Once again,
it’s that time of year. Halloween is over,
Thanksgiving is fast approaching, and Christmas
is only a few steps behind. Will this year be
different than the last seven? Will I find the
magic again? Wait. Let me revise that question:
Did I ever feel the magic?
As a
bereaved parent, I have experienced only two
holiday seasons. While I have physically lived
through 49 hell-a-days, emotionally, there have
been only two: The ones before and the ones
after Jason’s death. The two categories are
distinctly different.
If memory
serves me correctly, which God knows it
doesn’t always do, I spent the first 42 years
focused on material issues. What would I get?
What did I want? What would make me the happiest
child in the whole world? As I grew older and
had my own little family, I spent the next 22
years asking myself what I would get them. What
did they want? What would make them love me
more? How would I manage to pay for all of it? I
always felt there was something missing . . .
but didn’t really have the time or interest to
find that missing something. Besides, why borrow
trouble? Each year, by the time I realized that
something was missing, the decorations were
packed in their boxes and the kids had gone back
to school. I could always find the magic next
year.
In 1996,
Jason died. Suddenly, my life ended its forward
march and everything I had ever regarded as
important became nonsense. My heart was not
simply broken—it was ripped into shreds,
emptied of what had fueled it over the span of
my life. I had no hope of waiting for it to heal
and had to face the reality that only a total
reconstruction would suffice. I would have to
create a new heart . . . from scratch.
That first
fall was difficult. I was still numb, still
cushioned from reality, but the pain of
Jason’s death was beginning to seep in. Then
it was Halloween, and the horror of what had
happened was upon me. Thanksgiving came with
Christmas on its tail, bringing an empty chair,
an unbroken wishbone, and silence where laughter
had once prevailed.
I was sure
it could not get any worse, but life always
surprises us. The holidays of 1997 and 1998 were
devastating. The numbness that had protected me
that first season was gone. Reality had arrived,
and I could not escape it. I would never again
see Jason walk through our front door with that
grin that always made me nervous, tracking snow
across my “freshly waxed for the holidays”
floor. I would never again buy two of everything
for Jason and his twin brother. I would never
again . . . enjoy the holidays . . . or life.
Years
four through seven, we bought gifts for needy
families, hung Jason’s stocking right beside
the rest of ours, illuminated special candles to
include him in our celebrations, and smiled
cheerfully at everyone who offered us their joy
filled Merry Christmas. And as I spread my
Christmas cheer and goodwill toward men, I had
only one thought in my mind. It became my
mantra: “If I can just make it through
December, I will be okay.” I was no longer
focused on the material side of the season. I
was no longer focused on the season at all. I
wanted it over.
And now,
here I am, at year eight. My eighth season of
joy, my eighth year of decking the halls, my
eighth year of Jason’s physical absence. You
probably think I am going to tell you that this
year will be no different from the last seven.
You might even anticipate that I am going to
tell you that it never gets better, that there
is no such thing as healing, and that grieving
parents will always be bitter and angry,
especially during the times when families
everywhere celebrate the season of giving.
Wrong. But don’t feel bad; this revelation has
totally shocked me also.
A few days
ago, on a cold morning in October, I woke up and
was amazed to see that it was snowing.
Overnight, the world had gone from brown to pure
glistening white. It was beautiful. Later that
day, I heard someone in my home actually humming
Christmas carols. How dare they!? But . . . I
was alone. It was me. That evening, I spent an
hour printing up a beautiful green and red
Christmas “wish list” with graphics! That
was the straw that broke the camel’s back.
Suddenly, it hit me. And no matter how guilty I
feel in acknowledging it, I have to tell you. I
am looking forward to the holidays. Oh . . . my
. . . GOD. How can this be? Why is this
happening?
Well, after
much pondering, I think I know why. I think I
spent 42 holidays looking through a lens that
only focused on black and white, on the
physical, on that which can be seen and
physically felt. The lavishly wrapped gifts,
excessive food, amount of money spent, and
glittering (sometimes gaudy) lights on the tree.
The next seven were spent looking through a lens
that was distorted and scarred by grief. I
focused on what was missing rather than on what
was still here. I think I wanted it that way.
But now, I
feel I’ve learned how to not only endure—but
to enjoy—a memory that can only be defined as
bittersweet. I’ve come to appreciate that
feeling emotional is really about feeling
impassioned. And I think this year, as the songs
start to play on the radio and the cards begin
filling our mailbox, I will choose a different
lens, a lens that captures that which we cannot
see or physically touch. A lens that goes
beyond.
Not
everything will change. I will still hang
Jason’s stocking beside ours, buy gifts for
the needy, light candles in his memory, and all
of the other things that have made the last
seven years bearable. But this year, I hope to
do these things with joy rather than with
bitterness and sorrow. This year, I want to
grasp the hand of a homeless mother, kiss the
cheek of a newborn baby, and hold a kitten while
it plays in the place where kittens go to dream.
I want to watch Santa as he holds wiggly
toddlers on his lap. I want to sing “Silent
Night” on a snowy night in mid-December when
it feels as if all the world is sleeping. I want
to feel the Christmas that we cannot see.
This year, I
want to remember who I really am. I want to
enjoy the months ahead. Not because I need to or
because someone says it’s time to—but
because—well, because I can. This year, I want
to find the magic before it is time to put away
the boxes. And I won’t stop searching until I
find it.
Merry
Christmas to you and yours . . . Believe in
magic, And always . . . expect miracles.
Sandy
Goodman
Four years
after the death of her son, Jason, Sandy Goodman
realized she had found a way to survive the
unthinkable. She sat down and began writing the
story of her journey through grief, hoping to
reach others who needed a light in the darkness.
Love Never Dies: A Mother's Journey from Loss to
Love is her first book.
Sandy is the
founder, Chapter Leader, and Newsletter Editor
of the Wind River Chapter of the Compassionate
Friends. She and her husband Dave have been
Resident Counselors in a group home for at-risk
youth in central Wyoming for 17 years, and are
both actively involved in the Wyoming
Association for Child and Youth Care
Professionals. Sandy has presented at national
conferences for The Compassionate Friends, the
Bereaved Parents of the USA and the Tragedy
Assistance Program for Survivors. For more
information, visit her website at http://www.loveneverdies.net.
You can
email Sandy here Sandy
Goodman.
Beautiful
Quotes of Elisabeth Kubler Ross
The most
beautiful people we have known are those who
have known defeat, known suffering, known
struggle, known loss, and have found their way
out of the depths. These persons have an
appreciation, a sensitivity and an understanding
of life that fills them with compassions,
gentleness, and a deep loving concern. Beautiful
people do not just happen.
And after
your death, when most of you for the first time
realize what life here is all about, you will
begin to see that your life here is almost
nothing but the sum total of every choice you
have made during every moment of your life.
Your thoughts, which you are responsible for,
are as real as your deeds. You will begin
to realize that every word and every deed
affects your life and has also touched thousands
of lives.
We run after
values that, at death, become zero. At the
end of your life, nobody asks you how many
degrees you have, or how many mansions you
built, or how many Rolls Royces you could
afford. That’s what dying patients teach
you.
Dying is
nothing to fear. It can be the most
wonderful experience of your life. It all
depends on how you have lived.
If you live
each day of your life right, then you have
nothing to fear …
Throughout
life, we get clues that remind us of the
direction we are supposed to be headed … if
you stay focused, then you learn your lessons.
There is no
joy without hardship. If not for death,
would we appreciate life? If not for hate,
would we know the ultimate goal is love? … At
these moments you can either hold on to
negativity and look for blame, or you can choose
to heal and keep on loving.
When you
learn your lessons, the pain goes away.
When we have
passed the tests we are sent to Earth to learn,
we are allowed to graduate. We are allowed
to shed our body, which imprisons our souls …
We make
progress in society only if we stop cursing and
complaining about its shortcomings and have the
courage to do something about them.
Those who
learned to know death, rather than to fear and
fight it, become our teachers about life.
Learn to get
in touch with the silence within yourself and
know that everything in this life has a
purpose....
You will not
grow if you sit in a beautiful flower garden,
but you will grow if you are sick, if you are in
pain, if you experience losses, and if you do
not put your head in the sand, but take the pain
as a gift to you with a very, very specific
purpose.
It's only
when we truly know and understand that we have a
limited time on earth -- and that we have no way
of knowing when our time is up, we will then
begin to live each day to the fullest, as if it
was the only one we had.
Death is
simply a shedding of the physical body like the
butterfly shedding its cocoon. It is a
transition to a higher state of consciousness
where you continue to perceive, to understand,
to laugh, and to be able to grow.
For those
who seek to understand it, death is a highly
creative force. The highest spiritual values of
life can originate from the thought and study of
death.
I believe
that we are solely responsible for our choices,
and we have to accept the consequences of every
deed, word, and thought throughout our lifetime.
People are
like stained-glass windows. They sparkle
and shine when the sun is out, but when the
darkness sets in, their true beauty is revealed
only if there is a light from within.
Guilt is
perhaps the most painful companion of death.
There are no
mistakes, no coincidences, all events are
blessings given to us to learn from.
The ultimate
lesson all of us have to learn is unconditional
love, which includes not only others but
ourselves as well.
We need to
teach the next generation of children from day
one that they are responsible for their lives.
Mankind's greatest gift, also its greatest
curse, is that we have free choice. We can make
our choices built from love or from fear.
Should you
shield the canyons from the windstorms, you
would never see the beauty of their carvings.
Learn to get
in touch with the silence within yourself and
know that everything in this life has a purpose.
There is no
need to go to India or anywhere else to find
peace. You will find that deep place of silence
right in your room, your garden or even your
bathtub.
Doctor Finds
Faith Through Death
Dr. Diane
Komp, a professor of pediatrics at Yale
University School of Medicine, has viewed the
deaths of numerous terminally-ill children. Her
job is a tough one by anyone's standards. Dr.
Komp, however, has discovered that death is not
always a hopeless and melancholy specter.
Sitting at the bedsides of children near death
has taught her to look for God, even in the most
unexpected places. Her first experience of this
kind occurred in the room of a 7-year-old
leukemia victim. According to Komp, before the
little girl died, she "found the energy to
sit up and say, "The angels--they're so
beautiful! Mommy, can you see them? Do you hear
them singing? I've never heard such beautiful
singing.'" Komp, who admits that her
Christian beliefs where derailed in medical
school, has reaffirmed her faith because of such
experiences. Having seen so many of her young
patients die in peace after such visions, she
believes firmly in Jesus' words "to look to
the children to find the secrets of the kingdom
of God." Her favorite story is that of a
dying boy at Yale-New Haven Hospital. The boy's
parents had ordered those attending their son
not to discuss death or religion with him. Komp
relates that the boy, who suffered from
leukemia, had a dream in which a school bus
pulled up to his house. Jesus was on the bus and
invite him to come along. On the bus, Jesus told
the boy of his coming death, and by doing so,
gave the boy a strong sense of peace. Komp
asserts that this "great peace...is one of
the common threads in all of these
stories."
Images of
Grace by Diane M. Komp (Grand Rapids, Mich.,
Zondervan Publishing House, 1996).
To order
this book call Books Now at (800) 962-6651, ext.
3300 anytime.