I've shared before that when Katie left home at 18, I found myself in a long spell of grief. It was completely unexpected. I'd been parenting for over 30 years, and I thought I was more than ready to lose that role of full-time parent. I started out excited about the time ahead. And then I was hit by the runaway car called grief which nearly debilitated me for two full years.
I didn't know what to do with myself! All those plans I'd made for the day when I would not be on call 24/7 mattered no longer. I lost my footing. It was totally unexpected and it took me by surprise.
Six weeks into losing John, I can tell you that I find myself in a similar place now.
I had thought of life without him, in a vague sort of way, the same way that I used to muse about what I'd do when I was no longer needed as a parent on the same scale that I'd been needed. I'd planned in my mind how I'd live life on my own, if those days ever came, a day when I was no longer a daughter, a mother, a wife. But I had no idea that this time around I was not losing one role, but many.
I am not only no longer married in the world's view, but I am also no longer a lover, a companion, a partner, a stay-at-home wife. I hadn't anticipated that losing John would mean I'd lose so much I'd used to mark my own identity. And if you want to know the truth, I didn't realize how this sort of loss also meant I lost so much of myself.
Gain the independence I'd always craved? I suppose I did. But I'm not ready for it! Not on this scale! Not when it means the foundations are kicked out to have to build anew...
Frankly, it's a lot to come to terms with.
It's not loneliness that eats at me most frequently. No indeed. It's grappling with the idea of who I am, what I am, at this point in my life. Not old (not by my standards) and not young (by any standard). Not married, but not single. Without a lover who am I getting dressed and made-up for each day? For whom do I wish to be attractive? Without a companion, what do I do with my day? Who am I to bounce ideas off of, or read sticky passages of posts to? To whom can I be an advisor since no one else is in the house with a creative sticking point? With whom will I discuss pivotal quotes and scriptures or revelations? And what about my role as a caregiver? Whose care do I tend to each day without my husband? He hardly needed my care each day, since he was capable and able to feed and clothe himself, but I enjoyed taking care of his needs, anticipating what he might want, making meals, cleaning and decorating our home so that it was comfortable and pretty and something he might be proud of. I struggle with the role of homemaker...Home is meant to be made for others, isn't it? Can I make 'home' for only myself? I mean beyond the need to eat and make a meal, or to do laundry...
Am I capable of self-care without becoming selfish? That was a question when John was alive and now it roars at me in the night. Am I wrong to admit I'm too tired for a grandchild to stay a night much less a weekend? Am I wrong to confess that my energy has hit -10 on the scale and I desperately need something more to drag it up to 0?
In the end, as I've been clearing spaces that were filled with John's things, I've realized that part of my issue has been not just the idea that I was erasing him, but that I was also clearing out things that represented my own lost roles. Grief piles on top of grief as I look at this month. Grief that my husband is gone, grief that certain dreams will never come true, grief that I am no longer who I was.
I'm having something of an identity crisis.
And yet the flip side to all of this is that I am finding myself mildly excited if I ever do stop to refuel myself. As though this is a new adventure, a time to discover who I am without someone else defining me so fully as marriage and parenting have done in the past.
Who exactly is this person staring back at me from the mirror? Is she interesting? Does she embrace life? Is she someone I'd like to know? Is her story going to be a good one?
I can't wait to find out...
P.S. The day this publishes will be our 32nd wedding anniversary. And what do you do on such a day when you are no longer married? Yes, I know I've kept saying we were together 34 years; we lived together for 2 years before we were legally married.










