Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Open Your Eyes

Yes, I'm still here. It's February 21, exactly 3 months before the 3 year anniversary of my daughter's death. And as I mentioned, I'm not dreading it this time. I'm not counting the days in anticipation of something horrible happening, or at least feeling horrible. I am thinking of her a bit more these days than a month or two ago, but I think it's largely because her younger sister will be 3 (an age N never reached) in a couple of months. She's talking so much, though her sister talked more at a younger age. I can't help but wonder what they'd be like together.

I had another one of those unexpected moments that completely blindsided me. I was watching the movie Contagion with my husband. I hadn't wanted to watch it, because I thought it would be too much like Outbreak. Well, it was worse. It's grim, gray, and I'm not entirely sure why I did watch it. But we almost had to stop. Towards the beginning, a woman dies (lots of people die, if you know what the movie is about, this is not a spoiler) and the doctor is trying to tell her husband. While watching the scene, I kept thinking, wow, they really don't know what to say. The police officer who told me said "Your daughter has died." No "I'm sorry, " or "Maybe you should sit down," nothing. I fell to the ground, dropping the plastic water pitcher I held in my hand. It broke and I was sitting in a giant puddle, though I don't remember getting wet.

In the movie, after telling the man his wife is gone, he starts asking if there's someone he can call. Watching that, I was slowly and then suddenly taken back. I was sitting in my house with people asking if there was someone they could call, and telling them over and over again that no, we didn't have any family in town. I burst into tears, and told my husband I didn't want to watch the movie. I told him that was what they said to me, that I was there again.

I squeezed my eyes shut, tears streaming, and saying something, I can't remember what. He was in the kitchen, but rushed over and said, "Open your eyes, open your eyes. Look at me, look at my big nose." His nose isn't all that big, but hearing that gave me something to focus on and I did open my eyes. He talked to me, was basically talking me back to the moment.

I thought it was strange that at first, flashbacks would take over and I'd close my eyes to escape them. Now, I have to open my eyes. I have to let the memories go. I've been thinking about it, and while grief is and always will be with me, the trauma is what I have been letting go. I can't remember every single thing about that day. Talking about it, reliving it over and over in my mind, and using various therapeutic techniques to face moments of it have helped me let it go. Maybe in some way, letting go of the trauma has helped with the grief. I don't know, I still grieve having lost my daughter, still think of all the things she'll never get to do, have memories of her (new ones still surface occasionally), but I don't have the horrible flashbacks of the day she died.

And for that, I'm glad. Opening my eyes keeps me here, and as always, it's a choice to do so.

3 comments:

  1. Contagion wasn't very good, was it? But certainly, you'd think a doctor would be able to do a better job of delivering the news of a death than a police officer, although it must never be an easy task for anyone.

    I am sure that the trauma of the events surrounding your death WAS holding back your grief process. Although the grief will always be with you in one form or another, I am very happy to hear that the trauma may be something you will finally leave (mostly) behind.

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  2. I don't think I realized until recently that the two could be separated. The therapist I saw often talked about "complicated grief"--grief complicated by the trauma of the way she died (a sudden accident) and the events of that day. So I think I always thought of it as all one thing. Horribly enough, in seeing my friend go through it, I've realized that the two are separate and must both be dealt with as such.

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  3. Walking in your steps almost one year behind you, this gives me hope that maybe at least the trauma might one day lessen in its intensity. I feel that i can live with the grief, as it is driven by my love and the regret of not seeing him grow up. I once came across an article on post traumatic stress disorder and i realised that i ticked every single box, and i do find it hard to live with my stress levels constantly up, being on guard non- stop, always afraid of potential dangers. At the stage that i am at now, i am desperate for these fears to ease, yet so far i cannot imagine that they ever will. So thanks for giving me hope, that very maybe one day, i too will have to live with only(?) the grief

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