Since You've Gone
A door closing, the hum of a garage door opener performing a
function we have heard so many times before, the ringing of a phone, a final
text we cherish forever... all insignificant until they become memories set
down in time. These are the moments of a final goodbye we never forget. All
that is left of a lifetime of hopes and dreams that will never be fulfilled.
A stillness lies within these moments; time has stood still
in the oddest way. We remember milliseconds of extreme trauma in our lives.
Somehow we notice the smallest things, even the gentle breeze that moved the
leaves outside the window as we stared at a world that was forever changed.
Someone we loved is gone; leaving only the certainty that nothing will ever be
the same. A bird chirps, ice cubes drop into the tray, all those daily sounds
that never mattered are amplified as they jolt us back to the reality of this
new moment in time. It's a new memory we will never forget; this is the moment
when shock began to protect us until we are ready to emerge.
Shock is a state of mind that allows our brain to function
on auto pilot while our emotions remain anesthetized; shielding us from a pain
so unendurable we need time to absorb it slowly. It is a built-in protective
response our Creator endowed all of us with, understanding the pain we may
someday be forced to endure. How do we emerge from this? Slowly, after the
nausea passes, after the fear of a life without the one who has left has
dimmed, and all of the things required of us are behind us, our emotions begin
to emerge one day at a time. Like a child peeking out from a hiding place we
step carefully back into those daily tasks we never had to think about. We are
emerging.
It is a slow process, repairing something as vital as a
broken heart. Time really is your best friend; denial and delusion your worst
enemies. Like choosing to jump into a cold lake rather than slowly entering,
you may elect to absorb the pain as quickly as your emotions will allow you to
do so. It is akin to choosing surgery rather than a lengthy process that may
not be as effective. You are going to survive and begin a new normal; you choose
the path that permits your own healing to be complete.
You will never replace the one who has been lost; save
yourself the added pain and cherish the memories, those special moments in time
we are left to hold closely. You may choose to run and hide from the pain, only
to learn it is the shadow that follows you at will. You can be angry; angry at
the cause of the loss, angry at others response to your loss, even angry at God
for not intercepting the events that led to the loss. As time passes you will
accept that every person has their own life plan. No matter how much they may
love you and hate to leave you, they arrived with their own personal plan with
an exit that thankfully did not include you. It is OK to let go of the pain and
treasure the best that is left from shared love.
Something happens deep within all of us when we have
suffered the pain of a loved one being ripped from our life; our heart feels
broken beyond repair. Will you ever be the same having survived the
unimaginable? No, you are forever altered, far more than your life has been
altered. You are left with the gifts of understanding, compassion, empathy and
survival instincts that have been honed to new heights. This is the cement that
put the pieces of your broken heart back in to place, carefully applied by a
loving Creator. You are stronger having survived this.
We rarely emerge from this kind of trauma without learning
what is really important and a deeper faith in their value. It is here that we
gain a new understanding of how important those special moments really are. We
learn to cherish them before they become our last memories.
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