Summer ended without warning. I woke up one day and it was gone. The stores are full of everything pumpkin and the leaves have started to change. I'm not ready. I am not ready to face fall.
In the past, the fall used to be my most favorite season. I loved that it meant slowing down a little, staying home more, and eating soup. I love soup. But obviously, now fall holds an entirely different perspective. Over the last (almost) three years, I have tried really hard to change my outlook on October. But despite my best efforts, I can't do it. I try so hard to be strong and cope and deal with the grief that runs throughout my life. It's frustrating to find myself feeling weak, crying almost daily, and reflecting on the worst season of my life. A season that has turned into three years of hardships and heartache.
This last week has been incredibly exhausting. I hate complaining about my kids. It's been 6 years since my first miscarriage. I remember it vividly. I remember the months and months leading up to finally getting pregnant. The struggles, the tears, the negative tests. And then it finally happened. And then we lost the baby. During that time, I told myself over and over to remember how badly I want to be a mom. I told myself that someday I would be a mom. I know there are many people who struggle with their own fight of getting pregnant or having a family. I know there are many people who have lost their own children. I know there are many people who would give anything to be expericing the "terrible twos." I am cautious to express how hard this has been but I also think it is vital because of the uniqueness that comes from my situation as a widow. A very young widow.
Rylan has been an absolute terror lately. He wakes up whining and doesn't stop until he's asleep. Everything I ask of him gets a "NO!" shouted back at me. Everything is an arugement. Everything requires my patience and guidance and discipline. Rylan naturally has a very grating cry. Even as a baby, the sound of his cry has worn on me. And lately, it is all I hear from him. It's exhausting.
I have faced a lot of really, really hard moments over the last 35 months. Watching Matt pass, picking out his casket, burying him, and giving birth to Rylan without Matt beside me come to mind as some of the hardest moments of my life. But single parenting, as a widow, is by far the hardest, constant, thing I have ever done.
I have always had really wonderful support from mine and Matt's parents. I have found it incredibly beneficial to attend therapy regularly. And I have friends who love me. I have a village. But despite the size and support of this village, I am still, ultimately, doing this alone. The parenting falls soley on me. I can't expect anyone but me, their mom, to raise them and discipline them. I can't expect anyone but me to make sure their behavior is in check. And of course they are well-behaved for everyone except me. That's how most kids are.
This last week I have literally felt trapped in my own home. Trapped with my kids and no escape. I think of when I was growing up and when my mom would reach her limit with us kids. She was able to leave. She was able to say to my dad that she needed to go on a drive or take a walk. She was able to hide upstairs in their bathroom with a glass of wine in the tub. And my dad would make sure we didn't bother her. My mom could decompress, refocus, and chill out.
I have had countless offers from friends and family saying they will watch my kids anytime I need them. They have told me they would be happy to take my kids off my hands so I can go to the store alone or get a massage. And beleive me, I appreciate the offers so much. The problem is scheduling. The problem is thinking ahead. It's the moments that I need a break the most, the situations I need someone the most, and I don't have him. I don't have Matt. I don't have him walking through the door in the evenings and knowing I can leave the house and just breathe.
This week has tested me. This week has worn me down.
We are just a month away from the 3 year anniversary of Matt's passing. I thought time passing would make things easier. But it doesn't. Time doesn't heal. Time changes. The heaviness in my chest is the same today as it's been over the last 35 months. I don't miss Matt any less. I don't think of him less often. I still wish every single day that my life was different.
I am constantly trying to find ways to honor and remember Matt. I have expressed the importance of this before. I especially want Olivia and Rylan to know and remember their dad. But I also believe that Matt is worth that. He's worth us crying, he's worth us mentioning his name, he's worth us raising a glass and toasting him. This year, I want to try and bring that to a bigger place. I want all of us, the people impacted by Matt's passing, to remember Matt. I want us to think of him on October 15th. I want us to raise a glass, alcoholic or not, and honor him. Matt's time of death was 5:50 AM on October 15, 2015. My idea is this: wherever you are, whatever you're doing, at 5:50 PM on October 15th, raise a glass to Matt. If you can, take a picture and send it to myself, my family, or Matt's family. We want to feel the love, the support, and know that we are together, we are connected, because of this incredible person.
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