Rainy Day Blues Triptych (M.A. Reilly, 2009) |
Stand still. The trees ahead and bushes beside youAre not lost. Wherever you are is called Here,And you must treat it as a powerful stranger,Must ask permission to know it and be known...- David Wagoner, Lost
I.
I am reading a blog post the other day and the writer mentions the Northern Lights. I think of Rob immediately and sadness overcomes me. He will never hear the Northern Lights. Most people speak about the colors of the lights--the sight, but my husband was adamant. He wanted to hear them.
"Hear them?" I asked.
"Yep," said Rob. "They crackle, pop, hiss. It's like a radio station you almost have tuned, but not quite. Lots of static."
"What causes the sounds?"
I listened, somewhat, as he launched into a lengthy explanation about charged particles and solar wind. And now I wished I had listened better.13 months after his death, the list of things my husband will not do is longer than the time at hand. He will not witness his only son graduate high school in a few weeks, nor send him off to college. These are things he will never know. I thought we would do most of the bucket list we informally compiled across the decades. I thought at the very least we would get to retire together and take that trip across the country we so often spoke about. It never occurred to me that Rob would die so quickly, so young.
Sometimes loss feels overwhelming and I want to slip the knot that tightens around my throat each time I think of the things that my sweet husband will never know.
II.
I have been lost the last year. The threads and narrative of my life have unraveled quicker than I can count to ten, and my hands have not been able to mend what has been torn. A year of grief alters the landscape and being lost has become more familiar than not.
David Wagoner says we should treat here like a powerful stranger and I know he is correct. Wherever I am standing feels strange, foreign.
III.
Go ahead, I tell myself, be lost.
Say it out loud.
Yell to the sky, I am so lost!
IV.
And I think the hardest lesson grief teaches isn't simply, Stand still.
Rather it is: Let comfort find you.
V.
Friends, the very earth we call home is the comfort we most seek. And in the last year, the earth has found me, recasting the unfamiliar in cloth I have worn before.
I have learned to stand still and to trust that comfort will find me.
The birch trees have bent towards the ground and found me.
The wind has wrapped around me like a fine silk shawl.
The river has risen and taught me how to wade in, troubled water or not.
The cardinals have called to me near dusk. I have watched them wing from tree to tree and followed. An aerial map that has led me home.
How could I know in the depth of that grief, that it would be a baptism of sorts?
VI.
Wagoner tells us:
And it did.
VII.
Stand still, friend.
Wherever you are is called, here.
Let comfort find you.
I have been lost the last year. The threads and narrative of my life have unraveled quicker than I can count to ten, and my hands have not been able to mend what has been torn. A year of grief alters the landscape and being lost has become more familiar than not.
David Wagoner says we should treat here like a powerful stranger and I know he is correct. Wherever I am standing feels strange, foreign.
III.
Go ahead, I tell myself, be lost.
Say it out loud.
Yell to the sky, I am so lost!
IV.
And I think the hardest lesson grief teaches isn't simply, Stand still.
Rather it is: Let comfort find you.
V.
Friends, the very earth we call home is the comfort we most seek. And in the last year, the earth has found me, recasting the unfamiliar in cloth I have worn before.
I have learned to stand still and to trust that comfort will find me.
The birch trees have bent towards the ground and found me.
The wind has wrapped around me like a fine silk shawl.
The river has risen and taught me how to wade in, troubled water or not.
The cardinals have called to me near dusk. I have watched them wing from tree to tree and followed. An aerial map that has led me home.
How could I know in the depth of that grief, that it would be a baptism of sorts?
VI.
Wagoner tells us:
"Stand still. The forest knowsAnd I have.
Where you are. You must let it find you.”
And it did.
VII.
Stand still, friend.
Wherever you are is called, here.
Let comfort find you.