For the last several years, June has been a notoriously bad
month for me. Let me go back to the
beginning.
I was living in Louisville as
a college dropout. A friend and I were
sharing a crappy one-bedroom walk-up on Taylor Blvd. She got the bedroom because “It [was her]
apartment” she was just letting me live there. It was true, her name was on the
lease, but I paid half the rent. I
worked about 4 blocks away at a little gas station (where I got held-twice-jerks.)
I was 21, and like I said the other day, had the bottom half of my
head shaved; I would pull the rest- dyed black-back into a barrette at my crown,
of course. I wore lot of black-basically
I was Goth before it was called Goth- funky jewelry, makeup and all.
I drove the afore mentioned 1979 AMC Spirit-I loved that car. Went to Rocky Horror-in costume, drank gallons of coffee
nightly with friends at Denny’s, played Magic The Gathering and hung out with friends a lot. I basically
lived a carefree existence-no longer a child but not quite an adult. Then…
In the beginning of June 1994, my Dad died unexpectedly-it
had to do with a heart problem that they found when he was in High School-doesn’t
matter. I was caught complete off guard,
because quite honestly with Mom being a Brittle
Diabetic, I always expected her to pass first (soo many health problems.)
My beloved AMC Spirit had died and I had no way to get home. My friend Lori (hi Lori) came home from college to
make sure I was okay and take me to my brother’s in Lexington so I could ride the
rest of the way with him. The rest of my
family members who passed in June of various years were all elderly. That’s not to say that they were expected,
but they were less of a shock.
I was a mess for the first year… sullen, sarcastic and
bitchy- like I am now but far less fun because I cried a lot. Dad looked like Santa Clause, so the Christmas
in July commercials broke my heart. The first Christmas without him was hard-we sat arround drinking and "decorating" the tree. The lights and garland stayed bundled and were tossed into the branches and an empty can served as tree topper. We laughed and cried and we got through it.
I moved
back to live with Mom to finish teaching her and my sister how to drive-it’s
hard to get anywhere here without driving.
I took classes at the local Community College, because I knew he wanted me to and because I wanted it. Then after that year I went away to college
at Berea then on to Lexington for more schooling.
Each year day-by-day I would get a little better till out of nowhere, I
would be reminded and have a mini breakdown; I remember being in the Design
studio at Berea waiting for class to start while one of my friends told me something his
Dad said or did that upset him. I
reminded him that he should appreciate his Dad while he had him and that he was
just doing his job. Then the tears welled and I couldn’t push them back. It’s the moments when I’m not expecting it
that I get the sucker punch to the gut. Most
of the time I’m fine and can talk about him and tell stories, but I don’t talk
about him being dead-it makes me cry. (Don’t worry and rush to call me-by the time you read this I’ll be back to fine.)
So, there the grief is, lurking behind the everyday, just
waiting for its turn to ride the Merry-go-round. I always expect that grief to make its
appearance during the first of June and hang out for a week. Well, that didn’t happen this year. I was going through the motions of the everyday
when I realized it was half way through June and didn’t have my usual “OMG! It’s June!”
moment. I didn't prepare for the depression and crying, get extra tissues, chocolate
and anything else I might need.
After realizing that I had forgotten to wait for the sadness to
overcome me, I was filled with guilt. I
know I shouldn’t. I should be living my
life and enjoying what I have, but I can’t help it. Inside I’m a very sensitive person so I feel
deeply.
It has been 18 years and more than a week, and I think I
might be getting past this grief-next I get to work on the guilt for not
feeling the grief as much.
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