I have just been working on some
things for the bake sale we are having for the fundraiser. I am really excited to be doing it.
I started thinking about how
little time I have had to write, and then I thought about why I started writing
in the first place. It was because I
found so much comfort in reading things written by other bereaved parents. Just knowing that I was not the only one
feeling such things in this situation.
So how do I feel eight months in?
Really, not much different.
A lot has changed in how I handle
everything. I get up and go everyday
unlike at first when I couldn’t move. I
am able to bear the weight of the pain better now, I am able to have
conversations and work and do many of the normal things I just could not do at
first.
But it does not, in any way, hurt
any less that I still wake up every day without her. That pain is no less. 100 lbs doesn’t get lighter cause you train
to lift it, you just lift it better.
I feel the need to say this
though, I will never not want to talk about Virginia. It is never easy to say to someone that she
has died, but I would never want to hide her or shy away from her because it is
difficult. I don’t just blurt out my
child is dead to everyone who walks by, but if someone asks me who Virginia is
I will gladly tell anyone who is willing to listen anything and everything
about her. I will never not want to
talk about my daughter. She is my child,
alive or dead.
But, how I feel at eight months
in…
I’m still really angry much of
the time. Not so much now at everyone
with a living child or everyone who is pregnant, just pretty much at life and
the world in general. I’m still really
really angry, because it will never make sense to me that a child born into so
much love didn’t get to live out her life with us. It will never make any sense, and I will
always be angry about it. Angry that I
don’t get to watch her grow up. Angry
about a million other things. I am still
angry.
And sad of course, although I
would say I am a little healthier, I can at least eat on a regular basis.
I still can’t sleep though, not
without some kind of guided meditation to put me to sleep or medicine on the
really bad nights.
Grief is still just very heavy and exhausting. It clouds everything. I still just want to lay in bed all day. I still know I can't. I suppose some could say it's time to lighten up a little and learn to love to live. I don't really care if some think that. I feel what I feel, I'm still sad, I'll make no apologies.
I am determined to leave a legacy of love for my beautiful daughter though. I know she can make a difference in this world. I know that she can.
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