Dear Jonesie: 5 months. 5 months since you took your last breath. 5 months since I saw your face. 5 months since our lives changed irrevocably. I have this huge … Continue reading Tomorrow is the 12th of the Month
Dear Jonesie: 5 months. 5 months since you took your last breath. 5 months since I saw your face. 5 months since our lives changed irrevocably. I have this huge … Continue reading Tomorrow is the 12th of the Month
I am strong. That is my daily mantra. I set the intention of having strength every day. And I’m going to brag a bit and say I do a pretty good job on most days.
Enter global pandemic. That strength I’ve been holding so tightly to has sailed away like a ship in the night. You see, in real life, we are constantly on the go between kids, friends, sports, school, eating someplace other than the kitchen, errands and other such things that make our lives an actual life. Put that life on hold, and us recently unfortunately widowed folks are left to actually have to deal with our feelings. So thanks for that, raw bat eater. I’ve got a couple of hand signals for you.
I selfishly took this past Saturday, and aside from working out, did not leave my couch. I let my children play outside, I gave in to too much screen time and too many video games. And I parked my ass on the couch and didn’t really move. Other than to blow my nose because I let myself basically cry all day long. It is not my proudest day in history, nor my strongest day in history. But maybe it was my most necessary day.
I recently complimented myself on not having a day where I laid around and drowned in self pity. I guess I planted the seed in the recesses of my mind. And that seed sprouted and turned into this past Saturday. I watched romantic comedy after romantic comedy, which was quite the idiotic move because do you know what life is not? If you said a romantic comedy, you would be exactly right. But it did unlock feelings that I guess I’ve been holding onto for far too long and I finally let them out.
The problem, you ask, with letting them out? Once they start, I’m not sure how to make them stop. There is so much shit, in the world, in my own personal life, that sucks right now. And if I’m completely honest, I’m having a hard time finding the bright spot. Yes, my children are a bright spot, we have our health and each other and all the other shit you’re supposed to say that you’re grateful for (and I am grateful for it) but I also have all of these other negative feelings and self doubt and pain that are overtaking everything good that I know I have.
And there’s really not anything to be done about it, which would drive Ash crazy. He was always a fixer, not great at the listening and just being there. If there was a problem, yo, he’d come up with several ways to solve it. There’s no distractions to push away the painful feelings. There are no friends to give hugs and love and feed me wine and tell me I’m pretty. (That’s a joke.) It’s just me. And the boys. And the dogs. Trying to pretend like we’re ok.
My poor kids, every night, something makes me cry, generally at the dinner table. My sweet Jack always asks if I’m alright and my sweet Colt always answers she’s just missing daddy. And that is true. I am missing him. But there’s so much more to it than that. So many things, that I, myself, do not understand and do not know how to navigate through.
So, for now, I guess I’ll just let the water works flow. Because what else are you supposed to do when your husband dies and then the world fucking stops?
Ash and I had been together for a little over 2 years when he decided the Outer Banks wasn’t the place for him. He moved here to become a Realtor, … Continue reading Rocky Mountain High
The dreaded question. The one that has no answer. But I can’t help but wonder, why us? Why my kids? Why don’t they get to have their father? What did they do to deserve this? How were they chosen? Is it something that God chooses? Is it an eenie meenie miney moe kind of thing? Is our fate already decided before we’re even born? Don’t get me wrong, this is not something I would wish on anyone. But I especially don’t wish it on my children. Do they ever wonder why my dad? Of course they do, but they’re kids, and they go with the flow. They feel it and then they move on. I envy them for that. I feel it nonstop. All the time. So many memories. So many good times. So many terrible times. But it all made us who we were, who we are. And I just can’t help but question why. Certainly Jack and Colt don’t deserve this. They are young and wild and innocent and beautiful and intelligent and weird and perfect and imperfect. Why don’t they get a life with the man that helped create them? The man I chose. The man that chose me. Why did we get so unlucky? Fate? Luck or lack there of? God’s plan? Well, God, guess what? Your plan really sucks for us. We are ok because we are strong, but we are not ok because a very large piece of us is missing.
Tonight was not a great night in the Jones household. That’s actually a lie. It was great in a beautiful and sorrowful way. We were sitting at dinner, just chatting and I looked over at Colt, looking so much like his daddy, acting even more so like him and I asked his favorite memory with daddy. This lead to a mad dash from the table to my (my, mine alone, just mine) bedroom to grab our “Daddy Memory Box” filled with weird and random shit chosen by the boys. Colt, in his 5 year old excitement, brings the box to the table and grabs Ash’s wedding band (one of those rubber/silicone rings you order on Amazon for $8) and declares that his favorite memory of daddy. Ok. What about anything you did with daddy, I ask him. His reply: legos and golf were my favorite things to do with daddy. Mine too, buddy. Well, not Legos, they’re not my favorite but golf, that was definitely a favorite.
Jack then decided to take his mad dash from the kitchen table to gather all the memory/photo books we’ve created over the years. We paused our eating and just flipped through them. And we cried. We cried because we made so many great memories together. We had so much fun together. We also created some pretty awful memories, but the beautiful thing about life, and death, is that once someone is gone, even the bad becomes the good. Because it’s something to hold onto. It’s something that you learned from, something that seemed important at the time, but in reality, didn’t matter one damn bit. It’s not that someone becomes perfect once they are gone, it’s that you realize how much you loved the perfect and the imperfect. Because it helped shape who you were, who you are and who you will be. You can look back and laugh at what once caused you so much anguish. You can find the hilarity in the awful, the beauty in the pain, and the love in the hate.
Ash and I were passionate. We fought with passion and we made up with passion. And what I wouldn’t give for one more fight and one more makeup. I can remember the last time we lay together as husband and wife (you know, in the biblical sense). It was January, 2019. We were in a Residence Inn in the Brier Creek area of Raleigh. It was the day before chemo. We didn’t know then that it would be the last time, at least not consciously, maybe subconsciously. It wasn’t our best effort, either, for obvious reasons. It was a little clumsy, we both cried the entire time and it was short lived. It wasn’t passionate but it was full of love, full of trepidation, full of fear and full of sorrow.
I’ve dreamt of Ash twice in the last week. In the first dream, we were riding in the back of a pick up truck. Our children were with us (so unsafe). My mother was driving (she would never allow the children to be in the back of a pickup truck) and my father was riding shotgun. Ash was upset because he had just learned I’d made an offer on a lot without consulting with him (um, bullshit babe, I asked you nonstop for guidance) while my mom was trying to tell him how nice Mother’s Vineyard in Manteo is. The next one, I walked into some kind of cafeteria. He was sitting at a table with a bunch of unfamiliar faces. We locked eyes as soon as I walked in, he got up and started walking towards me as I was walking towards him, never breaking eye contact. And then I woke up. That one hurt.
So, again, why? Why my children? Why us? And why, following all of that, must we be stuck at hour homes with no outside contact? How are we supposed to handle that? I guess with the same strength and resilience we’ve handled everything else.
My parting words to you this evening are to hug your husband/wife tight. I know he/she is probably driving you crazy (especially since you’re stuck with only each other), but imagine if you didn’t have him/her at all. Would the bad times also become the good times? I’d bet my life that they would. Fight passionately and make up with that same passion. It’s all cliche but it’s all true.
Ash and I were (technically I guess I still am) huge Marvel movie fans. They have everything a great movie needs – plenty of action, a dose of humor and even some romance thrown in the mix. We saw Avengers: End Game one Tuesday night at a large AMC at the Streets of Southpoint in Durham, NC. It was one of those theaters where you could order beer or nachos or other items that you would never have considered ordering at a movie theater (we never did venture past popcorn and a coke). The chairs were recliners (that possibly may have had a heated seat feature, I can’t quite remember), there were tables and fancy cupholders and you had assigned seats, which never failed, we always seemed to mess up somehow. It was a pre-chemo night. See, Durham is a good 4 hour drive from us, appointments and chemo always started first thing in the morning so Ash and I would go up the day before, stay in a hotel and always tried to make a date out of it (we were always very good at dating), even when he felt his worst, he always wanted to keep me happy, entertained and feeling his love.
Last night, my youngest, Mr. Tolt, spent the night with my parents. (I promise this is probably leading somewhere relevant, but maybe not. It’s hard to say where my brain might take us.) Jack and I had an at home date night, just the 2 of us. Well, the 2 dogs were here as well but they don’t really count since they don’t talk and one of them constantly ignores all of us and the other is constantly in our faces. At first he ignored me (kind of like our old brown girl), as every 10 year old boy likes to do to his mother. He engrossed himself in several Star Wars Battlefront, well, battles, for lack of a better term, until I lured him away with a delicious dinner of frozen cheese pizza (don’t worry, we didn’t eat it frozen, I’m not that bad of a mother) and Caesar salad.
After eating, he finally decided he would grace me with his presence and he wanted to watch a movie. His choice was End Game. I convinced him he needed to see Captain Marvel first, which I’ve been attempting to get him to watch with me for months, to no avail (apparently when you’re 10, and male, girl superheroes aren’t that cool, at least for him anyway – I don’t want to blanket all 10 year old boys in that category). I told him she could kick his ass and would be worth watching, I promise. So we watched it last night and he loved it, as I knew he would because Mama generally knows best. We then had a slumber party in my bed, which is a rare thing that both my boys seem to think is the best treat in the world.
We slept in this morning until almost 9 am (one of my favorite treats!). We’re actually still in our jammies now at 12:20 pm EST (don’t judge us, we’ve nowhere to go and not shit to do). As soon as we woke up, brushed our teeth and got coffee (well, I got coffee. He didn’t. Because 10 year old.) Jack turned on Disney+ and loaded Avengers: End Game. I was excited. He was excited. The movie is great, albeit a tad on the lengthy side (that’s why it worked out so well that Colt wasn’t here.) I saw it, with Ash, not too long ago (see above), and I had no idea the affect it would have on me today, watching it with our oldest son.
We’ve been so wrapped up in the Coronavirus pandemic, it’s been easy to forget what else has been happening in our world, what we’ve lost, how we’ve navigated the last 4+ months, even what we’ve gained and how we’ve grown and changed.
This morning, watching End Game, made me feel our loss again. I ugly cried for the first time in a while. It was hard to watch the end. I found myself comparing my loss to Pepper’s. She looked so beautiful and full of grace for Ironman/Tony Stark’s funeral whereas I looked drunk and loopy at Ash’s. (Also, I know it’s all fake and a movie, I’m not that crazy, yet, but it invoked feelings and when I feel it, I do it, you know.) The part where she told Tony to rest now, it would be ok, they would be ok, I never did that for Ash. Not while he was conscious anyway. On the night I ultimately led him to his death, I said it, but in true Kellie fashion, I made it a joke. I laughed. I asked if he could see the light and if so, to go on into it. I guess I told him we would be ok. I can’t quite recall. But I wasn’t serious. I never take much seriously and in this instance, I wish I would have. I had been up all night, slowly easing his pain, slowly taking his life (because I was instructed to do so – just want to make that clear – I did not murder my husband – I eased his suffering upon strict orders to do so). At 5:30 in the morning, I decided my mom and I needed coffee. I left the room and Ash left me. I didn’t say goodbye. I didn’t tell him I loved him. I didn’t tell him we would be ok. Nothing. I left the room. And he left us. End Game.
Today, I watched a movie with my son. Today, after watching that movie, I am not ok. I am filled with regret – regret for not being a better wife, regret for the way I left things during Ash’s final hours, regret for making everything a joke. He deserved better. He deserved my best. And I did not give it him. That said, he loved me anyway. I just wish I would have said a proper goodbye. I wish I would have thanked him for choosing to spend his life with me. I wish I would have said I love you just one more time instead of hey baby, see the light? Why don’t you go on into it. I wish I would have embraced him one last time, held his hand all through the night. But I didn’t it. And I can’t change that. I can’t get that back. End Game.
Ash and I got married on a very hot August day in downtown Manteo, NC in 2009. I can never remember whether we got married on the 8th or the … Continue reading Til Death Do We Part
Luck is a strange concept. I’ve said how lucky we are several times since Ash’s passing, and while it’s true that we do have much to be grateful for, I’m … Continue reading What Luck? What Luck!
I’m not generally one to give advice, mainly because most of the time I don’t have a damn clue what I’m doing. But with losing your spouse perhaps comes a … Continue reading Hindsight is 20/20
Some weeks are harder than others. Some days are harder than others. Hell, some minutes are harder than others. This is true for anyone on any given day. It’s also true for the grief stricken. Enter Jack, Colt and me.
I barely remember a lot from the past week. (The confusion part of grief is really taking its toll on my brain or maybe I was always this confused. Who knows? Not me. Because I’m the confused…) The shit I do remember is just that. Shit.
We’ll start with Colt, or Mr. Tolt as I like to call him. My Mr. Tolt is so much like Ash it’s uncanny. He looks like Ash. He acts like Ash. He’s wildly independent. He’s hilarious. He will very bluntly tell you his opinion whether you want it or not, right on that fine line of oh how endearing to man you’re kind of a dick. (Side note – I don’t call him a dick to his face, but he certainly can be one). Colt is strong, brave and could careless what anybody thinks of him or what he’s doing. Just like his father before him. He’s an outside the box thinker and enjoys individual pursuits far more than group activities. I mean, if you knew Ash, I could very easily be describing him right now – they are so similar (that’s some strong DNA). But my whole point is, when it came to grief, sadness, acting out, anger, or any of the other myriads of emotions and outlets you can think of, I wasn’t all that worried about Colt. He’s not afraid to show his emotions – he breaks down nearly every day, it lasts about 5-10 minutes and then he moves on, like any normal 5 year old. Certainly he cries more often than he used to, over silly stuff that never would have bothered him in the past. But overall, I feel he is handling this fucked up hand he has been dealt like one bad ass 5 year old.
Enter this week. (Apparently enter is the word of the day today). I guess it really started the week before last, but I totally blamed it on Ash’s puppy. I found a large pee spot on the floor in Colt’s room right next to his nightstand and bed. I thought it was an odd spot for the dog to pee but just went about cleaning it up and moved about my business. A week later, my house, more specifically the area of the house containing Colt’s bedroom, is emanating an odor quite unpleasant to the senses. I go in his room to find another large pee spot, this time nearly under the bed. I think it’s Ash’s damn puppy again but do question how she squeezed under the bed and how she possibly could pee that much. I’m confused, my brain is spinning and then it dawns on me – this urine does not smell like dog urine – it smells like human urine. It’s also too large to be puppy pee. It has to be people pee. Yay. So I, like any insane, panicked, crazy ass mother that has too much shit to deal with every fucking day, lose my shit, just for a minute, at my poor Colt. He confesses that he has peed on his bedroom floor 3 times. He first tells me he forgot we had toilets (insert eye roll here) and then tells me he was mad at the puppy so decided to pee on the floor.
Luckily, my brother is a carpet cleaner and Colt’s bedroom is now fresh as daisies again. Unluckily, my little boy is having some big feelings, missing his father some kind of terrible and has taken to pissing on the floor because that is something he can control. He can’t control his feelings. He can’t control that daddy is gone and never coming back. But he can control where he takes a leak. Except, he can’t control that either, because mama won’t allow it! Go in the toilet, go outside, but ABSOLUTELY DO NOT PISS ON THE FLOOR ANYMORE! And he hasn’t done it again. And maybe he won’t do it again. And maybe he will. If you need me, I’ll be in a heap on the kitchen floor listening to Lewis Capaldi (is there anyone more depressed than that guy?!) crying my eyes out because I don’t have the handbook on what to do when your child starts pissing on the floor because dad’s dead. If anyone has a copy, send it my way.
Next, we have Jack, the child that is just like me. Shy, sensitive, sarcastic, a little mouthy and a lot angry. He wears a necklace that we found one day when going through an old box of Ash’s things. It’s just a cheap, white, shell necklace on fishing line with one of those spinny clasps that always pull out the hair on the back of your neck. It probably cost Ash $6.99 in 1999 (side note – we even have a picture of Ash wearing said necklace years ago which is pretty cool). Anyway, the point is, while the necklace may not have much value, to us, it is priceless. So of course, boys being boys, decide to wrestle on a trampoline and the necklace gets ripped off Jack’s neck and woe is fucking us! The boys diligently collect all the shells through their tears, we place them in a ziplock baggie with what’s left of the necklace and I drive it 30 minutes away to a friend of mine that makes jewelry because she’s awesome and is going to fix it for us because, again, priceless.
Also of note this past week, Jack had therapy. He always makes me stay with him, I think it helps him feel more comfortable and more willing to open up about his feelings. It also gets me to open up about my feelings, which I’m not all that good at, could be where Jack gets it from. Therapy day is always a hard day anyway. This one was particularly hard, I guess because we had the broken necklace tragedy and the Captain Pisses on the Floor tragedy and you know, the dad is dead, reality that he’s never coming back hits harder every day and what the hell do we do with ourselves now tragedy. Either way, nothing crazy or terrible or wonderful happened in therapy. We talked about grief, apparently Jack is still getting over his dead fish, and I cried because that’s basically all I did last week. Cry.
Moving on to me. I will be honest and say I am an absolute train wreck. Especially this last week. My new favorite thing to do is get the kids where they need to be, drive around listening to sad music and just cry (hello, loser!). I had a dream about Ash last week. And it was a good dream. I don’t remember much about it other than him telling me he loved me. And I think it nearly killed me. A girlfriend of mine also had a dream about Ash the exact same night I did. She said they were at a social event, talking and she looked at him and said “Kellie really misses you” and he said “I know, but I’m ok.” And she said he looked healthy and healed. And that nearly killed me even further. I feel so grateful that he is healthy and healed and ok.
And I’m also pretty fucking mad that he’s ok. Because we are down here struggling our asses off when all we want is to be ok. And we are ok but we’re also pissing on the floor, still grieving our beta fish and crying all over town because we’re so fucking lonely, we don’t know what else to do with ourselves. We’re placing feelings where they don’t belong, or maybe where they do belong. We’re confused. We’re sad. We’re angry. We’re tired. Colt has slept in my bed twice this week, something I don’t generally allow. Jack tried to spend all weekend with a friend because distraction is so much better than reality. And me? I don’t know how I’m doing on any given day. What’s that song my mom is always singing? Some days are diamonds and some days are stones. I’ve never questioned my mothering skills so much. I’m trying to be everything for my babies, but I’m definitely coming up short. I’m also in my own head so much, questioning every move I make, every conversation I have and how I really feel about anything that my anxiety level is at an all time high. Who knew that was even possible?!
Either way, I do know that Ash is ok and healed and healthy. And I also know that, one day, we will be more ok than not, we will be mostly healed and we will be healthy. And until then, I guess we will piss on the floor and cry in the car. And maybe this is rock bottom, and there’s nowhere to go from here but up.
I don’t know whether like comes first or lust comes first, but either way, it didn’t take me long to like or lust after Ash. He was unlike anyone I … Continue reading Like. Lust. Love.