On Death, Loss And The Holidays

It’s so curious: one can resist tears and ‘behave’ very well in the hardest hours of grief. But then someone makes you a friendly sign behind a window, or one notices that a flower that was in bud only yesterday has suddenly blossomed, or a letter slips from a drawer… and everything collapses.” –Colette

I’m going to talk about what I want to right now. Look at this picture of an aardvark if you want to walk away because I’m going to talk about death, loss and the holidays.

There is navel gazing in blogging. So I get my turn today because I can.

I miss my mom.

She died 11-years ago and I damn well miss her. It’s the holidays and this is always a messy time for me. I found myself profoundly sad last night about Thanksgiving and the entire Christmas season. Now, no worries, this happens for a lot of people and I believe it’s best to talk/write about it. I think significant events like the holidays bring up certain memories for people who have suffered a loss. Although time heals many things, there are reminders and triggers that bring up that loss, that invisible, gaping hole which nothing can fill.

My mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer one week before Christmas in 1996. We knew something was wrong before we “conned” her into going to the doctor because she hated doctors horribly. By the time we got her there, the tests were pretty conclusive and the doctor told me in the hallway that it was bad.

She lived for 14 more months after that and every day we watched her slowly fade away. The worst part is that she knew she was fading away as well and that is something I wouldn’t want my worst enemy to experience or to see. It’s a little bit like hell on earth watching someone die a little piece at a time.

Fast forward 11 years to now. Traditions have changed in my family. My dad remarried, my sister has two daughters who are enmeshed in their own lives which are filled with school, sports and friends where the holidays send her to visit her husband’s folks away from Hoots and my extended family, although large, never really spent holiday times together. So the smells and tastes of Thanksgiving have changed and I’ve been fortunate enough to have a place to hang my hat on Turkey Day. I do, however, get nostalgic and sentimental though, missing those years of family bonding.

Her turkey and dressing, experimenting with different foods, the fact that my dad doesn’t really like turkey (he’s having Japanese this year for his Thanksgiving dinner which I think is fabulous) or how that we would literally starve on the Wednesday before the big day because my mother always forgot to get any additional things to eat (this was a running joke in my family.)

The year her dog, Girl, ate our dinner. The time we had a huge cactus as a Christmas tree and put little red balls on it to celebrate. The year she planted a Christmas tree in the yard and named it Rufus (I get my weirdness honestly). Staff Christmas dinners at my dad’s old company where we would all dress us and have a great time. My mother laughing at me when I would make dressing sandwiches (carbariffic). How she always burned the rolls (every, single Thanksgiving and Christmas.) How my father wanted (and still does) to go to Wal-Mart if it’s a holiday. The movies we went to on Thanksgiving. How my mother never really recovered from her own mother’s death from breast cancer and where she felt these same things during Christmas, which my grandmother loved more than anything. How she could never smell Chanel No 5 without seeing the bottle that my grandfather gave my grandmother every year without crying. I feel the same way when I smell a hint of Youth Dew, which only my mother could wear successfully (it makes me sneeze when other people wear it these days.)

How she wasn’t afraid to give us a hug and tell us we were her everything. And, you know, she meant it.

I remember the joyful things. And I miss them. I have made new traditions but I still become a nostalgic ball of mush thinking about my mother.

11 Responses to “On Death, Loss And The Holidays”

  1. S says:

    Ditto.
    Beautiful post.

  2. holly wynne says:

    I named my first iPod Rufus. I really, really would have liked your mom. Our families have a lot in common as far as how we do the holidays. Much love to you, dear.

  3. Ron says:

    Remind me not to read these sorts of things at work, where I can’t very well have an “allergy attack.” A sniffly, snotty, eye-runny, throat-burny “allergy attack.”

    Wonderful post, Coma.

  4. @dancedivam says:

    These statements resonate deeply with me. I too have used the words “wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy.” Cancer is horribly cruel.

    As I’ve gotten older I’ve started to better understand the wistful joy of the holidays. I picked up on it as a kid but never really understood until people weren’t there to celebrate with anymore.

  5. Russ says:

    This is beautiful, ‘Coma. Much love…

  6. Kate says:

    And here I was trying NOT to think of the big family affairs we use to have and how much I miss both my parents. I guess you opened that door up, and I think I’m grateful. No matter how old we get, or how long they are gone from us, those are times that live in our hearts forever.

    Now, I have to go hunt down the tissue!

  7. Leigh says:

    Hugs to you Coma.
    A dear friend passed away three years ago right around Thanksgiving. I used to talk to her every day on the phone and we’d both crack each other up. Sigh.
    As for family and the holidays….it brought out the worst in my family every time. I really don’t care for Xmas at all.

  8. Exocentrick says:

    I like your sensitive post. Very thoughtful. My mother died from cancer when I was a little boy.

    I wrote about death this morning. My post is not as sensitive as yours, but it does get poetic and thoughtful at the end. I tried to capture a little humor in dealing with such a heavy subject:

    Ars Moriendi, The Art of Dying: How to die in 6 chapters.
    http://exocentrick.blogspot.com/2009/11/ars-moriendi-art-of-dying-how-to-die-in.html

  9. KK says:

    Could you have put a “Need Kleenex” warning on this? Everything you said in this post really hits home for me. The holidays are just not the same anymore without my mom either… :(

  10. GrannyPam says:

    Sorry to hear you are in a funk. I have had my moments. I believe the memories chart us a way to go, but we still can’t helping want to recapture the wonderful, cozy concept of home for the holidays. It can be hard, real hard. God bless.

  11. Elizabeth says:

    My mom died three years ago and I still miss her. My dad died when I was 6 and I still miss him. Especially, now, around the holidays.