Today marks five years since Kevin died. I still often live
in a state of disbelief that it has been so long since I last saw Kevin, last
spoke to him, last said goodnight or good morning, or all the other million
little things that make up the day of two people who live together and love
each other. I am still surprised at how
time can simultaneously seem to rush forward and stand still. It has been
forever and it has been no time at all.
We have moved on, mostly by putting one foot in front of the
other and trying our best to live in a way that would make Kevin proud. I think
there are more smiles and laughter these days though the most fun times still
invoke the realization that Kevin is missing. That feeling will never leave my
life, nor do I want it to. And indeed he has missed so much, especially this
past year with my daughter’s high school graduation and delivery to college.
It is this added grief that has marked these past 365 days
as different, indeed harder. This year has brought together the grief borne of
both loss and of letting go. They are two different kinds of grief, but they
have equal weight in my heart. I know I must let go of my children, and believe
that Kevin and I did the best we could to raise them to be strong, thoughtful,
caring, creative people. I see so much of their father in their appearance,
their actions, their mannerisms, and their thought processes. I am grateful
that his presence lives on in them so brightly. But to say it is easy to watch my
children fly away would be a complete lie. If I could have them back in the
house living with me, I would do it in a minute! What is this cruel job of
parenting that our work is to shower all the love and patience we have upon our
children in order to make them capable of living without us?
I have thought a lot lately about the so-called “sandwich
generation” of which I was very much a part. It seems about ten years ago much
was written about us—those people who, through coincidences of birth, marriage,
and childbearing timing, were caring for both elderly parents and young
children. I was firmly in that sandwich. Born to older parents (mom was 38 and
dad was 43 when I came along), and delaying childbirth myself until I was 29, I
spent several years caring for loved ones on both ends of the age spectrum. I
remember having a conversation with Richard Russo, one of my very favorite
authors. He was planning a trip to Ann Arbor for a book signing and I was
involved in the planning. He explained that his schedule was iffy because of
this very thing—an 85-year-old mother and a 19-year-old daughter, both of whom
needed him. I mentioned an epiphany I had recently had: that a big part of the
problem with both of these groups is that they each wish for more freedom than
is good for them: young people because they aren’t mature enough to handle it, older
people because it is physically risky. Yet as caregivers, it was our
responsibility to keep them safe, to say no to dangerous desires. At the time I had both a 16-year-old and an
88-year-old arguing with me about how often and how far they could drive. It
was a challenging time to maneuver through sanely.
Now, my parents are both gone, and I have taken my youngest
to college. Of course, I have had the added loss of my husband during that
time, which makes this even harder. So often in the past five years, I have made decisions on my own,
wondering if it was the right choice, if it is what Kevin would have done. I
constantly question whether I’ve helped my kids through their time of grief, if
I showed them my own grief and vulnerability often enough. I grapple with
balance, with encouraging them to be on their own all the while fearing their
leaving. Simultaneously, I try to shrug off the feeling of being an “adult
orphan” though many times that’s how I feel. I wish for my parents’ advice and
counsel, for them to be here guiding me in my own parenting, and sharing in the
accomplishments of their grandchildren, whom they cherished beyond measure.
So I wonder, what becomes of us sandwich generation folks
once the "bread" has been removed? We are dealing with two different kinds of grief,
but it is grief nonetheless. One form of bereavement brings pain, loss, anger,
sadness. The other is differently colored, with pride, hope, and the ability to
smile through the tears. I was completely unprepared for the first, but had my children’s entire lifetime to prepare for the latter.
Preparation doesn’t make it any easier I am finding. Loss,
whether through death or letting go, is painful and heart-wrenching, it just
is. My heart swells with satisfaction and delight at the sight of my son and
daughter strolling across their respective college campuses, working at their
part-time jobs, or handling difficult situations on their own. In the past few
weeks alone they’ve signed leases, closed and opened bank accounts, settled in
with perfect strangers, and dealt so maturely with a broken heart. All the
matters of adult life for which I hope I have prepared them but which I must
admit, I’d rather still be doing for them.
Rarely do we truly realize how important it is to be needed in
the midst of the needing time. When we’re deep in it, it feels like muck that
holds us back, that weighs us down, that won’t let us have a moment’s rest;
like quicksand that leaves you gasping for breaths and flailing to keep some of
your own identity and autonomy. Yet, sit long enough on dry land without that
needing, and one realizes quickly how painful it is to feel parched and arid,
how much the needing, while taking your autonomy, was also giving you purpose and
identity and life.
Kevin loved his children so much, and worked so hard to be
the kind of parent he hoped to be. In the end, he also fought so hard to stay
here with them. On the fifth anniversary of Kevin’s passing, I honor his memory
by tearfully and begrudgingly celebrating the independence of our children.
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