The Last Time, Ever I Saw Your Face…


May 22nd, 2023

Today is the day I will see his face for the last time here on this earth. There is an earnest fear in this. I want to remember him the way he is supposed to look, with this beautiful smile on his face and the look that always told me that no matter who had come before, there would be none, ever after, and that really, I was always the only one, the one he’d been searching for all that time. He always knew the same of me and we talked about how we had discovered that, at one time, we were in the same football stadium at the same time and wished we had crossed paths then.

I don’t want to remember him the way he will look today. But 𝘩𝘰𝘸 can I 𝘯𝘰𝘵 see him one more time, knowing this is the last time I can ever look at him? How can it be the last time? I cannot understand how this happened, how my healthy, perfect husband’s soul is no longer in the same world as mine.

Sure, there are wonderful photographs. We took a lot of pictures together but I wish there were more. And yet the photographs cannot wrap his arms around me, cannot kiss me goodnight, or hello, or just because.

Tomorrow is the day we will “bring closure” with a memorial service. We will have a slide show to represent his life but you cannot properly represent Scott in 100 pictures. You can’t even truly represent him in photographs because he was larger than life but in a quiet way.

Now, Scott could talk your ear off. I sometimes would walk out to the yard after he had been talking to the lawn guy or the cable repair man, or the person walking their dog and gently suggest he come back inside because they probably had other things they needed to do and I didn’t want anyone to get into trouble. But then many times they’d still stand and talk longer because Scott never met a stranger. They were already fast friends and enjoying their chat.

But he still had a quiet thoughtfulness. He carried the weight of the world on his shoulders sometimes, never understanding how people could be ugly to one another because he was all kindness and soft-hearted. He was hurt so much more in this life than he would ever have given back because people would take advantage of his gentleness. Don’t ever forget that your candle will never glow brighter by the action of extinguishing the candle of someone else.

Scott isn’t here anymore. I keep trying to convince myself. At the same time I try to convince myself he is on a travel assignment and will FaceTime me soon. That doesn’t work for long. Yet even though he is not here, his light is here. His gentleness. His grace in all circumstances, even over and over again for those who did not deserve it. He lived like Jesus in that way, always believing that people could turn around and redeem themselves even though some constantly hurt him and never did change. It made me angry, not at him but for him.

Today will be the last time I see his face. I saw him after it was all over on the 10th and I know he doesn’t look the way he should because this didn’t happen the way it should have. Life turned on a dime and left me floundering in this abyss of grief and loss. But I will see him today for the last time until I see him again. And I know it will break open the hurt that keeps trying to hide underneath the beginnings of a scab, of scars that will keloid and never fade. I miss you, baby, so much. 💔

Dreamscapes & Dry Spells


May 21st, 2023

I’m afraid of sleeping. Of what I’ll dream about, or that of what I might not dream about (haven’t dreamed his face or his voice yet and I ask him to come to me even in dreams every night). I’m also afraid that once I actually sleep more than a few hours a night, I’ll realize it’s an escape and it will be all I want to do.

I’m afraid of people seeing me in what I’m calling a “dry spell” and not understanding just how much I miss him and that I’m dying inside because I just don’t have tears at that point (until I do and they won’t stop) and because my brain is working hard to compartmentalize and shut the boxes so it doesn’t hurt so badly. Not because other people’s opinion of my grief matters but because it feels like it matters that they know how important he was. Scott was upset when I didn’t cry the day he asked me to marry him. I had been a single mom for years and learned to hold it all in tight to keep from scaring my boys. After trapping it for so long, it became difficult to express any of those kinds of feelings. Oh, but i was sooo happy on the day he asked me – and the rest of the day we had one of the best days ever. It’s actually hard to differentiate because I feel like we had soooo many best days ever. Now, when I am crying, it feels like I can’t hold it in to save my life. When I’m not crying I feel guilty for even being able to function because I still don’t know how I have survived this many days without him.

I’m afraid of so many other things. Things about how I 𝘢𝘮 going to live without him here. Scott would have told you I was fearless, that the only thing that scared me was losing one of our kids. And that was pretty much true because I never worried about losing him. He wore his seat belt. I used to tease him about driving like a grandma, but he was very safe. He was nervous about the surgery, as anyone would be when their spinal cord was involved, and I told him not to be afraid, that this would be like any other surgery he’d had and that he would come out feeling so much better (and he did…for awhile). And no other woman was ever going to take him away from me. I was never afraid of that because he couldn’t talk about anything but me when he was away from me and he only wanted to be in the same room I was when he was not working. Anyone we knew would tell you that. We were inseparable and I thought we always would be. We said “til death do us part” 𝘢𝘯𝘥 𝘮𝘦𝘢𝘯𝘵 𝘪𝘵 when we got married. I thought we had until we were 80.

But there are three primary emotions with this grief: white hot anger, intense, devastating sorrow, and fear. Disbelief sneaks in there but then the anger takes over again and proves me wrong.

We didn’t take a wrong turn. We did everything we were supposed to do. We followed the rules for pre-op and post op. We did what insurance and doctors told us to do. And he was healthy, so healthy. This was not supposed to happen, under any circumstances, and yet it did, despite everything.

So I’m afraid a lot. I’m afraid of how long it is going to feel like for me before I see him face to face again and can tell him how much I love him and missed him. He wouldn’t have wanted to miss all of this, the goings on around here – the grandbabies, the graduations, the successes and accomplishments, the trips we had planned (we have a payment plan for our trip to Jamaica which was postponed due to his injury). And he wouldn’t have wanted me to miss this (although I never plan to ever go to Jamaica now, ever – we dreamed about this delayed honeymoon for over six years). He would want me to find a way to enjoy all of it but I just can’t see my way to that point right now.

The light and color is gone from my life and I feel like I’m watching a black & white movie with no sound or subtitles; it doesn’t make sense.

I’ll figure it out. No need to call for a welfare check. Scott also would have told you I was strong and for some reason he was really proud of that. I’ve lived through a lot and I’ll live through this. But before, he was always there 𝘪𝘯 the storm with me (ever since I’ve known him) 𝘢𝘯𝘥 on the other side of the storm. I know he will be this time but I have one hell of a hurricane to ride out. And so, I’m afraid of doing it alone.

Edited to add: Minutes after writing this post, my app alerted me to the verse of the day. Here is what it was today, because God is always on time. God is not the author of coincidence and, once you know Him, you’ll see that there are too many instances of “coincidence” to ever thing it was chance again.

“Peace is what I leave with you; it is my own peace that I give you. I do not give it as the world does. Do not be worried and upset; do not be afraid.
John 14:27 GNT

Don’t Give Up – Fairytales Are Real


May 19th, 2023

I want to say something to anyone out there who is jaded by difficult relationships, divorce, or just waiting so long to find “the One”.

Don’t give up. It’s out there, especially when God directs your steps. I’ve said that Scott was my fairytale from the day, yes, literally the day I met him. His sweet spirit was looking for mine while I had given up on looking. When we met, there was an electrical, spiritual connection that we couldn’t deny.

Oh we fussed and argued sometimes, mostly over things that are so trivial now; we’re humans and so emotions and stress and even hormones get in the way (TMI trigger warning: menopause is a beast). But he held on to me when I was in chaos and I held onto him when he was.

He told me to retire from nursing in February of 2021; I did so in April. There were a few reasons for this. The first was that he knew I had suffered through burnout for many years (nursing is not for the faint of heart) and that it wasn’t getting any better. He hated seeing me struggle as much as I was. Scott was on top of the world nursing at Jackson South in Miami so me crying over work every night broke his heart.

The second, a reason I loved with all my heart, was to have more time to spend with me. Scott was travel nursing and when I was working I had to rush down to Miami for a weekend or else ask for time off and see if it got approved and if I could get coverage. He said “then you can come see me anytime you want to and you can stay for a whole week or two”. And that’s what I did. The memories of all of those visits to him in Miami and New Hampshire and the memories of the road trip we made home together when he finished in NH and we took a slow ride home, stopping to stay in places with great food and enjoyable attractions, this will live inside me forever.

The third reason was this: I asked Scott when he said “just retire, we’ll be fine without your paycheck”. I asked, “but who will I be then? What is my purpose going to be?” My last baby was going to be graduating soon and, although I’m still a mom, I knew it soon would not be the same. And I loved being Scott’s wife so much but I feared I would feel useless and without direction. He said, in an almost prophetic way, honey, one day we’re going to have grandchildren. You always said that you wished you could have stayed home with the boys. Now you can be a stay-at-home grandma and it will save the kids tons of money in daycare so you’ll be helping them, too. (This was just over a year before we ever knew that Lillian Reese was coming into our lives). And so I agreed. I’m so very glad I did. Because if I had kept working we would have had more money…but I wouldn’t trade the last two years (or the last ten) for anything in the world, certainly not for money.

A love like that, so selfless and pure, I never believed existed. He wanted to take care of me. He wanted me to be happy. He was really enjoying travel nursing (especially in Miami) but he knew I was floundering so he came up with a solution. He stayed with me during one of the toughest battles of my life before that and then saved me from other tough ones. Because of who he was, I’ll never doubt that, every day since we met, he loved me with every beat of his heart. True love, fairytale love, unimaginable love does exist. I felt blessed and so grateful to have it every day, even when we fussed over things. It was the forever kind and I will cherish it forever, even though our time was far too short.

So DON’T GIVE UP. Don’t settle. Don’t stop believing in the miracle. Don’t expect it to always be easy but if it’s really a gift straight from God, it will almost all of the time.

I was twitterpated (ref. Bambi) since the day I met him. That never stopped.

A Love Worth Living For


May 11th, 2023

Scott and I had the most beautiful love story.  

I had been a single mom for years.  I had given up on dating.  People who worked with me then could tell you that I had decided I would be happy to live the rest of my life just taking care of my boys and reading books.  I was done – stick a fork in me.  Being in love cost too much and I wasn’t a rich woman anymore.  I was drained.  I didn’t know then that there was someone God was wrapping His arms around right then who was done, too.  And God already knew that He could blow those theories out of the water with what he had planned for Scott and I.  We couldn’t have even imagined how good it was gonna get.

I had become fiercely independent in the years I was on my own with my boys.  I could do it all.  I could change my own tire and my own oil.  I could rip out the insides of the back of my toilet and replace them (with the help of my baby sister and a bottle of red for amusement…we didn’t even need the wine because we were pretty amused and amusing).  I could work like a boss and could mom like one, too.  I was trying to prove that if Superwoman existed, here I was.  I didn’t need a man.  So there.

Scott was the quintessential southern gentleman.  Chivalrous, kind, thoughtful, and he literally put everyone before himself.  How anyone would ever have let him go was always beyond me but, when I found him, I truly thanked God for the broken roads.  He still opened car and rooms doors ahead of me, pulled out chairs, wouldn’t let me walk on the outside of the sidewalk…all things I had been teaching my boys already hoping they would one day turn into the kind of man he was (spoiler alert: they did, and they all saw him doing these things as a man’s example and not their just their mama reminding them).

We met in a little tiny office outside of the emergency room at the hospital where I already worked and where Scott had recently been hired.  I don’t even know what it was.  I was staunchly opposed to ever being in a relationship again and in walks this man who didn’t do or say anything outlandish but to whom, I swear to you, I was instantly conjoined in a way I couldn’t explain.  A friend who was in the room teased me afterwards for making googly eyes at Scott and I told him he was crazy because I didn’t do that.  But I was somehow instantly twitterpated (my beautiful mother-in-law’s words soon after we met).  For the next two weeks I could scarcely think of anything else.  I sought reasons to go to the ER when he was working and flirt with him shamelessly.  Scott would later tell me he already felt the same connection but, being much more recently divorced than I and still very haunted, he thought he was just imagining that I kept showing up to see and talk to him, that I was just being nice to the new guy (who didn’t even work in my department).  We were both jaded but God was putting the pressure on because we were straight-up already connected in a way I will never be able to fully explain.  I can tell you that, if you don’t believe in love-at-first-sight, you’re wrong.  We both felt it.  

I often joked in the following years that I had to chase him for two whole weeks before he’d even give me the time of day and ask me out on a date.  He would staunchly deny that and tell me that he thought about it constantly, too, but just knew “someone like me” would turn him down.  Someone like me…he always made me feel that way, like someone he couldn’t believe he had.  But he had my whole heart and soul.  I was the lucky one.

Our first date was dinner at the Brown Lantern and then a walk through Lowe’s to find a ceiling fan he needed at home.  We each didn’t want to go home so we went to my house and watched a movie on my couch.  When he left, I remember asking God what He was doing because I didn’t want to hurt again and I knew that was what love does but somehow this felt different.  It felt like…right.  It felt like a gift.  It felt like the rest of my life.  God, I wish it had been the rest of my life.  But I know that he wouldn’t have wanted to be here without me either.

About two weeks of random bouquets of flowers and dates, and Scott stealing my car keys while I worked, taking it to completely detail it and leave flowers inside and on top of it before putting them back right before I left work, later…he told me he loved me.  And I didn’t say it back.  I panicked.  I thought, we’ve dated for two weeks, this is too fast, this is crazy.  And then I called him and told him I loved him back – not because I felt pressured by his words but because I admittedly couldn’t explain how they were true but our hearts were already sewn together by a thread that we would turn into marriage one day.

We met each others kids, five boys between us, and started having dates with all of us together sometimes.  It wasn’t seamless because blending has its own drama but we were so in love that we just became more and more tightly knit with every obstacle.  And there were plenty.  We always persevered.  Our song was I Want Crazy by Hunter Hayes.  

“But I don’t want “good” and I don’t want “good enough”

I want “can’t sleep, can’t breathe without your love”

Front porch and one more kiss

It doesn’t make sense to anybody else

Who cares if you’re all I think about?

I’ve searched the world and I know now

It ain’t right if you ain’t lost your mind

Yeah, I don’t want easy, I want crazy”

And we had crazy.  We had all of the above.  Every bit of it.  We had a fairytale.

But fairytales always have scary parts where the wicked witch gets you to take a bite of the apple.  We had that, too.  We both had lived through so much trauma and that doesn’t just disappear.  Although mine and Scott’s love never faltered, life kept on trying to intervene and mess things up.  I can tell you with 100% accuracy that Scott has loved me at my best and he has loved me at and through my worst.  And his bests and worsts were different than mine, because we weren’t the same person but just shared the same heart, but I loved him wholeheartedly through all of his.  Yes, we had fights.  We ranted at each other sometimes over what seem like the silliest things now.  Sometimes we even let the sun go down on our anger but it never lasted long.  We never spent a day not loving each other.  Not a single one.

Scott always made me feel like he didn’t deserve me.  I always knew it was the other way around.  He loved me unyieldingly, unshakeably, tremendously.  He loved everyone.  Scott didn’t just make friends everywhere he went – he made family.  He was the most magnificent nurse because he worked tirelessly and endlessly to not only care for his patients with a fervor that made others tired just watching, but he cared for his coworkers, helping anyone in need at the drop of a hat.  Every travel assignment begged him to renew his contract.  They knew what they’d be missing when he left.  And I don’t think I’ve ever met a nurse with whom he worked who didn’t tell me that he talked about me, all the time, and how much he loved me.  I joked with him about the percentage of female nurses on these travel assignments and to watch out for their womanly wiles but it was all in jest because I knew.  He always made sure I knew from him and everyone else.  And before twenty years of nursing, he was a very proud member of the United States Air Force, a war veteran of Desert Storm having served two tours during the Gulf War.  Scott’s entire life was devoted to service of others.  I have been so very blessed to have him in mine.

He always wanted me to need him and I fought him for a good while because of my independence.  It used to aggravate him that I wanted to do everything myself and he just wanted to help.  The funny thing is that I don’t even really know when that stopped because he listened to me, understood the reasons behind my hard-won independence, and slowly moved brick by brick to tear my wall down.  It was like, as he moved the bricks off of my wall, he laid them in a stack next to me so i would always know they were there if I needed to take them back…and then I never wanted to again.  I knew I was safe with him.  My heart was safe, I was safe, our family was safe.  I know that I got comfortable needing him a long time ago but I can’t tell you when because he helped me into it with a gentleness that made me not feel insecure or weak for doing it.  He loved me right into it.  

When my beautiful husband left this earthly plane yesterday, my heart shattered into millions and millions of tiny pieces.  I’ve lost my balance because he was the other side of it.  I’ve lost so much that the only way I know how to give it words was to tell you what we were together.  Even then, it doesn’t do us or the loss any justice.  Everyone keeps saying “there are no words” and you’re right.  There were no words grand enough, big enough, sweet enough, kind enough, amazing enough, to describe the man my husband was.  And there are not enough words to describe who we were together.  We won together and we lost together.  And now I am lost alone.  And each minute that passes (that feels like an hour) keeps shouting at me that there is no resolution to this.  I’ve missed him when he was travel nursing but we always, every single day, talked on the phone, texted constantly, and there were visits – him to home and me to him.  Today I don’t know how I will fill my time.  We didn’t hang out with other people much.  We had friends and we loved a lot of people but we were always content to just be together.  We were always together even when we were forced to be physically apart.  My soul feels the emptiness where his left this world yesterday.  It feels so very dark.  I’m so thankful for every single moment that we had to spend together, loving each other.

Scott was a man saved by grace.  He is undoubtedly singing praises at the foot of the King of Kings.  His neck and back don’t hurt anymore.  His PTSD demons don’t haunt him any longer.  There is no fear or anguish or pain for him anymore.  I’m thankful for that.  And I know how hurt and lost he would have been without me if I had gone first so I’m glad he doesn’t have to feel what I’m feeling now. 

I have the most beautiful, wonderful children to walk with me.  It hurts me to see how hurt they are right now and also that seeing me hurt is hurting them.  But I want them all to know that I would never have given up the opportunity to have a love so very BIG, to forego the loss I am feeling so very much now.  

My message to you: Love is worth the risk. If you ever have the chance to love this big, take it.  It’s gonna feel messy sometimes.  You’re going to feel mad, sad, frustrated, irritated sometimes.  Being so close that you can’t tell your own heart from that of someone else makes those kinds of feelings inevitable.  Take those things with a grain of salt and forgive.  And forgive again.  And again.  Don’t take it for granted.  Don’t waste it.  Savor it.  

I feel like we both knew what we had.  We savored it.

Jonathan Scott Raulerson – 1/22/74 – 5/10/23

My Grief Journey


There have been two HUGE losses in my life in the last two months. I don’t know how to recover. The boat feels as if it has filled, already, with so much water, that I’ll never be able to dump enough buckets to keep from sinking.

On April 23, 2023 my 14 year old nephew died…suicide. He was so very young. So full of life and joy. My sister said he was full of color and noise and, with him, it made perfect sense to me. It was so unexpected and shocking. My family reeled from the loss and from the questions…why? My husband and I drove the hour and a half to get to my sister and her family as quickly as we could. We sat in her driveway as police officers and investigators traipsed in and out of her home, documenting the scene.

My sister and her husband were the ones to see him first. They heard a gunshot and ran upstairs to his bedroom, having to kick in the door to get to him. A gruesome scene that no parent should ever have to endure and that will never leave their memory.

We spent the next two weeks with them, making arrangements, fielding phone calls and text messages, helping organize food deliveries and visitors, and just trying to provide any comfort or relief that we could.

I didn’t know then that those were the last two weeks my husband and I would have together.

We went home for my middle son’s graduation from college and then for the couple of days before my husband was scheduled for a “routine” and common surgery. Something our surgeon had performed hundreds of times. The details of what happened are not important at this moment except that my husband died just after midnight following his surgery. Our surgeon was not at fault; there was a complication that is not common but is known to be a risk of this particular surgery. It was a complication that could have been corrected fairly easily but the hospital staff overlooked every warning sign that it was occurring even as we kept begging for someone to help because we, as nurses with a combined 50 years of experience, knew something was not right and we were ignored, treated as if my husband was just experiencing anxiety and I was being an overzealous caregiver as I advocated for treatment for my husband.

I was with him when he coded. I yelled for the nurse to call the code, to get help. I was escorted shortly after to an ICU waiting room where I was told he would be transferred.

He never arrived there. Instead I was approached nearly an hour later by a physician who had responded to the code blue and three other unidentified people, all walking toward me in tandem. He never had to tell me. I saw the look on his face as he walked toward me down the hall and all I remember is screaming “NOOOO!” and sliding down the wall to the floor, a puddle of despair.

And so then my own grief journey began, just fifteen days after my sister’s world had crumbled. I’d walked with her through the beginning of her walk with grief and still had no idea how to keep breathing as I was navigating it myself. My husband was 49 years old. A little younger than I am, even. How did this happen?

I wrote this following passage when my nephew passed away, unknowing that tragedy would soon strike again, and I couldn’t seem to figure out how it had happened. Why? What next? How do I do this? The next few paragraphs are from the day after my sweet nephew died, but also strangely applied the morning I got home from the hospital after my husband dying:

When I put these clothes on yesterday morning, everything was normal. And now I’m still wearing them, but nothing will ever be normal again. It’s irrevocable. 💔 Jesus, help me. Please.

I still don’t understand how you can wake up one morning and everything is “normal”, the day goes the way most of the rest of them go, you’re just living in the beautiful monotony of everyday life…and then it’s gone. The normal is gone, irrevocably, unexplainedly, devastatingly gone. There are why’s that can never be answered. It feels as if the world just stopped, or it swallowed you up, and yet everyone is still moving around, doing normal things, when normal is gone and can never come back. Your heart aches like it’s being squeezed and pummeled and tortured and savagely ripped apart and people you love are suffering in a way that will never, ever allow them to breathe a whole breath again. Terrible, awful things happen to other people, the ones on TV or movies, all the time…but not to us, right?

It was never supposed to be like this. It’s not supposed to be this way. There would have been a warning. Someone turn back the clock. Please, please, please, turn it back. Give me time back. Please.


After my husband, Scott, died, I began to use writing as a tool to process my grief, as I often had in the past. What follows in the upcoming posts are the things I wrote about as grief fell over me in wave upon wave, crashing and pounding me into something that felt unrecognizable. The world became unfamiliar. Time didn’t make sense as it somehow moved quickly and agonizingly slowly at the same time. The only way I knew to sort out and process what I was feeling was to write about it, get it down in print so that I could read back over it, change the wording to match the way it really felt, and then wait for the next wave to crest.

My hope in posting this is that, in some way, my thoughts will reach someone who is suffering a similar path and that, as some of these feelings resonate with you, you will realize that you are not alone. You are not “going crazy,” because, believe me, it feels like it sometimes. You’ll realize that the things you’re being forced to experience are normal for this process and, most importantly, that you will live through it.

As I’m typing this introduction, I confess that I am not yet on the other side of this Category 5 hurricane, the storm that still rages over my everyday life. I don’t even know if there is “another side” to come out on. As I begin posting my journal pages to you, two months have passed since he died. Two months since the last time that I saw his face when he was alive and breathing. Two months since the last day he said “I love you, baby,” and I said it back.

In much of these journal pages that will follow, I am speaking myself into healthy patterns of grieving by giving reminders of the One who holds my future and to turn to Him when I am lost, alone, sobbing, screaming, questioning, and distraught.

God didn’t “take him too soon.” Neither of them, actually. I don’t even believe that God caused his death. It was a result of the prevalence of sin in our world, like so many other things that take place here. People who made poor decisions about his care caused it. Lack of empathy caused it. Lack of professionalism caused it. Maybe even some ignorance caused it, although it doesn’t seem that way. The enemy is always seeking ways to destroy those who love Jesus and the willingness of others to engage in sin are ingredients of the perfect recipe.

He almost succeeded with me, in destroying me; he’s still actively trying every single day. Those are all things that I have had to come to terms with forgiving; admittedly, I backtrack on forgiveness at times and then have to lay it all down at the feet of Jesus again. You’ll read of times when my soul cried out in anger comingled with anguish. And you’ll read about how I walk myself back toward Jesus so that I can feel at peace.

My husband knew Jesus. He’s getting to hang out with his own brother, who died just 15 months prior, my step-dad who thought Scott was the cat’s meow, my Granny, whom he never met Earthside but who I know would have absolutely loved him just because of the way he loved me. Scott is living in glory now and I’m thankful for that. He isn’t in pain, isn’t suffering the way we are down here. He is free and is spending his days worshipping. I can’t wait to see him again and get the grand tour.

I hope in reading on, you’ll find a little bit of your own peace. I hope you’ll be drawn to rest in the arms of Jesus when you can find no rest any other way. I hope, in some way, your pain is diminished, even a little, by the words of someone who has traveled a similar path. I hope it feels like I am holding your hand as we manage it together.

In His Love,
Jennifer

Tick Tock…


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VERY IMPORTANTLY EDITED TO ADD:

For those of you just joining the merry-go-round ride that has been my life, the posts up until this one have been about learning to a single mom, learning to be alone, learning to persevere, learning to be okay with just being me, not a part of an us.

And I had finally become okay with it.  I was, yes, somewhat jaded, but I had decided that I was better off alone than with the wrong person.

Then the right person…the only person…came along.  This post was made five days after my very first date with my husband (yes, my second husband but the one who God sent to me,) my soulmate.  Did you know that I met him somewhere around two weeks before and already knew we were meant to be together?  That God was somehow whispering in my ear:  “This is him…now you’re ready…”

I don’t know why words, writing, has only every come to me in darkness; it’s when God speaks to me more clearly, I suppose.  And perhaps I should take that as a hint, now that I think about it.  Maybe I’m just listening more intently in darkness.

If you’re just now jumping in, during my exhaustive grief journey, learning about this thing I am calling my life but have yet to fully understand, I wanted you to know that this was him.  If you go back and look at the dates yourself, there was this huge gap between when I met him and when he unwillingly left me…and that was the time that I wasn’t sad.  The time that I wasn’t in the dark.  The time that I was truly loved.

AUGUST 18th, 2013

Is today a new day? Is a new hour actually at hand? Seconds tick by on the clock of human existence and I wait, still hesitant to believe that a change would ever come.

A standstill has been in effect. A time warp has presided over life and love for what has seemed like centuries…or has it been minutes? No. Time has halted in an effort to thwart the loss of any further tears in the form of love blood lost in the heat of a heart’s battle. Time stopped for me because I became jaded. It stopped because I was lost. How can one go on looking when one knows the consequences of heartache? Of the murderous slaughter of one’s former understanding of “love”? How?

But…well…I digress.

So, has time now begun to move forward again? I am afraid to feel the merry-go-round begin to spin in its ever-forward, mild and perpetual motion. I fear the haunting noise of the childish, happy music and the laughter, feigning joy and bubbling sanguine spirit as the ride speeds slowly upon its course to full speed. And yet the most gentle and benign of all excursions is like a death-defying roller coaster of doom to my pitiable countenance. Who will calm my hysteria? How can my panic be allayed?
Whispering winds float between the whimsical horses: “Sois Courageuse”. There is only one way. Only one source has the influence to overcome past wrongdoing and defy fear itself. “Sois Courageuse” – “Be Brave” The horses in their painted costumes prance merrily around the circuit and I feel a childish amusement returning as I watch. Standing, carefully but feeling just the beginning of a carefree skip, only the rider can choose the mount. Is today really a new day? Is a new hour truly at hand? Where is the clock? How does one know?…

Guilt Trips: Free Tickets Available


About a week ago, I was standing in a local store with my mom and she’s talking to me about my boys, my three, thriving, growing, smart, amazing boys.  She says to me, out of the blue, “You need to start looking for…”  “STOP, Mom.  No, I don’t.”, I say.  Because I could already tell where she was going with this.  But she could not take the hint and I was already beginning to turn red.  This is always the way the conversation has to go for her.  “You are depriving them of…(and I stopped her again because I’m familiar with the pattern but I’ll finish it for you…’a positive male role model’).  “No, Mama.  I’m not.  They have him.”  And I point to my step-dad who was walking with us and who lives only one block away from me.  My boys have their dad but they also have someone who comes to my rescue when my house is broken into.  They have someone who comes immediately when they are in the E.R., and their dad does, too.   They still see someone who comes over to help me fix things that are broken at my house if it’s something that I haven’t learned how to fix yet.  And they do still have a Dad who goes to their soccer games, who hugs them and who tells them that he loves them when they’re at his house.  We just don’t all happen to live together as a big happy family anymore.  Besides all of that, I just so happen to have learned to be a pretty good XBOX fixer, I can change out broken toilet parts myself, fix leaky sinks, change tires and do many other boy things that quite a few moms haven’t had the joy of learning.  Just because they’re boys, do I not count; I’m the role model!  Hey, hey…look at me over here!  (Insert eye roll here…)

What an insult to say that I’m depriving them because I’m not out “looking” for a replacement dad.  First of all, I would never.  Second of all, WHA???   If I have learned one thing, one very important thing, from being married, divorced and single again, it is that I don’t NEED someone.  I remember thinking that life was all about finding someone to complete you.  As it turns out, I am the only one who can complete me.  I just had to figure out what all my pieces were and where to put them.  I’ve learned so much (and still am) about who I am and what I’m all about.  I know now that it was silly for me to ever think or expect someone else to be able to fill up the holes that I, myself, didn’t even have the pieces for, or didn’t know where to locate them.  I had to wait to understand the gaps myself and am much better equipped now to be a better, more whole person than I was when I was waiting around for someone to “complete me”.

Right now I am truly not looking for anyone.  I don’t even know that I’m really capable of a deep trust with people anymore anyway.  I care about people but I’ve come to understand that people will always let you down and that we just love them anyway, faults and all, because we’re all made that way.  We can’t even help it.  So, just don’t tell me to be on the lookout and don’t send me out looking, okay?  I’m good.  Image

But I like my head in the sand…what???


Have you ever found yourself wanting to just drop away from reality for awhile?  Things get complicated or overwhelming or even downright frightening and you just want to disappear from that part of life while finding a tiny season of blissful forgetfulness and enjoyment?  Oh, brother, I have.

I love my children and, overall, my life, with wild abandon.  We deal with trying times (after all, I have a teen and preteen now) and difficult days  but, through it all, they are mine, this life is mine, and I will never cease seeking the answers to why it didn’t go a certain way or how it is “supposed to go” from this point forward.  I know there are times that I have done it all wrong.  Am I doing it right, now?  This is not purposed by self-denigration but, rather, by a yearning for self-discovery.  I think that, overall in my life, I have typically been in such a rush to be happy that I have taken enjoyable moments and made lifelong decisions based on temporary enchantment.  At some point, I look back at said resolutions (and revolutions) and think….”why didn’t I just slow down and try a little objectivity before that one?”  I can actually often look back and remember hearing a little voice inside my head saying “This is probably not the best decision but, well, you’re happy right now; feels good, right?…You can figure out how to be happy again after this happy wears off…”  Ughhhh.  I’m disgusted with the asinine absurdity of that whole idea and yet, yep, that’s been me.  Most euphoria is temporary but it’s circumstances can take much longer to be relinquished than originally embarked upon.

Take marriage for example.  A happy “honeymoon” period is like the teasing and tantalizing effect of a drug.  Exhilaration, euphoria, optimism, mirth and enchantment are your companion emotions at the start.  At some point after that, however, the desire to run away will surface.  Somewhere along the path to longevity, I think we all find ourselves in a spot saying…”what did I get myself into and how can I get out?”  Now, I’m not saying that everyone should get out at that point.  This is just the moment of truth at which you make a decision to stand and fight for it and for a better understanding of how it should work, sit and cower under the feelings of self-pity and self-loathing, or jump ship and run like hell to the nearest exit sign as the fire licks at your heels.  The “drug” wears off and the low kicks in.  Or the hangover, if that’s easier to understand.  And this doesn’t have to be about marriage.  Pick your own analogy and insert here: ________.  Chase high, escape low, ad nauseum with no completion.

I think I often want to spend too much of my time with my head in the sand.  I mean, ostriches are kind of cool birds.  Granted, they have the mental capability of a toddler in a peek-a-boo routine (if I can’t see you, you can’t see me) but they are still regal in their own way.  Or if I take a deep breath once in awhile and plunge my head beneath the water, it is quieter there.  The sunlight glitters across the bottom of the cerulean pool, chaotic noise is dramatically muffled and the weightless feel of the gentle rock, to and fro, of the water is calming.  If I didn’t need to breathe, I could live there…well, except that divas don’t actually like to get all pruny.  But we can choose to take a break from reality sometimes.  The “I need to run!” urge can be settled a little as long as the break is temporary and is not a way to avoid truths.

So, how does one decide whether the current longitude and latitude of life is the vacation spot or the permanent homestead?  I need to learn a long-sought ability to step back from a situation and to veritably see some kind of truth in it.  Is the run-and-hide instinct just a product of my miserable failings prior to this intersection of life or is it a visceral instinct, animalistic and primal in nature but necessary for survival?

(((sigh))) Just new…well, maybe not so new but resurfaced…points to ponder for the day…and night, as it would seem.  Somehow it feels as if a fairy princess dress and tiara with some rockin’ high kicks (sparkly ones, of course) should just fix things.  Diva dreams…

Someday My Prince Will Come


Someday...“Hey…that guy over there…he’s checking you out…”  “Me?  How do you know he’s not checking you out?”  “Well, he just looks like he’s more your type.”  “Uh…okay…why couldn’t he be YOUR type?  What is wrong with him that he’s not your type, then, huh?”  “Geez…forget it.  He wasn’t looking at you.  He was probably checking me out.”  “Really?  Do you think so?  Well, is there some reason he wouldn’t have been looking at me?  Do you think these are Mom jeans?  I look too old, don’t I?  Is there toilet paper stuck to my shoe?…”

Why on earth can’t I just be normal?  Or, is this what normal is all about?  Is neurotic actually normal and everyone just thinks abnormal people are actually neurotic?

I am failing miserably at figuring out how to re-enter the atmosphere of dating.  Frankly, it terrifies me.  In high school, I had one boyfriend at a time (never “dating” as much as “going together”) and then met my ex-hasbeen at the tender age of 17.  I married him at 23 and then, well, the rest is history.  After divorce, I spent an entire year alone in my house, just waiting for my children to call saying they wanted to come back home from their Dad’s…and they often did.  I dedicated my life to my job (ugh), my children and my pathetic hobby of wallowing in self-pity.  This year, although a time of insight into the “supposed to be” of my life, was a pit of hell.  It was time to move on.

I then spent two years in an impossible relationship.  No big details here but suffice it to say that long distance relationships do not ultimately work when there is no reasonable hope to close the distance.  Love does not conquer all.  Love is actually depressing when it has no foreseeable future.  Meh.

Recently, a friend suggested I meet another friend.  Enter the “Facebook Friend Suggestion” and flirty instant messaging.  You know, I am much more verbose and witty in typeface than in face to face combat…I mean, conversation.  In real life, in emotional situations, I can be rather taciturn.  It would appear that the same is true for others sometimes.  Actually, no, this guy pulled out all the stops when it came to manners (opening car doors, pulling out chairs), flattery and literary quotes.  I was quite stuck between “this cannot be real” and “oh, my goodness…what if this is real?”.  Alas, I allowed myself to fall into the slippery slope of the latter belief and then, within three weeks, Romance Man turned into Stalker-Pushy-We-Should-Get-Married guy.  No, I’m not kidding…three weeks.  Gah!

And so, where does a girl like me find myself now?  In the middle of a gargantuan mud puddle of mistrust and disillusionment.  Love is not transparent; you cannot tell if it’s real or not, right off.  Love is not fair; if you actually find it, it may be impossibly rooted in soil in which you cannot be planted and flourish.  Love is not a promise of forever and of rocking in a porch swing with gray hair, holding hands with someone you share grandchildren with.  Love is maybe…just not.

And what does a fairy tale believing girl do with all of this information?  She puts on her high heels, pins her tiara snugly to her crown of curls, lines & shines her lips then kisses a napkin…and walks right back out into this world looking for the one and only Mr. Right.  You see, I refuse to be permanently disenchanted.  Someday, my prince will come…goodbye, froggies…