Grabbing near the edges of my long, kelly green wool coat, I wrapped myself tighter, and exited Christian County Judicial Center for the last time. The air was colder than I remember from past visits but this time my shoulders were tight from the coolness not the anger, bitterness, and tension that I usually exit with. This chapter has ended. The chapter where the person who was responsible for making this wife a widow finally agreed to pay a $25 violation fine for his negligence. To be clear, I have spent more than that in gas money traveling countless times to court, anticipating a resolution and hoping for a sign of remorse. Yesterday I was given the opportunity to address James O’Neal and the Court, the following letter was my response:
Category: grief
45 days
It has been 45 days since the accident, 25 since I kissed him goodbye and wiped his last tears, yet it feels like yesterday. Most days I have to remind myself this is real, this is my new life. I don’t like it, I question why him? Why not me? Why such a senseless tragedy at all? I’ll never have an answer, I know.
Today I went and picked up the accident report from the Sheriff’s Office, they asked matter of factly the date and where it occurred, I only knew the date so as tears came to my eyes I just said “he was the one that hit the hog in the road”. Instantaneously the lady’s face dropped and she said ok, I know that one and she rushed away to retrieve it. As she brought me the papers and stamped them she just looked at me and said “I’m so sorry” and all I could say back was “Me too…..me too”. As I got in my car, I looked over the report and reconstruction drawing, in disbelief really, and almost in autopilot I went on to the towing company to drop off paperwork.
I’m not sure what I was thinking, I just pulled in and there it was, the gold Prius usually in my driveway, just sitting there, crushed like a tin can. It took me a moment before I could go into the office, I spoke briefly to the company’s clerk and then said “I’m going to look at the car”, all she could say back was “stay strong”. What did that even mean? I wondered. Why does every one keep using that word? As I walked around the tangled car I could hardly tell which parts went where, there was no glass in the windows and I couldn’t help but become overwhelmed with anger and sadness. As I opened the passenger side door, just to glance, I saw the shirt that had been cut off at the scene, damp from the recent weather but dried with blood at the same time. My only instinct was to grab it and as I slid down beside the glass covered seat asking why, I realized there is no staying strong, I’m not strong and maybe I never will be. As the smell of blood circled my head, I wiped my tears and hesitantly laid the shirt back in the car and slowly closed the door. I closed the door and with a deep breath I walked away. I walked away from the one thing I looked for, that intuitively eased my mind every afternoon as I arrived home, in that deep breath I felt my heart sink.
Please don’t worry about me, I know my posts are heavy but grief for me is just that, a weight that is hard to carry. I really only write for reflection later on, hoping for clarity at some point not pity or attention. For your reassurance, I am getting out of the house more, mainly so people will stop telling me I need to do so (don’t worry if you are one of those people, I’m not offended or bothered by it). I have gone to the gym once, one and a half times if you count the twenty minutes I stood around mostly looking for nothing and not doing much more than that. I went to church again last week, Amaya’s cheer practice and I’ve not cancelled any chiropractor appointments.
Christmas this year, on the other hand, it is cancelled. I’m not boycotting Jesus’ birth but we aren’t celebrating with parties or gatherings. I can’t fake my way through it like Thanksgiving, I can’t put up a tree or buy gifts without guilt so I booked a trip away from the place we’ve always celebrated Christmas. I feel guilty being in a room full of people who love Troy (us) so much, but only have me as a reminder he isn’t there. Everyone is trying to find their new normal and navigate the heaviness of loss and I pray they find some comfort sooner rather than later. Guilt is a weird emotion that takes over and makes me second guess every decision, including getting away but I’m not sure that the bitterness and sadness of waking up on Christmas morning, just the two us, won’t be just as overwhelming. I miss the chaos of tradition and the joy that Christmas has always brought, maybe next year will be different, maybe we will be able to find some peace and happiness instead of pain and heartbreak. We shall see. 
Unexplainable
I’ve been hesitant to write, mostly out of anger, maybe some regret and even out of the overwhelming sadness that comes with every thought. Not writing sometimes because I just feel like I’m telling the same things over and over. I miss you so much that my body is physically aching, my eyes sting and my head hurts from the constant wandering thoughts that plague me.
I’m angry at myself mostly, I regret every goodbye kiss I took for granted and not fully listening to every thought about work, football or baseball. I’m angry that I accidentally deleted a whole folder of photos from my phone just a couple of weeks before the wreck. I’m angry that when talking to Amaya I still say “we’ll talk about it”, which used to mean you and I would let her know an answer later, now it just means I’m talking to myself. I’m overwhelmed with sadness because I can never see you again, never hear your laugh or touch you. I’m scared that memories of you may fade one day, that details will slip my mind. I’m scared to live a life without you. I know people say you are here with me but it is not the same. It never will be and that is the scariest part of waking up every day.
I’m angry with God, I may have said that before but I’ll say it again. I know that you shouldn’t question God, I should have faith that I can make it through and that He will be there guiding me along the way. I’m not proud that I question Him about this whole situation, but I do. I remember us having this same conversation about your mom over and over, you truly believed that with the amount of people praying for her healing she would receive a miracle and that would be a testament to how great of a God we serve. It was still somewhat unbelievable, twenty years later, that she didn’t and you lost her. I guess I never fully grasped the emotions you had from that time until now. Well I had the same faith through your hospital stay, I truly believed that you would be healed no matter how long the road, that this testimony would bring people closer to Him and you would get a chance to have your miracle. My heart breaks for you. My heart breaks for our family. It is shattered.
Last night I walked with Amaya along the Christmas parade route so she could be normal again, with her friends, hopefully without her mom being a basket case of tears. At the very last minute I bought light up necklaces, candy and bags. I took deep breaths and made little eye contact with onlookers. As we lined up all I could think was last year we were here together, proud cheer parents, smiles, with coffee from Fidalgo Bay but also a plan to get away quickly to watch The Ohio State play. Knowing I will never have that again, well it sucks quite frankly. We finished the parade, I dropped Amaya off to be with her dad and I went home and watched the Buckeyes go on to win the Big 10 Championship again, but I would give anything to have my biggest Buckeye fan here with me. I miss you.
This morning I woke up and went to church, Mom came too. Kory delivered the sermon today, I stared at the screens mostly not singing for fear the tears in my eyes would start falling. Although the Christmas series started today, he touched on God being the cornerstone of our lives and then said something to the affect of if your family is your cornerstone, instead of God and someone passes you are left devastated. I absolutely believe that you were a piece of the cornerstone of our family. I also believe that at the core of who you truly were God was your cornerstone, so naturally we relied on you and followed your lead. Were you perfect? No. Am I? Most definitely not. I’m not sure, no matter how someone prioritizes their faith, that they could say they weren’t devastated if standing in my shoes. I am devastated, and my faith although shaken, isn’t gone, it is just on a journey of unexplainable query and grief. 
Giving Thanks
I struggle as the texts, invitations and attempted phone calls have flooded my phone this Thanksgiving morning. Everyone has good intentions, I suppose I should be thankful for the love of all of our family and friends. I’ll be staying home like always though, just alone this year.
I cried as I made my own cup of coffee, we all know on your days off I do not do that. I struggle because right now we would be waiting for my Mom to come over to start cooking while we watch the Macy’s parade, the best damn band in the land played in it this year. We would be getting our shopping list for tonight in order, I would be picking out gifts for the kids while you are focused on things you want for the house or for us. I struggle because the thought of football and drinks should be how our afternoon is filled. Remember when we stood in line for hours at Toys R Us one year with no coats and it snowing? People still laugh about that. It’s never been about the deal as much as just the time spent together, although lets be honest, your desire to save money ranks pretty high on the priority list. I struggle because on the day everyone is giving thanks I am only questioning why life is so unfair.
I’ve spent the entire week trying to tie up loose ends, ordering our plaque for the mausoleum, HR paperwork and hospital billing. It is crippling, almost unreal, saying the words “he has passed” over and over again. I’m mad that I work for attorneys and didn’t have our wills drawn up because I thought we had time. With each call from insurances, AECOM, retirement, etc. I see you took care of us, as usual. I am thankful for that. I have no doubt that you wouldn’t be shocked to know some of the things that have transpired with opening an estate. You would be PISSED, but as usual not shocked. As hard as it has been, I haven’t waived from your wishes regarding anything to do with that so you would be proud. I am giving thanks that you were the most honest person with our circle of family and friends, I’m thankful that they remind me always of what you would want in this life forced upon us.
Tonight will be the most difficult. Gathering with your family, you forcing people to try our vegan food, name drawing for Christmas gifts, and exchanging our shopping lists so we all make sure the other families get what is needed. It is so unfair to do those things without you. I made a Marge Farley cake to take, the frosting is whipped and shiny, I know you would be proud even if it doesn’t taste like Deb made it. I did have mom pick us up a hand blender. I will never forget when I made it and we had to take turns stirring the frosting with a single whisk, seven straight minutes we switched out and our forearms probably burned for seven days afterwards. Oh the stories. My mom is making the desserts so they will be joining the crowd, I do not want to go, Amaya does, so I will. She says Todd reminds her of you, I owe her the dinner where I’m sure she will stay close to him as long as I can keep it together. I noticed last week that when he would sit she would too, even in his lap when he sat in your usual place on the couch. She loves our family unconditionally, each person has their own place in her heart. My heart is broken for her, but she is resilient, I know she will still want to make you proud and for that I am giving thanks.
Each day I have a thought to do something small, go to the movie, Wal-Mart or meet up with someone for lunch but the time comes and I’m overwhelmed. Who will I call after or come home to tell about it anyway? This holiday season may be the hardest of my life. I just want to survive, I don’t need any life lesson or purpose to come from this tragedy happening to us now. I just want to survive and for that I will be thankful.
I see pieces of Troy in her, seeds he planted in her heart and I am forever grateful that she was loved so much. As you hear this, know that our worlds have been rocked and I am being very honest and as raw as this pain remains. This pain is not just emotional and mental but it is physically tolling. Troy’s brother, Todd asked me the once what I thought Troy would want me to do in this time. I know he would want me to miss him, cry for him and love him out loud. For how long? I don’t know. “At least forever” he would probably say with a slight laugh from behind a fist covering his mouth.