Whatifitis
This morning- Madi’s 15th birthday- I woke with the familiar weight of grief pressing down on me. I laid in bed, immobilized by it, alternating between looking at pictures and videos of Madi and just staring at the wall, crying. Kurt, my kids, my mom, my sister, my nieces and nephews all tried to get me out of bed. I couldn’t move. It hurt so much. I couldn’t do anything except cry and wonder all the what ifs all over again.
Somewhere in between the raw pain of
watching a loved one pass from this life and the oppressive sadness of trying
to heal from the trauma is an empty space. The perpetual motion of life
continually fills the space whether we want it filled or not. My space
has been host to many things in the 2 ½ years since we lost our kids. But
perhaps the most debilitating of all them is what I now call,
“whatifitis.” After having met and gotten to know many people who are
mourning a lost loved one, I am convinced now that this is part of the grieving
process. We seem to go through a period of asking, “what if?” Specific or
general, it doesn’t matter. The end result is always the same, “What if things
had been different?” I call it whatifitis because if left untreated, this
little sickness can destroy a person with a finality that rivals death itself.
My own whatifitis induced doubts about
how we had handled the situation with Madi. What if we had found the
tumor sooner? Would it have bought us more time with her? What if
we had recognized her little headaches as more than something benign and gotten
an MRI after the cancer had just taken root? Going back even farther,
what if something environmental caused the cancer? What if that house we
lived in when she was little made her sick? What if we had moved sooner?
What if everything she experienced really had been in our control and we could
have managed our way out through detox or supplements or diet changes or
juicing or strict lifestyle regimens or jumping on the trampoline or increasing
water intake? With Frederick, what if something I ate or put on my body
affected his development? What if I had changed A,B, or C? Would he
be a healthy normal 2 ½ year old right now? What if I had just gotten a
C-section when we saw his heart-rate was dropping? Would that have bought
me more time with him or just sped up the process of losing him? And then
there are the emotional what ifs. What if I had not spent enough time
with Madi? What if I had not gotten my Master’s while she was a baby- would I
feel better now having all those hours of study and class time with her
instead? Would I feel less sad that she was gone? What if I had
spent more time imparting truths and knowledge to her that I had hoped she
would accumulate over a very long life? What if I didn’t hug her enough?
Tell her enough I loved her? What if, what if, what if…. Now push fast
forward and add about a million more questions and you’ll get a good idea of
how my whatifitis felt.
I found myself engulfed in what ifs
every day for a very long time. Sometimes I could distract myself, but
whenever that quiet emptiness opened up, the endless questions would come and
beat me down into agony. Perhaps you have gone through this or had
similar questions about someone who has experienced a tragedy. Every question
seems to trail off at the end with the unspoken...everything would be better
now if only I could fix the what ifs….
I think it was several months after
Madi and Frederick died before I realized how sick whatifitis was making
me. I felt tortured, desperate for relief. My therapist pointed out
one day that the what-ifs are endless. There is no way to get past
them. Even if I could go back and fix everything I felt had gone wrong, I
would find - like every go-back-in-time movie shows- that there would be a
whole new crop of what ifs to take their place. I realized that the heart
of whatifitis was my unwillingness to recognize how little control I had over
life. No matter how much I try to hamster-wheel my way through avoiding
any kind of possible calamity, ultimately I am at the mercy of mortality. I
will eventually succumb to its bitter end. Knowing this and accepting this are
two very different things.
One of my friends who had also lost a
baby not long after I had told me that she used the what ifs as a reminder that
she needed to remember all the “I’m so glads.” Whenever she had the
thoughts, she would take a few minutes to slow down and remember her son and
everything she loved about him. Just like a fever is an indicator that
something is wrong in our physical body, she took the fever of whatifitis to be
an indicator that she needed to slow down and let her body grieve and be still
for a few minutes. And heal. This helped me immensely.
I also started imagining death as a
person (who in my apparently gender-biased mind was a man). I always saw myself
in a rocking chair on the front porch of a house in Indiana (where I grew
up). When I saw Death walking around, instead of running to hide, I
pulled my tired body off my front-porch chair and started walking with him.
He seemed happy to have company, and I felt relief as we walked with my hands
tucked into my front pockets. On my walks with Death, I find I am growing in
respect for him and what he allows me to feel. He is so very wise with a
wickedly dry and honest humor, though he doesn’t speak much. I think
that’s less because he has nothing to say and more because he only speaks when
asked questions. I find myself enjoying the familiarity our walks provide
me.
So this morning as my mind started
spiraling down toward whatifitis again, I decided to stop and take a stroll
with my good friend, Death. I asked him questions like, “What would Madi be
like at age 15?” And he gave me some shrewd and hilarious
observations. I asked him how life after death shapes a person, and how
often those who have passed on can see those they love on earth. I asked him if
they think about their deaths the way we do, if they remember what it felt like
to die, if it sticks with them the way it sticks with us. We walked and talked
and I cried and laughed and then it was time to say good-bye to him. I
imagine I will still see him in the distance for the rest of the day, walking
around. It’s ok. While our time together staves off the whatifitis,
too many walks with Death can make me forget about the life I have left to
live.
Happy Birthday to my sweet and beloved
Madi! She would have rocked this world had she stayed, but has likely
rocked the next world already. Always a step ahead, she was… And while
I’m still starving for the feeling of her cheek on mine or her arms hugging me
the way she used to do, I am feeling awfully grateful for the beauty she’s left
in her wake. I’m grateful she introduced me to Death, even though it took
me a long time to appreciate him. I hope in some capacity, she is
celebrating with us today.
Comments
When I read your posts, I feel the mother in me searching for the answers to your questions to the point of tears. You are able to express your thoughts in a way that gives the reader a snapshot of the pain and loss you are feeling today. Knowing your family, I know you hugged and told Madi how much you loved her VERY frequently. Thank you for sharing your tender thoughts on this special day. Love to you and your family, including your mom and sister.
Love,
Cheryl