
Well, I’m laying in bed on a Sunday morning… drinking coffee… smoking a little somethin’ somethin’… and trying not to be annoyed that it just took a half hour for my computer to connect to the internet… errrr!! I’ve been pretty excited about getting to today. It’s my first day off since Easter and my first “weekend” since the end of March. Luckily, I enjoy working and I enjoy my job, but I also really enjoy my time off…!
Currently, I’m in the midst of memories of the shittiest time in my life. Last Sunday, April 11th, was the anniversary of Kateri going into Palliative care. It’s weird, things seem to be coming back… memories… that sorta kinda just pop into the brain. Things that are rough to remember. For example, like when I just typed “April 11th”, the memory of talking to Kateri’s Cancer Doc in a hallway of the main hospital as he told me the option(s) going forward popped up… which was the option of drilling a hole in the side of her skull to relieve some of the pressure that the tumors were putting on her brain. For a seven days now I’ve known I’ve been in the anniversary of the last two weeks of Kateri’s life, yet today was the first time that that memory came back… and it’s just kinda hard to deal with. It’s really fucking hard to deal with, actually. It’s a challenge, which was actually the topic that started my thought process for this blog post… dealing with everyday challenges as a widower… but since I started thinking about that over a week ago… challenges… it has snowballed in my brain to the point where I simply have a mish mash of heavy thoughts (because one thing always leads to another!) swirling around and I can’t seem to grab any specific one to focus on. Yay!!
Last Wednesday is when I first started to feel some relief from my workload and as I was standing on my porch that evening, I thought about how my life as a cook has instilled this attitude of doing whatever it is I need to do to get the job done… to get through service… to get through the day. The last four months have not been easy for me at my gig… there have been all sorts of challenges… but I fell back on my work ethic and my new approach and attitude towards everything in life since Kateri died to get through… to keep going… to get to today… with the hope of getting to tomorrow mostly unscathed. When Wednesday hit… I felt good… I felt proud of facing that immediate challenge of needing to focus on work shit until I had a moment to focus on myself. Although I had to pay more attention to this and less attention to that, I was able to get to a point where I could lay in bed… drink coffee… smoke a doobie… and take some time to face the emotional and psychological shit storm that comes along in my life that starts the end of December, picks up in intensity on April 11th, and then hits the crescendo on April 22nd… the day I heard Kateri’s last breath. On the work side of things… I’m glad I got to this point. On the life side of things… this point kinda sucks… but I’m glad I’m here and going through it.

Last Thursday I woke up ballin’. No, I wasn’t having dreams of dunking on Lebron as we battled on the court in a game of One on One… I literally woke up sobbing. I had dreamt that I had cancer in my brain. The last image I can remember was me in my back yard checking to see if my sump pump had spewed any water out from the bulk head. There were people around, but I don’t recall anyone specific… except for my father… for some reason. I was crying in my dream because I felt alone… because in my dream, Kateri had already died. I felt lost without her there… and the loss of her in my life was unbearable as I was faced with the uncertainty of some not so fun information. It was intense… hence the waking up with a wet pillow and puffy eyes. It was one of those odd feeling moments when you recognize you are coming out of sleep and start to separate dream from reality. After I wiped and rubbed my early morning eyeballs, I was able to temper my emotions… put my big boy pants on… grab a cup of Joe… and head to work. Even on the way out to my cute little Jeep I could feel myself getting emotional and not wanting to face the day, but I did anyways… because that’s just what I had to do.
Widower Notes n Thoughts:
- The other day I wrote down the note, “It took me a lot of living to get… here.” As I’ve thought about it more and more… I don’t really know where “here” is. I guess that’s what it feels like when you’re feeling… “lost”.
- “Lost” is one thing. Coupled once in a while with feeling “insignificant” in the world… kinda sucks.
- Almost three years out… I still sleep on “my” side of the bed.
- Sometimes when laying in bed I wedge my Achilles tendon between my big toe… and the toe next to it. It just feels good.
- I have found “Widowhood” to be an extremely hard life to live… but it’s my only option. I have an even harder time with the fact that life told Kateri she didn’t have an option… and it took her away from me… from us. The world would simply be a better place… if she was here… next to me… laying on her side of the bed.
9 thoughts on “It Took Me a lot of Living to Get… here.”
Maggie
Darren, grief anniversaries are never easy particularly when they extend for months and they surround your life with someone you loved so intimately. I have no advice other than to feel it all. In some weird-assed way, it honors Kateri’s memory because you still feel it all so deeply. Hang in there. I’m keeping you and your life with Kateri in my thoughts wishing all the best through the coming weeks. I know it must be tough.
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Darren Lidstrom
Thanks Maggie. Ya… it’s sometimes weird how I feel comfort in feeling that grief… let’s me know it’s still real and that I love her so much.
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Maggie
I get exactly what you mean, Darren.
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lssattitudeofgratitude
I understand your grief. Your body knows the dates are coming even before your mind does. It changes some over time, but the pain is still there. Hoping you keep living because that is indeed what got you here.
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Darren Lidstrom
Sometimes it’s hard when your body knows what time it is, but you have to kinda push it off until you have time to deal with it..! I guess that is getting a little easier with time!
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lssattitudeofgratitude
I’ve gone to my acupuncture appt only to have him tell me I am experience emotional pain. I look at the date and realize my body is remembering. It gets a little easier, but doesn’t go away for me.
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jennasnanny04
Maggie and Lauren said it all. Just know I sure understand and know how hard this process is. As always, giant hugs. I, too, have experienced those sobbing dreams and am always relieved when I realize ut was only a dream but the pain in your heart and soul lingers.
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Darren Lidstrom
You said that perfectly! Ya… it’s such a weird way to wake up!
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Elizabeth
Once again I appreciate your honesty here. Anniversaries suck, no two ways about it. I am touched that even in your sleep you seem to be processing and grieving.
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