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Laura Babcock's avatar

My heart breaks for you and your family. This is horrible and it sucks. It just sucks. I’m glad for the timing of your mom’s visit. I hope she can provide some moral support and help with the inhumane onslaught of decisions and paperwork that follow a loss.

I always turn to this poem by Mary Oliver when I am overcome by loss.

In Blackwater Woods

Look, the trees

are turning

their own bodies

into pillars

of light,

are giving off the rich

fragrance of cinnamon

and fulfillment,

the long tapers

of cattails

are bursting and floating away over

the blue shoulders

of the ponds,

and every pond,

no matter what its

name is, is

nameless now.

Every year

everything

I have ever learned

in my lifetime

leads back to this: the fires

and the black river of loss

whose other side

is salvation,

whose meaning

none of us will ever know.

To live in this world

you must be able

to do three things:

to love what is mortal;

to hold it

against your bones knowing

your own life depends on it;

and, when the time comes to let it go,

to let it go.

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Christine Hennebury's avatar

Damn it.

I don’t want to toss in more words that won’t help but I don’t want to be silent.

I have spent the last year since my Dad died walking through a different kind of grief. It’s terrible how the world goes on as if nothing has happened. There are still meetings and bills and meals, as if the entire map of your life hasn’t changed, as if the effort to put one foot in front of the other isn’t consuming all your energy.

There is nothing that helps. I wish I could somehow show up in person and bring you tea or a sandwich or pens or just sit with you.

I wish you whatever ease can be found right now. I wish you peace in your heart and in your mind. May you have what you need, whatever that might be.

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