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My mom lost a very dear friend of hers last week. This friend was quite a bit older than my
mother and they’d been friends for at least 30 years. I remember going up to San Juan Island (off
the northwest coast of Washington) every summer and spending a week with my
mom, her friend and her husband on their property. We would play badminton, dig for clams, and
bait crab traps with the clams. My
sister and I would put on plays and stay up half the night roasting marshmallows
for s’mores and then try not to giggle too loud in our beds as we were right
above our mom in the loft of the guest “barn.”
It had never been a barn to house animals, but the structure was built
like a barn nonetheless.
Though my mom and her friend obviously had quite a
connection, I didn’t have the same connection with her. When my mom called me Monday morning to
notify me of her friend’s death and to ask me to come to the memorial service
this Sunday, I was sad but not heartbroken.
However, as the week has worn on I’ve found myself getting snappy at
stupid things and feeling something close to anxious. I sometimes get that way when I have a lot on
my mind and need to write, but I’ve been blogging so I didn’t think that was
it.
As I was categorizing thoughts in my head as I tend to do
and deciding what to write about for my post here this week, I came to the
realization that though the connection to my mom’s friend was never a strong
one, it’s triggering in me the feelings of loss that are always threatening to
come to the surface. Just when I think
that I’m coping well with adoption, the tornado I’ve mentioned before comes and
sucks me in again.
I’ve started to figure out what situations I might find
myself in that would trigger different aspects of grief. But I wasn’t prepared that the loss of
someone I really didn’t know well would trigger my own feelings of adoption
loss. I don’t miss my daughter more than
any other time, nor am I worried that the relationship Nick and I have built
with her parents is just going to suddenly disappear like I used to be. Those would be huge adoption loss
scenarios. I think that’s what
bewildered me most about this situation.
However, admitting that I’m dealing with this and writing my
feelings down in the form of a post has been very healing for me. I don’t know how I will cope on Sunday. I might break down more than I expect to do,
I might not feel anything at all, or I might be somewhere in between. We’ll just have to see how it plays out.
Have you had any triggers for your loss that you haven’t
expected? How did you deal with those
feelings?
I experienced a very unexpected trigger this past week. My friend has a daughter who has been taking care of two young kids through foster care in hopes of adopting them. The entire time she's had these babies my complete hope was that she would get to adopt. When I received the news of the Mother's rights being terminated, it hit me like a very sharp knife. I cried, all of the sudden my heart shifted to this Mother losing her two children.
ReplyDeleteIt's triggered me into a very hurtful place this week. I'm a birth grandma. My heart hurts not only for the loss of my first and only grandchild but for my daughter as well. When she's hurting, I hurt right along with her. I don't think the grief will ever disappear.
My friends daughter has longed to have a family for 11 years and I'm thrilled for her though I see the other side of it and compare it to our loss.
Monika... this is such a good post. It's so true that loss of any kind reminds us of loss. It's just that simple! Good for you for recognizing the connection. I know I'm often slow to see it in myself. Praying for you this evening.
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