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Catherine Siebel's avatar

I am going through a difficult "season" (Dear God, I hope it's a season) parenting my 13-yo son. Everything feels contentious, though none of it needs to be so. This past Saturday morning we actually managed to cook alongside one another, agree on the music, and end up with a mostly clean kitchen - and I really can't say how grateful I was for that singular, peaceful hour. With that in mind, my focus for the season is to create as many of those moments as possible for us - even if it's just a few minutes per day.

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Jim Bono's avatar

Thanks for this reflection. The paragraph about your mom and dad's health prompted me to write. My wife of 44 years died in February of 2022 from Covid despite vaccination and boosters. I had retired early from a university to become her caregiver. She had multiple health problems and toward the end she could not walk. So I did all her body care and lifted her out of bed so she could sit and we could do things together (like read or color mandalas). Getting through this season is a continued part of my grief and resurrection journey. I didn't know that grief would have so many parts to it (though I sort of knew it would forever 'mark' a person). There was the grief of her dying, the grief of being alone, the grief of sorting 40+years of stuff. On this last part, I gave away her paintbrushes last night to a friend who is a local artist. I gave away a lot of her teaching supplies to a place that helps teachers in underfunded school districts. I asked memorial gifts to go to a school in Uganda where amazing work is done. That all can feel like a lot of virtue signaling. But at a deeper, better level it continues her memory by putting 'bits' of her back out into the universe. Her brushes will still make art. Her violin will still make music. Her sweaters will still warm women who would not have been warm otherwise. And so I sit with all this. I sit alone (but not really alone). Pema Chodron's book "When Things Fall Apart" has been especially helpful - sitting in the quiet in front of my Christmas tree for the second "by-my-self" holiday is hard, but I don't "bleed" quite so much now as I used to. The latest phase of grief is exploring how I want to resurrect into the world around me - what presence and to what things/people/activities do I want to expose myself? I got rid of my landline phone (political calls). I pretty much quit television. I don't do things I don't want to (esp. at church where I got over-used). I do help set up refugee apartments, tho I never meet the families. It is an anonymous act to help people who have had nothing and have suffered far more than me. My hope, is that I will learn to let the unfolding of my new and different life happen naturally - without being forced - which (on my best days) I can almost let happen.

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