Counting Down to the Second Anniversary of Grief
And so begins the countdown to the two-year anniversary of my life mate's death.
I don't know why the second anniversary of his death has me so spooked. I can't imagine there are many surprises left for me when it comes to grief, though everything about grief up to this point has shocked me. I was shocked that I even felt grief — he'd been sick for so long, and I'd been looking forward to an ending for his pain that it never occurred to me that I would feel more than relief at his death. I was shocked by the severity of my grief and its global nature, affecting as it does, body, mind, emotions, equilibrium. I was shocked by the recurring violent upsurges of grief that made it seem as if he'd left the earth that very moment instead of months previously. I was shocked by how long grief takes. And mostly I've been shocked and continue to be shocked by how very gone he is.
His goneness still affects me, still bewilders me. We spent most of our time together for thirty-four years, and now he's . . . gone. He's not just gone from my life, he's gone from the earth. If he were still here, maybe living with a new love, I'd miss him, and probably would be furious at him for what he put me through, but I could understand that. What I can't understand is his total goneness. There is a void where he once was, a blankness that my mind cannot comprehend.
Still, this noncomprehension is something I am getting used to. The rough edges of the void are smoothing out, and I don't always bang my mental shins on that enormous mindblock, though I do occasionally get a freefalling-elevator feeling when the thought hits me . . . again . . . that he is dead.
The countdown to the first anniversary of his death was very painful. It was as if I were reliving the last weeks of his life, feeling everything that I couldn't let myself feel when I lived through it. This countdown to the second anniversary is mild compared to that, so why am I dreading the anniversary itself? I don't know, unless I'm afraid grief still has more surprises. Or maybe I'm afraid that it holds no more surprises, and for the rest of my life I will be moving further and further away from our shared life into . . . what? I still don't know.
For thirty-four years I was constantly aware of his presence. Even if we weren't in the same room, I was aware of his nearness. For the past twenty-three months, I have been constantly aware of his absence. Even when I don't consciously remember that he's dead, there is that subliminal feeling of blank.
This blog might make you think that I have done nothing for the past twenty-three months but sit around and feel sorry for myself, and that is far from the truth. From the beginning, despite the overwhelming agony of my grief, I have taken life into my hands and run with it. I relocated a thousand miles from where we lived to help care for my 95-year-old father. I've traveled to new cities, made excursions to museums, fairs, expositions. I've walked thousands of miles, lifted weights, eaten in dozens of restaurants, sampled new foods. I've written hundreds of blog posts, participated in several different writing projects, read hundreds of books, made new friends.
Yet, here I am, counting down the days to the second anniversary of his death, and I still don't know where I am going, or if I am even going anywhere. Still don't know how to live with his every-present absence in my life.
People keep telling me I need to focus on others, that doing volunteer work and such is how one gets through this, but I'm wondering if perhaps I need to focus on myself. He may be absent, but I am still here.
Tagged: death, death of a soul mate, grief, grief at two years, loss, Second anniversary of grief, surviving grief







