Archive for November 2013

Toward Happiness

Friday, November 22, 2013



Lately I’ve been thinking about happiness.  How do we live happy lives, or in some cases, return to a happy life after being sorrowful? What makes me happy? Am I happy right now? Is that ok?

Happiness in the midst of heavy grief is an elusive and, for me, fraught emotion. For weeks after Kevin’s death, even laughing at a joke felt wrong. As with everything in grieving, each person has their own timeline. In my case, it took nearly a year before I could even laugh with close friends. I distinctly remember an evening shortly after Kevin’s passing when friends came over to watch Project Runway. In an effort to cheer my daughter, we brought out popcorn, chips, and pop, and made it a girls’ night. As the critiques of the designers and their creations began, jokes were made and we were all supposed to laugh, but I couldn’t. I remember it as being close to an out-of-body or metaphysical experience. I was observing myself, sitting among friends who were there because they were concerned about leaving us alone. They were concerned because I was a widow and my daughter had just—at the age of twelve—lost her father. They were with us because my husband was not. There were the usual feelings of disbelief and impossibility, but there was also the overwhelming understanding that I would never again find even simple enjoyment, nor did I want to, or feel I deserved to.

Over the past three years, enjoyment has managed to creep back into my life—sometimes accidentally, sometimes because I’ve sought it out. Most of those times though, it is accompanied by considerable heartache and guilt. Milestone events, which should be happy and enjoyable, are now and will forever, be bittersweet. This term will always be attached to any occasion with my children: birthdays, performances, graduations, weddings, the births of grandchildren, as it should be. None of these life events will be the same without Kevin present. He should be here, experiencing them with us, and he’s not. The amount of unfairness in that realization is indescribable.

This understanding that Kevin isn’t here to enjoy these moments makes movement toward happiness a slow and troubled process. It is a complicated mixture of guilt and longing. I may always feel guilty for still being here, enjoying the achievements of our children, or participating in both the simplicity and awesomeness of life. In the quiet moments after a joyful experience I always come to the questions that can’t be answered: why is Kevin gone, why am I still here?

Too, I simply miss having my best friend to share in the wonderful and the mundane. Both of us traveled for business, and whenever one of us returned, we would talk about experiences we had on our trips, always ending the story with “I wish you had been there, you would have loved it.” So often I say that now, whether it’s seeing a bright flash of the Aurora Borealis from our deck, or feeling comfort in a gathering of old friends, or attending a particularly lovely poetry reading: I wish he could have been here, he would have loved it.

Despite the questions and the wishing, I also know that I tend toward happiness. I need it in my life and fear the alternative darkness. Knowing this has propelled me forward over the past three years. I recall a conversation with Kevin a few years into our marriage. He was writing a paper for a college class and as I proofread, I jokingly commented on how unfair it was that he was so smart; that math and science and even writing came easily for him, while I studied hard, read and then re-read a text, or worked to make a single sentence just right. He responded with the usual good-husband response: that I was smart, too--I think he stopped short of saying that I was equally smart :), and that I had qualities he didn’t have, like a sense of happiness, a lack of cynicism, a belief in the goodness of people, the ability to make friends with anyone, and the desire to live in a place of light. Those were things that he was struggling to learn that seemingly came easily to me. Over the years we taught and learned from each other. I believe he became a happy person who lived with me in that lightness.

I recently came across this story by Madonna Badger, who lost her parents and her three children in a house fire on Christmas morning, 2011. In it, she talks about how she has carried on. Those who haven’t experienced loss (and hers was certainly greater than most), struggle with understanding how those who grieve can carry on. There is much to admire about her, particularly her response to this question. She says, “…trying really hard to not feel sorry for myself makes me feel good. Being of service helps the pain to go away, if only for a little while, and giving and receiving love makes me feel good. Basically, I go to wherever the light is, because anything else is darkness, and it can be a deeply black darkness.”

I understand this, and I so admire her ability to so clearly articulate it.

This forward momentum (some may call it resilience but I’m not sure that’s accurate) isn’t for everyone. Some may also say that we all have a choice to be happy or sad, but for those in grief I don’t believe that’s always true, either. For me, I move toward an eventual happiness because that is just who I am, no less than having long fingers or red hair. It is a part of me that has been beaten up and nearly suffocated, but it was always there. 

And, with the slow steps of someone walking through an uncharted, muck-filled, foggy swamp, I will continue to walk toward it.

share this on »
{Facebook}
{Twitter}
{Pinterest}
1 Comment »

A House, A Home

Monday, November 11, 2013



Earlier this year, I sold the house in which Kevin and I had lived for twenty years. It was a terribly difficult thing to do. I had hoped to stay in the house until our daughter graduated from high school in 2015, but keeping up an old farmhouse on two acres of land (mostly vegetable and flower gardens) was becoming increasingly impossible. It had occurred to me that it might take two years to sell the house, given Michigan’s slowly recovering economy. Instead, the house sold within six months of listing, and after nearly one-hundred showings (yes, 100). 

Any home would be difficult to leave, but leaving our home was particularly traumatic. Kevin and I purchased it shortly after we married. We had been visiting my brother one evening, and had a conversation with him about when we could buy our first house. We complained that it would take years to save for a down payment while paying off student loans, paying rent in Ann Arbor, and handling other expenses like car payments, insurance, etc. Dusk was just settling in as we headed
Moving day.
back to our apartment and passed an old, abandoned, farmhouse with knee-high grass and a wooden screen door flapping in the late autumn wind. I yelled at Kevin to turn into the drive and that was all it took. We returned a few days later with our trusty landlord/general contractor and made a bid on the house by the weekend. My parents helped with the down payment, which was all of $4000.

Friends came out and looked at the house prior to our move-in, dubbing it “Sullivan Acres” after the 1970’s television show “Green Acres.” Another friend called the basement a Turkish prison, and several were certain it was haunted. Regardless of these “concerns” we moved in just before Christmas and began work, pulling plaster and lathe off the walls, scraping up carpet, re-wiring, re-plumbing, and then putting it all back together. Over the course of this time, we lived on the first floor, then only in the kitchen, then we moved out altogether and lived first in a sublet in Ann Arbor, and then with my parents in Detroit. Finally, just six months before our first child was born, we moved back. The original plan was to gut, rebuild, and sell, making enough money to have a down payment on a nice house in Ann Arbor. But then life happened and soon our kids were settled into the schools, we made friends, and the idea of selling became distant. The few times we considered selling we needed only to attend a few open houses where we would list all the shortcomings of the property and decide instead to stay put.

The house became a huge part of our identity. “We live in the yellow farm house across from the party store,” was pretty much all we ever had to say to anyone in Dexter and they would know the one. The home’s original family still lived in town, and our work had made many curious over the years. We frequently entertained, welcoming friends and neighbors as often as we could find an occasion. Our children held many sleepovers and birthday parties, and roamed the two acres finding snakes, frogs, and bunny rabbits.

After. July, 2012
My feelings about the house are now, for the most part, ambivalent. It is my great regret (given my now perfect hindsight), that we stayed in the house for so long. How many trips could we have taken, how many memories could we have created with the time and money used on our house? It breaks my heart to think about this.

On the other hand, how great it was to have such a place to call our home.  And what a true accomplishment it was for us both. Many times (well, more than once, anyway) I encountered someone who, upon hearing of this project, would tell me that they had undertaken a similar project with their former spouse. A marriage that can survive such a major home renovation is a rare thing. I also know that Kevin and I learned so much from that renovation; there was nothing that could go wrong that one of us (mostly Kevin) couldn’t fix.

Shortly after Kevin received his Stage IV diagnosis, we talked about our accomplishments. It was a dreadful conversation to have. I reminded Kevin that he had realized so much—a Michigan MBA, a position of importance with an international corporation that respected him and held his opinion in high regard, many close friends, children that loved him and wanted to spend time with him, an extended family who loved him. He had traveled the world, run a marathon, and completely renovated an old house that was now a beautiful, memory-filled home. His response was that he wasn’t done yet, which I completely understood and agreed with. But it was important to me that he know how very much he had achieved; that his was not a life that, by anyone’s estimation, would come up short.

Containing our marriage, indeed our lives, into moving boxes was a physically and emotionally challenging chore. There were times, I must admit, when there was a certain lightness and liberation to it as well—an uncluttering. For the most part though, it felt like a stripping away or reduction of so much that defined me and us. Our marriage would never be defined by things, but it certainly was defined, in part, by that house. And now, I’m attempting to create new definitions for myself that don’t necessarily involve the home in which I live.

Now, the house is occupied by two plant biologists who both teach at the University of Michigan. They have two children, a boy and girl, who are the same age difference as ours. They love the gardens, the antiquity, the creaking of the wood floors, and the inviting porch. They understand the memories that reside within the house and hope to make their own. There is a certain miraculous symmetry to their purchase of our home. I wish them well.

share this on »
{Facebook}
{Twitter}
{Pinterest}
Add a comment »