the anniversary of the night we met.

I have a large framed photograph of Steven and me that recently came out of hiding.  It was taken when we had been together less than a year.  He was working at the Hollywood Bowl and I was standing next to him at the mix board obviously discussing something of great importance.  An  unknown photographer snapped our picture from a distance.  The candid shot so perfectly captured us at that moment in time, young and intent and earnest.  Our daughter insisted it be hung on the wall in our home, a place I bought last year, so it is a place Steven was never in.  At first I was uncomfortable having it there, but it has come to be a bit of a comfort to me.  Looking at it now brings a slight smile, as it reminds me of the life that was, and of the beginning, and of the end, of our time together.  

And now, tonight, the anniversary of the night we met, when the night air is as comfortably cool and invigorating as it was all those years ago, I look at the photo with a wistful thought and just a dash of melancholy.  I celebrate who we were, the bad days and good, the fun and not so fun, and our building a life and then our trying to redefine it when what we built fell apart.  Tonight, I celebrate that beginning, and I celebrate the "us" that was.

Bookends.  November 14 to July 23.  I have a photograph.  And memories.

Wish you were here.


copyright 2020

Grief and the Death of Normal

When I first started this blog, I only considered the loss surrounding a child.  Then I added spouse,  and then I added best friend.  Now....in what the world has become, I add the loss of life as we knew it.  The loss of normal.

For those of us who have suffered loss, we know what it means to lose something.  But it means a person, someone who has been a major part of our life.

Now, we have lost our normal way of life. 

Those who have not gone through the grief journey do not recognize the grief path. But with the pandemic, and the FEAR that we now all live with, comes the familiar stages:  we ignore the gravity of the situation (let's bake bread!  Let's go walking!  Let's do jigsaw puzzles!).  Then there is the reality (OMG, I can't go to work, I''m not getting paid, I can't celebrate a birthday/wedding/annivesary).  Then there is the reality that things are not as they were.

Welcome, world, to the grief that we survivors have been living with.

Grief.  It sucks.


First published 4/20/2020

Monday, February 3, 2020

The Life and Death Decider

I have usually encountered death in a sudden, unexpected way.  (The exceptions are my grandmothers, who lived into their 80s -- which now seems somehow a bit young but for their generation was old. )

Now, I am confronted with a new face of mortality.  According to the doctors, I am faced with the unfathomable choice of deciding when my friend of almost 20 years will die.

She was taken to the hospital a week ago.  She has been in and out of a coma since then.  She is not able to communicate her thinking or her wishes as to medical care or anything else.

10 years ago she appointed me her power of attorney.  She has no other family.  Her only child is severely autistic and not able to decide on anything more than what he wants for his birthday dinner.  And so it goes that when she cannot communicate her wishes, the doctors look for someone who will make her decisions for her. So, that means...…..

I'm the decider.

As much as this is a burden no one should carry, I'm comforted in knowing that at least this choice is in the hands of a person who is her friend and who cares about her.  Otherwise, it would be the courts appointing a professional conservator who no doubt would decide that extra medical interventions only "prolong the inevitable" and would give the order to terminate  all medical support.  In other words, pull the plug.  I'm just not willing to do it right now, because she still has function and will and spirit.

My friend is fighting to stay in this plane of existence. She lives for her son and is trying to return to him.  I know that.  I have pledged to give her the support and medical care to enable her to make a comeback.

If she loses the fight, then I am comforted with the knowledge that I did not hasten the end.

She has brain function.  She responds to my voice by moving towards me, opening her eyes, struggling to speak despite the ventilation tube (needed because her oxygen levels were too low).  She wiggled her toes when the doctor asked her to. She comes around when I mention her son.  She responds to pain stimuli.  She tries hard to open her eyes and to talk, despite the tube.

I have had the doctors say, "but what about the quality of life?  She likely will never be the same."  That may very well be true.  But if she survives this medical downturn, and maintains some conscious connection to this plane, then she will still be here and somehow able to connect with her son.  He has been her reason for living for far too long, and so long as she shows signs of cognition and function,  I will not be the one to willfully terminate that connection.

But the pressure to do so is enormous.  I do not fault the doctors.  They only see the outward suffering.  They cannot understand as I do that all she wants is to go home and be with her son.

Perhaps that is why I fight for her.  To be that connected with one's child -- as I was (and am) to my son (and daughter) -- is beyond rational explanation.  I cannot and will not be the force to interfere with that.

My own son was killed by those who wanted to break the bonds between us in order to advance their own selfish purposes. And they were nurses!!!!!  Their souls (I hope and pray) will suffer for such depravity. But their evildoing helped me see that I cannot be the one who decides to sever the earthly ties between a parent a child.

I will continue to advocate for my friend.  She must be the one to rally and come back to consciousness, or to give into the light and transition to a new existence.

Her medical condition is quite serious.  I am not naïve enough to believe she will simply get better and go home.  She may never be who she was.  But I will give her the opportunity to stay with us.

Should she now pass on, I will grieve our friendship, and yet be comforted in knowing I did all I could to give her the opportunity to stay in this life.

I have prayed about this situation.  Does that seem odd to you?  For one who has lost as much as I have, to do something as impractical as "pray?"

Over the past few years, I have returned to prayer.  Don't laugh or scoff.  It is the act of acknowledging that one needs help -- or is asking for help for another in need.  It recognizes that we are not the center of the universe, and that there are forces beyond our full comprehension or control.

And so to whom does one pray?  To the universe?  To God?  To Jesus?  To the candle on my shelf?  Here is where my prayers go:   To the Higher Power by whatever name we choose to give her/him/it.  I choose to call this Higher Power by the simple name "God."  Somebody bigger than you or I.

My prayer -- my request for help -- is that Mary answers the question "leave" or "stay" by deciding to stay (contrast to my BFF Heidi who left so quickly and before I even knew she was so ill) and that I will hear the answer even if she cannot say it or act on it.

Whether she survives or passes, I will be comforted by knowing that she trusted her health decisions to me.  I pray I continue to make the choices that are best for her.

copyright 2020


Sunday, February 10, 2019

Clutter/Connection

I've been trying to declutter my home in anticipation of moving to a new place.  It's not easy or pretty to wade through the piles of stuff and things that accumulate over a 20  year period.  All of what I must go through, box by box, reflects a life that in so many ways no longer exists for me.  It's a veritable archaeological dig.  

Most folks, faced with the task of decluttering, can go through the photos, school papers, drawings, yearbooks, boy and girl scout uniforms and pins and sashes, and simply remember with a smile what happened years ago.  And so often found treasures can be shared with those who helped make the treasure.  "Remember when you made this for me?"   "Didn't we love to take the kids to the book store on Saturday where they bought all these books and comic books?"  

But sometimes life just smacks us upside the head and rearranges all plans and paths.  You can go through the clutter and find that there is no one to share  the memories with.  You sit there, and cry, and no one is around.  All you can do is remember, and hold on to whatever object transports you back to a time in your life "before" it was all taken from you.

When your child or spouse or best friend is taken from you, you cling to anything that was ever part of them.  It's how we fool ourselves into staying one step ahead of the pain of loss.  We can time travel back to a time when that person was here and tragedy had not wiped out that part of our life.

In trying to unclutter, I am forced to relive big pieces of my life gone forever.  There is no continuation of what my son was, or what he did, or what he could have done.  My son's life ended just short of his 21st birthday.  It is not possible to look at his picture proudly holding the French horn, or hanging out with his friends at music camp, or dressed in his Boy Scout uniform receiving his Arrow of Light award, or his photos with his sister and Santa, without jumping ahead to the dark days that awaited him and his ultimate tragic death.

In the process of uncluttering, I find myself refusing to toss out any piece of paper or photo or object that has any connection with him, no matter how tangential.  I foolishly soothe myself with the notion that if I can't hold on to him, I can at least hold on to something that was connected with him.

Several years have passed since that unspeakably awful day in June when "I heard the news today" that my son had died.  My life since that day has been divided into things that existed "before" and things that came into existence "after."  It is a silent calculation I do not share with anyone because it seems so macabre, and indeed it is.  But this is how I have come to define my life.    "When did I last paint the house/replace the mattress/travel to San Francisco/buy these shoes?"  "When did I last visit this place/person?"   "When did I stop going to movies/listening to music?"   Always, the answer is "before" or "after" that horrific day in June.

As I force myself to go through boxes of paperwork, school work, photos, cards, mementos, and leftovers from "when he was still here" I force myself to come to grip with reality.  He is not the  photo. He is not the poem he wrote to the great love of his life, Denise.  He is not the scrapbook of his piano recitals.  He is not the hospital records. He is not his Ramones Tshirts or his jeans. Those are just tags, snapshots, Instagram photos posted in my mind.  

My son is part of my cellular structure.  Even if all those tangible objects vanished, he would still be part of me.  Knowing that makes it a bit easier to cull through the chaff and keep only the wheat of these objects stuffed into boxes in my garage.  So, in my effort to declutter in anticipation of a move out of the home we shared, I will keep what brings me joy in remembering when he was in this plane and physically in my life.  My baby boy, my life's joy.  Your sister and I miss you every day.  And we miss you with or without the physical reminders.

But still I will hold on to the physical reminders.  Your dinosaur baby blanket, ironically made for you by my best friend Heidi, who I also lost too soon.  Your notes and cards.  The Brio train set.  Favorite books. Herds of plastic dinosaurs.  Books and comic books.  Photos.  The sand painting from the Hopi on your trip to Arizona with your archeology class.  The leather bracelet with your drawings on it that you made for me in 6th grade.   Somewhere, somehow, all of those items and more still carry part of your spirit and give me a bit of peace.

Not clutter.  Connection.   It's good to have more than feathers, and dreams.  These objects may be just clutter and junk to the Marie Kondos of the world, but to me they are part of you.  They remind me that a bit of your spirit remains with me.  And so I find a bit of joy...sad joy....but still joy in these physical reminders of you.

Copyright 2019

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Gratitude on Mother's Day

It's Mother's Day.  A difficult day for everyone -- moms, kids, and Those Who Should Do Something for a Particular Mom -- because of the over the top social pressure to "honor mom" or someone who "is like a mom" or is your significant other's mom, or the mom of a mom -- you get the point.  Expectations aren't just big on this day, but enormous.  Thus florists, chocolate purveyors (including those who sell dipped strawberries), garden centers and Hallmark win the day.

You would think that Mother's Day for someone who has lost a child would be unbearable.  Or that those whose mom died recently would just rather not acknowledge the day. Ignore the day, it will go away, and so will the pain.

But life is like the white pearl contrasted on the black velvet.  We only see the pearl's true beauty due to the contrast.  And so it is that without death, we cannot fully see the beauty that is life.

When we lose someone that a great friend of mine referred to as a "core person" -- be it child, spouse, parent, sibling or friend -- our life just isn't the same.  It will never be the same.  Impossible.  The fabric of our being and soul has been ripped.  We can try our best to repair it, but you can always see the stitching, and maybe the rip was too big to ever be fully repaired.

When our soul has been ripped by a grievous loss, we can chose to:  1) ignore the loss; 2) wallow in the loss; 3) be vanquished by the loss or 4) find a way to move forward and embrace the loss as part of a different life.

I used to criticize those who just couldn't move on from someone's death.  What's wrong with them that they can't be strong enough or self reliant enough to get back to their life?

I no longer judge.  We  take the path that fits us at that moment.  Each grief journey is our own and no one can tell us how far to go, where to go or how to get there.  We can see guideposts, or mile markers, offered by those who care about us, but how we make our grief journey is strictly up to each of us.  No one, even if your loss has been of the same core category, can fully know how another's soul has been damaged by the loss.  We can only be company on the journey, but the one with the loss must make their own way.

Gratitude defines me now.  I am beyond grateful that I am in category 4 -- I found a way to move forward and embrace my  multiple losses as part of  what is now my different life.  But don't misunderstand -- I remain sad, and feel deep grief, and so many times feel utterly alone and abandoned by the universe.  But there is something, which others have called resilience, that has allowed me to experience that aloneness and embrace it but concurrently embrace joy and peace and contentment.  It is indeed a new life for me, and I have come to realize it is a good life.

Gratitude overwhelms me -- for the life and experiences and most of all the love and joy I had at various times over so many years with my son, my husband and my best friend.  It is gratitude that saved my spirit and continues to do so.

I first learned the power of gratitude when I attended various 12 step meetings -- open AA , Al-Anon, and even Cocaine Anonymous.  To experience people struggling with the Siren call of addiction, and those crushed by their loved one's addiction, is to know that life inevitably is unfair and uneven.  But I saw -- indeed, I felt -- not just pain and struggle, but hope and happiness and redemption, all of which was rooted in gratitude.

Every day -- every single day -- I find something to be grateful for.  Did I  find a penny in an unexpected fold of my briefbag?  Did I have a butterfly land at my feet?  Was there a feather on my seat when I opened the car door?  [All of which happened to me in the week leading up to Mother's Day.]  Or bigger -- grateful for the day, for my daughter, for those who have come to be my new BFFs, for my family, for success in my business despite the relentless kicks in the butt that life kept giving me during those very dark years.  I have embraced the concept that only gratitude puts everything in perspective, and transforms what might otherwise be a shitshow into a well lived life.

And today, Mother's Day, I have more to be grateful for.  First, I was able to become a mother.  So many have not, or chose not to only to later realize they should have.  Both of my children were and are special beings who were placed in my care by whatever force or power or being that exists, and who received more love and nurturing than I ever thought I was capable of.   Without my children, and the love and challenges each of them brought, I would not have been able to expand my heart and my spirit and be who I am now.

Today I have another point of gratitude.   I have stayed away from the blog for a long time, between computer issues, press (crush?) of work, and a vague sense of not having anything more to say.  But my sister in law -- truly a "core person" in my life [and the one who was my son's favorite] returned to the blog and realized it had been taken down.  Had she not done that, and more importantly reached out to me to find out why, I would not have realized the domain had expired and all my postings would have been lost forever.   I averted yet another loss.  She gets special thanks for alerting me to this.

Grateful  -- for causing me to return, and to realize that this blog, and writing, is important to this revised new life, as a way to repair the tears in the fabric of my soul from the death of those so vital to me.  Grateful that I am reminded that my new life is different, but not separate from the me who used to be.  Grateful for those who continue to join me in my journey.

copyright 2018

Saturday, July 15, 2017

Ball and Chain

If you haven't had to deal with the death of a family member, you probably haven't had to consider death certificates.  In addition to personal information and next of kin, it states the primary "cause of death" as well as contributing factors.  So, for example, death could be due to atherosclerosis; sepsis or blunt force trauma.  "Contributing" factors could be  pneumonia, diabetes, etc.

That's the clinical stuff.  The County Coroner is supposed to classify the death.  However, to the family, to the survivors, your loved one is dead.  No longer here.  Does it matter how it happened?

Well, as a matter of fact, it does.  To some, it matters a great deal.

Take, for example, suicide.  No one ever wants to say his or her loved one committed suicide.  It was an accident!!!  Or, it was part of a nefarious plot (look up Vince Foster (of the Clinton entourage) for a great conspiracy theory).

The idea that someone you love would willingly take their life is for most folks too much to bear.

And so it is with addiction.  The idea that someone took drugs and died of an overdose is also too much to bear.

If you read my earlier post on "The Hierarchy of Death" you know that there are "acceptable" causes of death and not-so-acceptable causes.   We want our loved one to be part of the "better" reasons that she/he died.  It places us higher on the "worthy of sympathy" scale.  Military or cancer deaths are just about at the top of preferred deaths; drug overdoses and suicide are in a race for the bottom.

Recently, a friend of mine received word that a family member had been found dead in bed.  This person had a history of drug use, and of being in and out of jails and rehab.

When a known addict is found dead in bed, the immediate thought is "overdose."  And so for my friend that's what she and everyone else thought.  My heart was heavy, knowing the pain she was suffering as she had tried so often to "rescue" him from his addiction, to somehow free him from the demon that served as his ball and chain.

So imagine my reaction when my friend texted me the next day to say that "thank goodness" it appears her family member may have died from a "seizure" not an "overdose."  She thought that death by seizure would be "much easier to take."

I had to think about that for a while.  How is death ever "easier to take"???

But of course.  We do not want our loved one to have died of an overdose.  Oh, the shame!  If they died from an overdose, clearly it was our fault. We didn't do "enough" to keep them from the drugs. We are somehow to blame for their addiction and their death makes us look bad!  We could have prevented the overdose!

Here's the cold truth. You cannot prevent it.

Repeat:  You. Cannot. Prevent. It.

You might postpone it, and save someone from an overdose today.  But only if the addict WANTS to change their path will the path be changed.  You cannot change their path.  That is their journey alone.  [I make exception for the scum of the earth that supply drugs to known addicts and encourage their use or make money off their use.  They are death merchants and should be held accountable.]

As family members, we always believe we can change them.  But we can't.  Worse, we -- the family and friends -  are judged by others if our loved one dies from suicide or addiction.  It is always seen as somehow our fault.  We "let them" go astray or failed to protect them.

I will spend the rest of my life spreading this truth:  That no one can free another of whatever ball and chain binds them.  We can only accept them and love them and make them know we are ready to support their efforts when they decide to admit to and manage their addiction.

Right now, there is a plague of overdoses on opioid medication (particularly Fentanyl).  I'm glad that the tragedy is being given a public forum by elected officials as well as family members (like the mom who posted photos of her son on life support after he took Fentanyl, shortly before they removed life support and he died.)   Giving a face to addiction, and removing the shame, will benefit all those who must confront another's addiction.

Also, I am glad to know that Narcan (which can reverse the effects of opioid overdose) is being supplied to first responders who can prevent deaths.  It's true, if you catch an overdose in time, Narcan can save lives. First responders should have had this drug in their kits a long time ago.

But the story not being told is what happens after someone is revived.  Do they change?

The sad truth is, many do not.  Addiction is as part of their genetic make up as the color of their eyes, or their preference for chocolate vs. lemon.  Only if the addict makes the decision to confront his or her addiction is there any hope of avoiding the inevitable outcome of "jails, institutions or death" [go to an AA or NA meeting and eventually you will hear this truth.]  That's why the first step of any 12 Step program is to "admit we are powerless over alcohol/drugs."  Only when the addict admits the problem can the addict ever hope to try to deal with the problem.

We cannot get them to admit it.  Only they can do that.  We are indeed powerless over their addiction.
So how does this reality fit in to the Hierarchy of Death that I wrote about in a prior blog? And about my friend's loss of her family member?

No one wants to admit their family member died of an overdose.  It sullies their memory.  They were a "drug addict" and that makes us look bad too.  Had we just sat down and had more dinners with them as kids.  Or had they just gotten involved in sports.  Or gotten to the right therapist.  Or if the parents had not gotten divorced.  Or if only had they gone to church regularly. Or lived in a better neighborhood.  Or if we had just kept them productive at a job or hobbies.  The list of "if only we'd done....." goes on to infinity.

All bullshit.

All that matters is that they have the addiction genes, the genes were triggered, and after that it's their journey.

"Well it's been 10 years and a thousand fears, and look at the mess I'm in.
A broken car and a broken nose, an empty bottle of gin.
Well I search and I pray,
In my broken down Chevrolet,
And I'm singing to myself, there's got to be another way.

Take away, take away,
Take away this ball and chain,
For I'm lonely and I'm tired, and I can't take any more pain.
Take away, take away,
Never to return again,
Take away, take away, take away...."

[Social Distortion, "Ball and Chain"]

So my friend, like so many others, cannot confront the reality that her family member's demon of addiction did not go away.  She needs to believe he died of something else, anything else, other than addiction. Yes, maybe he did die of a seizure.  Or a heart attack.  But years of mistreating one's body with drugs or alcohol will lead to seizures and heart attacks.  Yet how much easier it is to say to the world, "so sad, he was doing better, and he suffered a seizure."  Far better than to say the dreaded word "overdose."

And far better to not  think that we -- and the addict -- failed.

Many folks don't know that Bill W., one of the two co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, who lived many years sober, asked for whiskey on his deathbed.  Pardon the pun, but that is a sobering thought.

For my friend, I hope she comes to peace with whatever the coroner finally states as a cause of death. The loss of her loved one is no less tragic or no less worthy of sympathy and support whether it was a seizure, or a heart attack, or an overdose.

Survivors of loss feel the same pain and gaping hole in our psyches regardless of the cause of death. Those who have lost still need love and support -- and no judgment -- from the rest of us.

Give love and give hugs and most of all, don't judge the cause of death.  It's still death.  And someone still grieves.  Let's not give them more to grieve.


copyright 2017