I’m alone, in the most literal sense of the word and it is usually then, in the solitude, when he comes to me. I mean, of course, he is always there in my periphery – a wavering figure against the backdrop of everyday life. But when I am quiet and alone my vision focuses and his blurry outlines solidify. I’m tempted to pull out his three photographs and let myself sink into the familiar darkness. There are times, like this moment, when his absence fills up the entirety of my being.
We’ve just returned from a visit with Leif’s family in Oregon and the jolt of living in the truth of his death has left me reeling. In those few days it became all too easy to imagine a reality different than the one we have been given and almost unbearable to live in the one we have.
I still want to say his name and tell his story but I am finding it more and more exhausting emotionally to allow others to participate in –and observe- my grief. The more time that passes the more uncomfortable I am in letting people see just how broken I still am, because this is the part in the screenplay when everything is supposed to start wrapping up in a satisfying way for audience members. This is the part where I should start expounding on the gifts that his death has brought me; a greater sense of sympathy for the world at large, a greater sense of appreciation for the beautiful things in life, a greater sense of self. Maybe that is all true in one way or another but right now, at this very moment, I just want him back.
What I do know for sure, and maybe for now this is enough, is that I’m one year and forty-seven days older and in that time I have somehow managed to haphazardly stitch myself together into a whole person again, or at least a reasonable facsimile of one. I'm not what I used to be, and certainly on days like these that shows more clearly than usual. I’m threadbare in places, with oversized button eyes, mismatched threading and dingy cotton stuffing that peaks through in places and for which I am constantly trying to sneakily push back in less someone see just how shoddily I’ve been put back together. I’m whole –as complete as I can or ever will be- but if anyone were to look closely enough just how timeworn I am would be apparent as would just how much I still miss my son.
*Thank you to Angie for bringing this project to life.











