As in earlier posts, I want to preface this discussion by
saying that I understand people’s hearts are in the right place. But sometimes
the impact of their words on my head and my heart is not what one would
anticipate it to be.
In 1993, NBA star Charles Barkley was scolded in the media
for proclaiming that he was no one’s role model. Specifically, when he was
asked by a reporter to atone for certain behavior off the court, Barkley
responded:
"I'm not paid to be a role model. I'm paid to wreak
havoc on the basketball court."
At the time, I disagreed with Barkley, and felt that his
response was an easy way in which to justify his lack of self-control. As the mother of a one-year-old son, I was especially attuned to the debate, wondering as I did who he would eventually choose for his
role models.
Fast-forward twenty years, and I have a new understanding of
Barkley’s frustration. Unlike Charles, however, I don’t feel I can go
around demanding that people not view me as a role model. I tend to back away
from the discussions and keep the frustration to myself. It wasn’t until a
meeting of my widow’s group that I realized I was not alone in my discomfort
with such conversations.
These accolades usually come after I talk with someone about
what has happened in the three years since my husband passed away. Yes, I
finished my Master’s degree—something I promised my husband I would do. I sold
my house and moved myself and my two children into a new home. Also because I committed to Kevin that I would, and it was too difficult and costly to stay. I purchased a condo for the
time when my daughter and son have left our nest and I am completely on my own.
I have kept my job and kept my children in school and extra-curricular
activities. We love each other, we get along most days, and we keep moving
forward together.
For this, I have been called strong, brave, courageous,
gutsy, and even told I have “pluck.” I am honored that people see me in this
way, but I don’t feel it is accurate or even appropriate. I certainly don’t see
myself in this way at all. I am simply doing what I have to do in order to get
through the day. Outwardly, I smile and am mildly deferential when offered this
sentiment. But inside, I’m bristling.
I did many time-consuming, sometimes-healing projects in the
aftermath of Kevin’s illness and passing. In looking back, they were most
certainly done in order to honor Kevin’s memory. But they were also done as a
way to keep me so busy that I never had time to grieve. And the more exhausted
I was at the end of the day, the more likely I was to sleep through the night.
They weren’t acts of bravery or strength; they were, more accurately, acts of
defense or denial of my situation. It was me doing what I had to do to get
through this time. None were acts of heroism or virtue, but instead, were
simple, yet very tiring, acts of self-preservation. They fed my need to keep up
the sense of diligence developed from three years of life with a cancer
patient, or, as the writer Emily Rapp has called it, the “addiction to dread,”
that caregivers begin to live for.
Add to this the fact that the "public me" is quite often not
like the "private me" who still has bouts of crying, of angry yelling at the
universe, and even the occasional kick of the dog (who somehow still comes back
to me and kisses my face), and you can hopefully see how difficult it is to
accept accolades.
A dear friend recently asked me what has been the hardest
thing I’ve dealt with in the past three years. After thinking for only a
minute, I answered more honestly than I previously had, and said, “facing and
being alone with my grief.” That is the
truth. And that is not a sign of strength. To me, it seems much more a sign of
weakness.
I have another friend who is widowed, whom I greatly admire.
She too, has maintained a career, family and household despite the loss of her
soul mate—so many of us do. At the time of his sudden passing, she spent
several weeks in bed, not answering calls or going out.
Some might say she was being weak, not getting on with it;
hiding under the covers rather than facing her grief.
But I believe the opposite to be true. She is my hero. She
did face her grief, in all its debilitating, suffocating, energy-zapping,
daylight-robbing heaviness. She faced it and lived in its midst for long,
frightening days and longer nights. She did not put it aside, telling herself
that she would deal with it another day.
In the midst of the Charles Barkley ruckus, fellow NBA
player Karl Malone said the following:
“We don't choose to be role models, we are chosen. Our only choice is whether to be a good role model or a bad one."
“We don't choose to be role models, we are chosen. Our only choice is whether to be a good role model or a bad one."
I suppose this is true of the widow that gets herself up and
moving forward each day, although I certainly wouldn’t call myself “chosen.” More
like “left-behind.” I’m in a life that, God knows, I didn’t ask, nor ever
plan to be in. And I would give anything to have my old life back. But it is
still difficult for me to take the acts of simply moving forward and declare
them to be acts of bravery by those who observe them. Especially since I know that many of those who have
classified me as a strong role model would behave in exactly the same way, and
do it equally well, were they to be in a similar situation.
We each deal with grief in our own way, and no one way is
better or more correct than another. As grievers we each, in our own way, try
to make the best of this new role into which we’ve been thrust, even on those days
when we feel, more than anything else, that it simply isn’t worth it. Call it
strength, adaptability, or simply getting on with it, it’s just what we do.
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Lori, Thanks for sharing this observation. I enjoyed knowing you and Kevin as a young couple, newly married & very hopeful. Losing your soul mate is hard but sharing your thoughts could help someone else move on. You may not want to "own your role model role" but I think every one who has lost a partner could learn something from you... It is definitely all about embracing the pain, moving on through the pain and living on the other side of the pain. As you know I am an extrovert (!) however; when I grieve, I need alone time. It's funny hearing people say "oh come on, are you sure you want to be alone?". My answer is; TRUST ME, I need to be alone and I am not kidding.... Looking forward to seeing more of your writing. Love, P
ReplyDeleteThanks, Ms. P! I'm thankful for the time Kevin and I spent on 3rd Street making so many lifelong friends. I'm also glad that you and I ran into each other and have been able to reconnect. I'm looking forward to sharing more writing with you and receiving your wisdom in return! Love, Lori
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