Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

A widower at forty-two. What Kateri gave me… what cancer took away… and how I'm coping with life from the woods of Vermont
Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning
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    • 2.2.367… Heman… and Widower Day 1

      Posted at 8:09 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 24, 2019

      img_0696I’m not gonna do this for the next fifteen days or anything, but I figured it was kinda cool to revisit a year ago… that whole, “look at how much has happened since then” type thing. This has been an emotional three days, but they’ve been good.  Emotional… but not exactly too much more than any other day or what was to be expected.  The flood of love and support is somewhat overwhelming… in the best possible way!… but definitely adds to the waterworks.

      Really, I just wanted to start year two by remembering Day 1 of this new life.  Day 1 was… strange. I was exhausted. I was in shock… and in a fog. You would think it is the hardest day… the day after losing a spouse, but for me… I was numb. I just floated through it. It’s when you come out of that fog and have to live life again is when it gets tough… stoopid reality sets in.

      I read through these note… thought about that day… looked back at the last three days… and I’ve gotta say that I feel good!  I’m proud of myself for getting through this first year, by doing it however I thought I needed to do it. People say there isn’t a road map for this type of shit… and from what I can tell, they’re correct! I’m glad I was able to bushwhack for a bit… find my way… and I feel like there are gonna be some open spots up ahead so I’ll  stay on the “as positive as possible” train for now. There are no more first anniversaries… there will no longer be days that I can say, “On this day last year, Kateri was… yada, yada, yada… alive.”.  Time is a funny thing… and I’m starting to think it likes to fuck with you.

      My favorite part about Widower Day 1 was Heman. Kateri and I had never met Heman… I guess Kateri just hasn’t… but we spoke about him often as we made up stories from the limited information we had acquired through the two and a half years since buying the schoolhouse. He’s a neighbor just a few houses down the road, has the bushy… somewhat frizzy big white beard, is a machinist who loves old cars (he has a beautiful old Studebaker… it’s gorgeous!), and there are stories that he has lists… that you don’t wanna be on. Kateri’s high school (?… I think) French teacher used to live down the road and he told us that once he saw his name in the ol’ 18 spot.  Some time had gone by, him and Heman caught up… AND HE SAW HE WAS NUMBER 4! Didn’t know what it meant… but didn’t think it was good!

      Heman is just one of those characters in life that everyone has a story about. Honestly, a vast majority of the stories I have heard from various friends and neighbors put him on a pretty high pedestal.  He’s a good, honest man that will help you out if you need it… and yes, I kinda wanna be him when I grow up! (I mean, I wanna be Braedy’s dad, as well… but that’s a whole nother story that involves tractors and tighty whiteys)

      I remember it was brilliantly sunny that morning… it felt nice… after, well… losing Kateri the night before. When I’m outside, especially when I’m on the porch, I wave to everyone who drives past the schoolhouse… and this loud ass purple Chevy was no exception.  I watched it go by and when I heard that it stopped out front and was backing up it was kinda like… ok? this may be interesting?!… not knowing who it was at first, but when I saw that big ol’ beard… I knew exactly who it was. I can’t tell you the impact this encounter has had on my life. Although I was in a daze from just losing Kateri… I felt a smidgen of comfort. I’ve gotta tell you, Heman was nowhere near the bubble of people I thought I was gonna encounter that day, but he probably had the most profound affect on me. Day one of my new life… just happened to be the day I got to meet Heman.

      Heman: Hallo… My name’s Heman… I live just down the road.  Figured enough time has gone by that introductions were in order.

      Me: Heman… I can’t tell you how fantastic I think it is that you stopped by today, but I’ve just gotta let you know that my wife passed away last night… and things are a little strange.

      Heman: Oh, oh my gosh… I’m so sorry for stopping.  I’m so sorry for your loss.

      Me: That’s ok Heman.   This is why Kateri and I bought this house… our first home… to set roots. I think it’s absolutely perfect that on the first day of my new life… on day one… I got to meet a neighbor… and it was you. I just wish Kateri could have been here to meet you, too.

      Heman: I’m just so sorry for your loss man. If I still drank I’d invite you down to the porch for a beer, but I gave that up blah, blah, blah 2012.

      Me: That’s ok Heman… I haven’t had a drink since September 9, 2006… but I smoke pot?!

      Heman: SO DO I!!

      Yup… and Heman basically got back into his loud ass purple Chevy, cigarillo coming dangerously close to his perfectly unkept beard, and went off to do whatever it is that Heman does.img_2586

      It’s been a long strange year… and now, I’m ready to see what the next year has to offer, but this is what I did the day after Kateri died. I remember it being strange in itself to open up a computer in bed to make these notes… we never had “screens” in bed!

      ps-I have yet to hang out on Heman’s porch… maybe in Year 2!

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 1… Woke up at 10:00am-to alarm-Dr. Phil moment

      Just Scottie, Maria, and myself

      a. Heman drove past, stopped, backed up, and pulled into our driveway.
      b. Figured it had been long enough and introductions should happen
      c. Told him my wife passed away.
      d. We bought this home to set roots and it meant the world to me that a neighbor… Heman… would stop by the DAY AFTER Kateri died meant so much to me as I am in the first day of my new life
      e. Scottie left around 12:45PM

      Bobbi stopped by after checking her mail. Sat on the deck

      Keith and Michelle came by. They brought me a BLT hoagie

      Moose and Fam came by.

      a. Went over cremation papers… decided on Wednesday.
      b. Made list of who would be invited to cremation
      c. Tony’s first time to the house.
      d. This is what a “home” is… a place for friends and family to gather… I’m glad I had that realization.

      Chichi and Benjamin came by with 6 pizzas

      a. Gave me a… card.

      Never really left the front deck

      Got sun burnt on my face

      Facetimed with my family… they were at Dina’s house.

      Went to bed at 5:00am

      Widower Notes n Thought:

      • The first day after Kateri’s death was the first time in a long time I didn’t feel… worried. It wasn’t until a friend mentioned it up at the fire pit, but she was 100% right… that “worry”… any worries… kinda just leave you for a while. Of course, then they’re replaced by a whole new set of worries, but for a few days… everything just stops. On the “Widower” side of things… In a strange way… I kinda miss how it felt that day.

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      Posted in grief, loss, Uncategorized, Widow, widower | 4 Comments | Tagged anniversary, grief, grieving, loss, mourning, thefirstthirty, thirtydaysofmorning, threfirstthirtydays, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 365… It’s been a year.

      Posted at 10:34 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 22, 2019

      img_4883-1It’s 7:35 in the morning… I’ve been up for about 47 minutes… and I don’t know what the fuck to say. I do know that the first text of the day came in a bit ago… and I’ve been crying those good ol’ crocodile tears ever since. Although I don’t really care if people see or hear me being emotional, I am sorta glad that I don’t have people walking past my house on their way to work or school hearing me as I sob uncontrollably while making odd noises through my mouth because my nose is so plugged up with snot! Kateri always said, “Trees make better neighbors!”… and right now I’m glad they are the ones right outside my window listening to me cope and come to terms with the fact that I haven’t been able to hear her laugh, hold her hand while walking down the dirt road, or kiss her goodnight… like I did every… single… night. It has been a year since Kateri has not been on this earth. For 365 days I have come home to an empty house filled with memories of a life that life decided to take away from me… from all of us. It hurts. It’s painful. It’s something I don’t want… but it’s what I’ve got… and I’m glad life didn’t take away the memories.

      img_4888In the winter of 1998/99… December… Wyoming… I watched Kateri walk from The Chalet (female employee housing) down to the lodge, from the window of The Stables (male employee housing). She had on her blue snow pants, her white winter coat with the god awful neon patch work, and her funky hat from Nepal or some place (I should remember where she got it… she told me… it’s just not coming to me!) keeping her head warm. Kateri would sometimes tilt her head as she walked. I found the image to be calming.  We didn’t really know each other at the time… we had just met. At the time, there weren’t any romantic inclining’s yet… she was just someone I found to be interesting.  She was unique.  There was something different about her. Thankfully, we got along and became friends!img_4891

      Twenty years later, I love the fact that the image of Kateri strolling through the snow is still clear as day in my mind… and that it was just the beginning of her filling my life with friendship, purpose, guidance, and love. It has been the surprise of my life watching this young twenty something woman from the east coast walking through the snow turn into the most important thing that ever came into my world. I am grateful and lucky that I am the one who got to spend the rest of Kateri’s life with her… I am fortunate in that way… I just wish she didn’t have to leave.

      img_4887For the last 365 days… and for the four months and three days before that… I have been consumed with either the experience of watching and being a part of cancer ravish Kateri’s body and brain, the loss of Kateri, or trying to figure out how to survive without her.  It’s been a struggle. I don’t eat, I find it a challenge to put myself to bed, I’m stressed out worrying about my future, my job, my home. I’m sad, I’m confused, and I hurt… this process physically hurts… but I’m here. I’m here surrounded by the memories that Kateri and I made with each other as we built our life together. She gave me twenty years of memories to draw upon when I feel the need to be close to her. She filled our home with relics which are attached to experiences over those twenty years which I can hold in my hand, I can feel, I can smell… I can touch. Kateri will always be with me… a part of me.  That’s just what happens.  This last year has sucked balls, but the great things that Kateri brought into this world… into my world… are still here… even if she isn’t. That is how we hold on… to the people we love more than ourselves. That is how I hold on to Kateri… because I miss her… I love her… and I always will.

      ps… the video is kinda dark, but it did happen to be night time… and we were just sitting in our driveway.  This is simply a minute and 18 seconds of Kateri being Kateri. Yup, sometimes she just had to finish out a song! (love ya Nina)

      Kateri “dancing” in our cute little Jeep.

      Kateri “dancing” in our cute little Jeep.

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      Posted in anniversary, cancer, grief, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, videos, Widow, widower | 8 Comments | Tagged anniversary, cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thirtydaysofmorning, videos, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 364… Easter… and a video from the last one.

      Posted at 11:40 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 21, 2019

      Although Kateri called herself a “Recovering Catholic”… she still loved the holidays and Easter was no exception.  It didn’t matter if we were home or happened to be away in some dumpyish hotel near the ocean, visiting friends back in The Rockies, or with family anywhere… there was always an Easter Basket in the morning.  I’ve got to mention that Kateri loved baskets, and if there was a holiday where she could make someone happy by putting little gifts and candy in a basket… she was all over it!  The gravy being she got to keep the baskets afterwards!

      Sorry, just gotta detour for a sec because one of Kateri’s favorite Easter events IN THE WORLD! just popped into my head. We have a couple of friends who throw an Adult Easter Egg Hunt! Now, first of all, Kateri loved these two people.  (The husband was actually the nurse who was there when they had to tip her upside down to put an IV in her neck when her kidneys failed in 2004… after our trip to the Dominican. It was a scary time and she was so thankful that someone she knew was taking care of her… and that it was him. He had ever since held a special place in her heart). Anyways, these guys have some land in the hills and invite friends over for an evening/night of festivities. You see… the Easter Egg hunt happens once it get’s dark!… At night!… with flashlights n shit!… on a few acres in rural Vermont consisting of yard, woods, creek, pond, fields, barns, and culverts! It was probably one of our favorite experiences ever… I mean, at least in the top 250… there are a lot to choose from, but it’s up there!

      It was hilarious. I think about 50 of us… ish… packed into the kitchen and living room of their little old farmhouse and waited for two things. 1. For it to get dark and 2. For John to come back from hiding the prize which would provide us with a “winner” of the hunt… The Black Egg.  Actually it was shaped liked a kidney, but it did the job. It was obviously the best color for an Adult Easter Egg Hunt at night… and it was able to hold the prize of a couple hundred bucks for the winner!

      It was nice for everyone to catch up in that time, to meet new people, to share stories… but once John came back!… it was on!… in the most polite, friendly, and supportive way an Adult Easter Egg Hunt could go! The fact that it was in the dark just killed Kateri and I! They would literally walk into the yard… drop eggs… and not find them till the next morning. You could see headlamps pointed straight down scouring fence lines, woods, around out buildings… and in them. You could hear the giggles of grown ups as they found and opened eggs filled with candy, lottery tickets, and booze. There was outright laughter echoing in the darkness as people tromped through the creek and slipped on the slick rocks. The year we participated, The Black Egg was inside… INSIDE… the 6 foot culvert running beneath the dirt road! It was simply one of those fun things in life that take you by surprise when you realize just how good of an idea it is… that everything about it is fun! Basically, it’s a night filled with good people who are simply trying to find money in a black kidney… in the dark… while drunk and stoned. (yes, it’s also fun sober… just not as fun… or challenging)

      IMG_2316Last year, Easter fell on the 1st.  It was actually three weeks before Kateri passed.  It’s weird to think about… she wasn’t in Palliative Care yet.  Heck, we hadn’t even received the bad news of no more options yet. Maria had just gotten to our house the day or two before… I think.  She came to help… and to be with her sister. It was the three of us for the last three weeks of Kateri’s life… going through it… together. I am forever grateful to Maria for being here for many reasons, but it really comes down to the fact that I think Kateri needed her to be here.  Kateri needed Maria to be with her as she was preparing to leave this earth… she needed her help… her support… her love.  And Maria… needed to be with Kateri.

      It’s because of Maria that I have this video taken last Easter after we had spent the morning drinking coffee and going through our Easter Baskets (Kateri got me a tent… that’s a whole nother story).IMG_2319 I didn’t remember the video when I stumbled upon it trying to clear space on my phone, so it sorta caught me by surprise.  It’s hard for me to see Kateri in the “Cancer Time” and it’s quick, but it’s Kateri… through and through… in a space she loved… with people she loved.

      If you are into Easter, Jesus, and all that jive… I hope you have a good one!  If not… well… Happy Sunday!

      Easter April 1st, 2018

      Easter April 1st, 2018

       

      Yo… and if ya want… hit the follow button!

       

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      Posted in cancer, Easter, grief, loss, Uncategorized, videos, Widow, widower | 7 Comments | Tagged cancer, Easter, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thirtydaysofmorning, video, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 357… Chickens Running… in slow motion!

      Posted at 12:38 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 14, 2019

      img_4828This is kinda one of those “spur of the moment” posts.  It’s cloudy and a bit chilly…. with large patches of snow adding to the coolness of the image out the ol’ schoolhouse windows. I’m still in comfy clothes… from last night… because I fell asleep on the couch after watching the first scary movie… alone… in said schoolhouse… since Kateri passed away (“The Silence”. At least it wasn’t a ghost/paranormal/psychological sorta movie. And… I survived!). I actually woke up at 6 something, but was comfortable enough and warm enough, so I just decided to stay horizontal… till 9:13!… (a.m.)… and not trudge upstairs.  It’s been one of those slow moving/Tupelo Honey on the radio types of mornings… and it feels good.  The coffee tastes nice, dark, and strong… and I’ve already gotten to have a nice visit with a friend from down the road. I even got to pull out power tools!… and use them in my front yard while still in those comfy clothes… with the addition of rubber boots! It was literally just replacing a couple of straps… but some people… well I… will take any opportunity to fix something using tools.

      Basically, I’ve enjoyed the morning. I’ve actually enjoyed the last couple of days. Last night, when I got home, I let the chickens out so that they could stretch their legs and remember what scratching in the grass and leaves from last fall feels like. I also learned that we all have a little slow motion option on our phones!… yup. As I’m going through life learning about what makes me happy,  what doesn’t, and everything in between… I thought, “A slow motion video of Lil’ Bitch, Chicken, Chicken, and Chicken running to me might make me happy?!… and it did. Soooo…..

      The Ladies Running Slo-mo

      The Ladies Running Slo-mo

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      Posted in cancer, grief, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, videos, Widow, widower | 9 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, mourning, sunday morning, thirtydaysofmorning, video, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 355… Rememberin’…?

      Posted at 11:13 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 12, 2019

      img_4802I had told myself… and I guess the digital world… that I wanted to take these next two weeks (the last two of the first year without Kateri) to mourn the loss of my wife.  The other day, at the end of a conversation with a friend, he asked me, “What does that mean to you?”…. and I realized… I have no fucking idea! But I figure rememberin’ has somethin’ to do with it so that’s what I’m gonna do a little of and see how it goes. I mean… we’ll see… it took me three days, 2 baths, a pint of Ben n Jerry’s, two hours and 23 minutes of Aquaman, and 13 packages of pills (Smarties) to get through 8 photos! (yup, the kind you can hold in your hand)

      Yesterday… a year ago… Kateri went into Palliative care after we spent all night in the ER (except for an early morning run home with Maria so we could grab… something?… don’t really remember). I’m not gonna talk about seeing her doc in the morning, before the hospital was humming… when I could see the sorrow in his eyes as he went over options of drilling holes in Kateri’s head to relieve some pressure. I’m not gonna get into how I kicked the wooden box out of frustration because Kateri said, “We… can’t do this anymore.”… a box I walk by every morning and every night… splintered wood that reminds me of the time I wasn’t willing to give up hope… I wasn’t willing to accept it… but my wife… Kateri, couldn’t take the pain any longer. I’m not gonna talk about that because… as awful as those sound… I thought I still had time.

      A year ago yesterday, I sat on a couch.  Across the room from me was my wife, my best friend, the love of my life… Kateri. It was quiet… calm. Kateri was asleep… well, drugged… but finally some relief for her. Keith was on one side of me… Michelle on the other.img_4807  Each with an arm wrapped around my shoulders… a hand on my leg… one on across my chest.  I remember them just holding me as I was processing what was going on… while they were processing what was going on… and I just remember saying to Keith… “This is it. We’re here for a reason…. right?… this is it?”… and all he had to say was, “Yes.”

      What does “mourning” mean to me?  I guess it’s remembering picnics with bologna sandwiches (bologna was not a part of our normal diet) in the back of Cherokees… in the middle of Iowa while a thunderstorm is wreaking havoc across an empty campground.  It’s remembering Kateri saying, “Fear the poke!” as she would flex her index finger to show off her second digit muscle. It’s remembering that Kateri was the most loving, thoughtful, honest… sometimes brutally honest, and simply the most beautiful person I have ever been fortunate enough to meet, to be friends with, and to share my life with (of course, she’s basically the only one I’ve shared my life with!).  It’s remembering sitting on that couch being comforted by friends I love. It’s remembering walking over to my wife to hold her… crying… knowing she was going to die… knowing… Kateri was going to die… soon. It’s remembering a time… when she was alive.

      (before anyone says anything about her always being around, will never truly be gone, she’s in the wind and yada, yada, yada type stuff… I get it… I’m not talking about that stuff)

      It’s been nice going through some old pics, but really it’s not the time.  It’s hard, but the memories of Palliative Care are really what are consuming my thoughts right now… and I’m OK with that.  That’s what was going on a year ago. I feel it’s only natural that they would still be ever present in the ol’ noggin around the first anniversary. And quite frankly, I believe it was probably the most intimate experience Kateri and I had together so I’ll just roll with it.  Being with the person you love more than yourself when they are in pain, when they are sick, when they are told there is nothing that can be done to save their life… and them looking to you for comfort… them looking to their husband… looking to the love of their life… well, that’s when life shows you a bit more of what love is.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • On a happier note… the chickens looked really happy standing on wet, soggy grass.4-11-2019 There’s a strip between the coop and the house… which I was excited about… and then the chickens crapped all over it! (At least they looked happy!)
      • No… I’m not one of the guys in the first picture, but when Kateri was around 24… ish… she had a deal with one of them to help her become a mom if she was still single and childless by the time she was 40.  The day Kateri passed, that guy arrived on the east coast early in the morning… from Alaska. I love that guy… and just realized he’s basically “our” oldest friend.  The three of us met in Wyoming… 1998. He was there at the very beginning of mine and Kateri’s relationship… and standing with me hours after she took her last breath… he was there with us at the very end.  The memories I have that involve this man mean the world to me… and I’m glad he didn’t impregnate my wife!

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      Posted in cancer, grief, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, Widow, widower | 2 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thefirstthirty, thirtydaysofmorning, threfirstthirtydays, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 351… 15… I’m learning how to cope.

      Posted at 10:46 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 8, 2019

      IMG_2817It hit me last night… I’m trying to jam “healing” into a time frame and attaching it to all sorts of things.  This is one reason I’m thankful I decided to use writing, to start a blog, as a tool for myself as I go through this process.  Recently, my plan was to just get all those things that I associate with “widower” stuff on the blog by the one year anniversary of Kateri’s passing.  I wanted it all there… consolidated… organized… so that I could start year 2 with a fresh and brighter outlook, but I can’t do it. Tomorrow is the anniversary of one of the roughest days of my life… the day we found out there were no other options (two immunotherapy treatments which had two drugs at each treatment… along with one radiation session… did absolutely nothing). The day after that is the ER.  The day after that… Palliative Care.

      I need to remember those times without trying to pile on what I was going through after she had passed. I mentioned that I need to take the next couple of weeks and mourn the loss of Kateri, to remember her, and this experience.  I just can’t do that while posting and thinking about the time right after she passed. It’s just too much… and it takes away from the uniqueness of each experience. I feel it would diminish them… to just notes about an experience.  Writing and this blog has shown me that.

      Soooo, after reading my notes from Day 15, I thought it was fitting to pause the “Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning” notes here (I’ll still be posting other things) until after the 22nd, and to remember not only the last two weeks of Kateri’s life… but the 44 other years we were all so lucky and thankful to have her in our lives. For me, I just want to remember the last 20 years… my life with Kateri… and not the life without her.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 15… woke up at 8:00am… got out of bed at 8:45… just needed to be horizontal a little longer.

      As I get ready to go back to work, I decided to shoot the entire company (for some reason) an email to show my gratitude. This is what I sent out.

      Good Morning Everyone,
      As I try to reintegrate back into life I was going to write to my crew, to my peeps, to our department, to say “Thanks!” for supporting me and for picking up my slack over the last however long when I realized that I needed to thank everyone who makes up this company. What I just went through (and am still going through) requires support from all sorts of different angles, from all sorts of people who are in my life in varying degrees. I don’t know most of you and I’m sure most of you don’t know me, but we have KA that connects us and right now those connections are helping me as I try to navigate, cope with, and live with this new life that was thrust upon me. My wife, Kateri Marie Damato, died 2 weeks ago after a four month and three-day dance (she considered it a dance… not a battle, not a fight… although she fought hard) with Metastatic Malignant Melanoma in the brain at the age of 44. She had a rare mutation in the disease that was just absolutely brutal to her body. She faced it head on and with that “Kateri” approach to life. She never asked for a prognosis, never took narcotics for the pain because they disgusted her, she never said the “woe is me” type stuff, she never stopped living her life or being who she is when faced with an obstacle that would have left most of us destroyed on the floor and unable to function because of the weight of it. This has been the absolute worst thing that has happened to me in my life so far. I have never felt so saddened, so scared, so sorry for someone else. I have never felt so many different emotions, so much pain while… numb at the same time. It is a strange thing to go through losing a spouse, a partner. Two weeks ago, I went from traveling through this life and all that it brings (a home, experiences, travel, friends, moments, chickens) with someone who I planned on being old and wrinkly with… to instant independence and all the challenges that that brings emotionally, physically, and financially. To say the least, it has been a bit much.

      The point of this email is not to list all the horrible things that come along with a big pile of shit like this, but to shed light on the amount of beauty that I have seen while going through this experience. The amount of love and support from friends, family, co-workers, acquaintances, and strangers has been simply overwhelming. The conversations, the phone calls, the texts, the emails from all sorts of people in our life from all sorts of places has made some of this bearable and the rest of it not quite as daunting. Life doesn’t stop for any of us roaming this planet, but sometimes we need to stop and say “thank you”. I thank everyone for giving me time to be with my wife as she lived with cancer, to care for her when it got rough, and for the time to initially cope with my life after it had taken her’s. I thank you for providing me with the memory of being treated as a person, not an employee, in a time of adversity. I thank you for the opportunity to look back at this and say, “Ummm, that went as well as it possibly could… for a big pile of shit”.

      I am just one person within this company and I know we all have a different experience with it, but I felt the need to share part of my experience with all of you because it has been a positive one… and this is what it’s all about. We are a company made up of people who are all just living life… it’s as simple as that. I look forward to using some of my new-found time to get to know some of you a little more. You can check out my FB page if you want a fuller story of our life recently and in years past (I’m cool with friend requests at this time… filling voids n such), and I’ll check out yours. If not, that’s cool and groovy… we don’t all need to be friends. More importantly, please just be kind to one another, respect each other for being here, and support the people who you are surrounded by every day because that is the way life should be lived, that is the way people should be treated, and that is the experience that you have given me.
      Regards,
      Darren

      a. I’ve gotten some replies already and they make me feel hesitantly better.

      Called Consolidated

      a. Paid the bill, my name is nowhere on the account, they transferred me to CS… got sick of waiting and have to wait for death certificates anyways.
      b. Haven’t gotten death certificates yet… kind of annoying, but not really. Doesn’t really matter at this point… I’ll get them at some point.

      Set up the new phone.

      a. Kind of a fun little new thing. I like that it is black like the router… sorta blends in, doesn’t stand our as much as the white.

      Keith came over and we chatted on the front deck for a bit (left at 3:30ish).

      a. The sun was nice. Had to open up the umbrella.
      b. First time I hade cried in a bit. It feels good to be able to cry when he visits, I’m finding I get more emotional when other people are around
      c. He’s gonna start working 5 days a week…

      Drove up to Burlington for Penny Cluse’s 20th Anniversary. It was something that is uncomfortable for me… social situations… alone, but I wanted to congratulate Charles and Holly and say thank you for being a part of my life. It is still one of my favorite restaurants and I hold Charles in such high regard as a cook/restaurateur

      a. Didi and Nick pulled up besides me as I was texting with my dad about places to stay when they come out.
      b. I felt awkward about going in, but I felt pretty secure with my actions… I knew I needed to go in and I knew that I really did want to see people. (It didn’t feel weird)
      c. People I saw: Didi, Nick/John, Charles, Holly, Tracy, Stasia, Dan Marshall, Moira/Joe, Andy, Carlton, Juan, Sabra, Betzida?, Ruslan/Emily, Dale, James, Clarence/Sandy, Jake/Kristen, Gardner, Sipha,….
      d. Stayed longer than expected, but was gonna roll with it anyways. I’m glad I stayed as along as I did to see the people I did and to have the conversations I had.

      Drove home, talked to my folks about some Freedom Farm house (looked it up when I got home… hopefully they can book it).

      a. I had to just get off the phone with them considering my father kept running downstairs to the computer to get information on it… I was trying to get home… and it was late already, but that is what makes it interesting and entertaining.

      Read cards from Leo and Heidi, and Nancy D.

      Went to bed at 2:10am…. First day of work tomorrow. Another first day of my new life… more Dr. Phil moments to come.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • If you have lost a spouse, if you are going through any type of traumatic experience, take care of yourself.  If you don’t know how?… you’ll figure it out… and there are people to help you along the way.
      • I love how this little website gives me information.  I saw people were searching for “Kateri Lidstrom”… she didn’t take my name!Axeless Mountain Dwarf 4/8/ We were progressive n shit. (Actually, we didn’t like the idea of changing her name… Kateri Lidstrom wasn’t who she was… and it sounded stupid)
      • Yup… just looked down at myself and it made me kinda laugh. A friend once referred to me as an Axeless Mountain Dwarf… I guess this is what one looks like in the morning!

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      Posted in anniversary, cancer, grief, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, Widow, widower | 2 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thefirstthirty, thirtydaysofmorning, threfirstthirtydays, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 350… Remembering 16… The First Day Back to Work.

      Posted at 11:06 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 7, 2019

      Making Steamed Buns at Penny Cluse for our WeddingI’m a cook.  It’s in my blood at this point… it’s part of “who” I am.  We are not “Home Chefs” or tell people that, “I just love to cook!”… we are a different breed and unless you are one… you just don’t understand… like being a widower/widow. You may get a glimpse of what/who we are… but you never get the full story… there are too many details.  Now, I do believe that that goes for any personal experience we humans go through.  I may know that you are hurting, or are faced with the challenge of losing a loved one, or that you are an accountant and have to face Tax Season!… but I don’t know what that feels like for you… I don’t know what you need to do to get through your challenges. Nor, do I need to know. I just need to know that there are challenges in your world.

      Work is a huge part of a cook’s life… it’s a huge part of my life. Kateri and I were a cook and a flower farmer.  We were worker bees… the drones… like so many in our circle. We rely on work out of necessity for survival… it’s paycheck to paycheck. Now, I’ve made it no secret that I’m kinda over being in kitchens… 24 years is a long time to do anything and I just wanna try something new… but the comfort I found just sitting on a stainless steel table, talking with my chef… with my friend, on a day when I was seeing my co-workers… some for the first time after losing Kateri, was the perfect place for me to be. I found warmth surrounded by the hum of refrigeration, sitting on a cold metal table, and having someone listen to me as I tried to explain what I was going through.

      I am forever grateful to my place of employment and co-workers for one reason (there are other accolades I can give, but this is the big one)… they gave me time to be with my wife when she got sick… they gave me time to be with her when she went into Palliative Care… they gave me time to be home in our schoolhouse after she passed.  It is because of that time that I am able to look back on this horrendous experience and recognize that there are good parts imbedded in those memories.  It is because of the time given, that I have the memory of holding Kateri’s hand and arm… when she took her last breath. To have the memory that I was with Kateri at the very end of her life… at the very end of our life… is something I will always cherish… no matter how hard it is to think about. That is what the gift of time can give someone… when time is running out.Denver Botanical Gardens '09ish?

      For the past couple of weeks I have been humming and hawing over if I should be revisiting these notes right now, but that is one reason I think I started writing this blog. It has sorta guided me through this process.  It has given me some insight to what it is I’m doing and what got me to this point.  It has forced me to reassess decisions and to adapt so that I can keep moving forward… so that I can keep waking up each morning and keep putting on my big boy pants (Dr. Phil moments). In the last week and a half, it has shown me that I need to take the next two weeks… and mourn the death of Kateri.  I need to put everything else aside, I need to focus on myself, I need to stop worrying about all the things that life has thrown at me, I need to stop trying to figure “everything” out, and I need to simply slow down… and mourn my wife… because I want to.

      I have tried to be overly positive throughout this process because I needed to… to survive… literally.  In no way have I ever had thoughts of suicide, but to this day… I still don’t want to live a day without Kateri… and that is a hard thing to come to terms with when I know I will never have another day at the beach with her. There won’t be another afternoon of working in the yard or in the gardens. She will never again be laying in bed next to me… drinking coffee… on a Sunday morning. As I’ve been faced with that reality, I had to overcompensate with “The Good” in the world… I’ve relied on it.  But now… I just want to remember my wife… how much I love her… and how much I simply miss Kateri.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 16… First day of going back to work… first day of the rest of my life. Woke up @ 7:35ish

      Couldn’t really jump out of bed. It was nice to have to get motivated to go to work, but I wasn’t in a hurry. It took a little longer to get out of the house as well… hesitant.

      Eric texted if I wanted to go to A-Street first, so I drove there.

      a. I like that I went to A-St. first… it was a nice warm up… a toe in the water.
      b. He mentioned working in a day of rest in the middle of the work week for now… which I think is a great idea. It helps relieve that stress of making it through a work week. I’ll probably work Tues/Wed, off Thurs, work Fri/Sat. Who CAN’T work 16 hours without freaking out?! Of course, I may have a moment of freak out.

      Went to Camelot.

      a. Jason was there. We chatted both in the kitchen and up at my desk. Work shit.
      b. Talked with Diane… I love my desk neighbor. She’s just a pretty cool lady.
      c. Brock was working on the dodec and came over and gave his condolences. I like that dude, too. Just seems like a nice guy. Don’t know if we would have ANYTHING in common, but I would have a burger with that guy.

      a. I’m trying to figure out who I want to maybe spend more time with or not while trying to figure out how to interact with people at the same time.

      d. I had a bowl of chicken salad.

      Went back to A-St. to chat with Eric and to see if there was anything I could do to help. Portioned chicken salad, turkey, roast beef… then pretty much left.

      Chatted with Eric for a bit after everyone left.

      Came home, swept the breezeway, cleaned bathroom/bedroom screens, got chicken water, cleaned the grill, replaced a burner cover (I thought there would be four in the case… nope, just one). Cleaned up the kitchen, dishes, and called Consolidated Communication and paid off bill.

      Drove to Bradford to get some smokes.

      a. I need to stop… still. At this point, I am also thinking of how she would deal with stuff.

      Ate some spaghetti and meatballs

      Watched some Kitchen Nightmares (which I don’t really care for), but it’s noise. Looked for lawnmower baffle and new cook shoes… couldn’t do either, but that’s OK.

      My folks rented the Airbnb on Bloodbrook. I think that will be better for everyone.

      I simply can’t do this anymore… I gotta sleep. All in all, it was a nice first “back to work” day. I’m feeling OK, but still know the challenges ahead me… there will be some new things/new emotions coming down the pike (?).

      Going to sleep at 1:00am on the dot.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Yup, crying is a pretty normal occurrence these last few days.  Usually starts when I get close to home… and then throughout the evening with moments of reprieve. It’s strange to cry so hard… but to feel “ok”.
      • I’ve been writing mostly about my “widower” stuff.  I’m kinda hoping that when I get to the 1 year mark I can start writing about some of the things that made Kateri’s and my life so wonderful… the things that made Kateri… well… Kateri.
      • I love Saturdays (my Fridays).  Going into my weekends are the only days where I don’t feel rushed to try and get everything done.
      • Ann stopped by last night.  I met her when she knocked on my window looking for help with moving a log out of the road during a storm one night a couple of months back.  She wanted to introduce me to her husband… Frank.  They were fantastic!
      • Another random dude also stopped by last night looking for a road… because he was supposed to pick up his daughter from a birthday party… but was lost.  It was quite the social evening at the schoolhouse last night!… which wasn’t anticipated.
        • It’s always fun as a widower… who likes to self medicate with certain weeds… to have random people just stop by.  After going through notes and having a few “moments”… I’m pretty sure I looked like a crack addict that lives in the woods… in a cute little schoolhouse.
      • I think I said, “first day of the rest of my life” because of the insertion of work back into the day to day activities instead of just focusing on the ol’ private life.  It was the start of me having to live in this new reality… of having to balance things.
      • Yup, I’ve stopped going through Kateri’s emails… should probably do something about that!

      4-6-2019

      ps… Go ahead, don’t be scared, you can follow the blog through email… there’s a button somewhere on here! It just feels good. I guess another reason for the blog… positive reinforcement. (You don’t even need to read them!… just delete them right away!)

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      Posted in grief, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, Widow, widower | 7 Comments | Tagged grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thefirstthirty, thirtydaysofmorning, threfirstthirtydays, widower, widower thoughts, widows
    • Widower Day 349… on 350… cuz I fell asleep writing about 17.

      Posted at 7:45 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 7, 2019

      img_4764.jpgI was gonna write about all sorts of stuff… but then I read how long this thing was and decided against it… because I can do that. Looking back on this day (and I remember it clearly)… is just kinda weird. I remember wanting to be strong and positive.  I probably overcompensated on the positivity, but I needed to at the time…… And then I fell asleep on the couch (seems to be a theme). Yup.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 17…. Woke up at 7:25, stayed in bed until 7:37am

      Day number 2 of work:

      Started at Camelot.

      a. Went through emails. Never suited up, stayed in 501’s/Cedar Circle Hoodie/Green John Deere hat.
      b. Talked with people. Angela (might be going to Sheboygan), bakery Jim, Lindsay, Tony (from Jersey).
      c. Put Trampoline in Jessica’s car and saw Karen, Suzanne, Ralph, Brock sitting on the picnic table, they came over to see how I was doing.
      d. I did try to hit the major points of this experience and what my approach currently is towards the challenges that I’m about to deal with. I feel as though they were impressed with how I am dealing/coping with everything.
      e. It felt nice that they took the time… the “Big Wigs”. I am/feel fortunate to work for this place. It is filled with people who are being sooo supportive of me as I go through this.

      Went to A-St.

      a. Eric, Gil and I went through the schedule for the summer to look at coverage.
      b. Happens every year… the question of what to do with staff and how to reduce labor when Baker closes.

      Went to that new building.

      a. Spoke with Chantelle about insurance. She was awesome. Might leave me at Silver… why not, I’ve definitely hit the out of pocket maximum.
      b. Barb came out and we chatted for a bit. It was nice to talk with her, she has been great through this… both supportive and responsible.
      c. Gave Suzanne another hug and Ceal came through.

      Went back to Camelot.

      a. Hung out in the front for a minute.
      b. Talked with Michelle… she’s just so nice
      c. Had a conversation with J. He just became a US citizen (don’t know where he is from), but he said it was an amazing experience. He loved the diversity of the group that was there for the ceremony.

      Called Knights’s funeral home from the park n ride in Thetford. Rich said they are gonna get some more death certificates and just mail them to me.

      a. When I got home, there was a message from Stuart saying they were still waiting for the Williston PO to send them back. I felt bad calling them before I had heard that message, but it’s been over two weeks and I am ready to have the certificates in my possession so that I can take care of some stuff.

      Went to the store. Was gonna pick up some hot dogs, but on the way there Michelle texted asking if I wanted to come over for dinner and have hot dogs!

      a. I didn’t get much stuff, still not in a routine of meals and I don’t wanna throw shit away or spend money just to throw something away.

      Came home and washed the jeep. It’s kinds fun washing your own car in your own driveway. It’s probably a strange sight in WFC, also.

      a. Went to clear spam from Kateri’s email and saw the one from Kit again so I clicked on it. He had sent it (titled Thinking of you) on the morning of her passing at 10:57am. In it was a few pictures and a link to a video of me proposing to her at Mcguckin’s (Love in a hardware store).
      b. I watched the video… it was rough, but I watched the whole thing. It just brought up so many memories and feelings.
      c. It made me really miss her touch. I miss the feeling of her arm, her skin, her hair. I sat on the pink box (which is now purple) and cried for a bit. I went out and sat on the porch and just had that “missing her” feeling… it was overwhelming. All I wanted to do was to feel her again… and I know I never will.

      When I was about to leave for Keith and Michelle’s, Michelle from Ptown messaged me thanking me for my message.

      a. It felt good that she reached out. I really dug her, and it was my first experience meeting someone new… albeit, she was a bartender and working.
      b. The conversation was just so easy and nice and she was so welcoming that I needed to thank her.
      c. I kinda hope she stays in contact… I think it could be fun to see where that relationship goes (she is a lesbian with a girlfriend, so I don’t mean in any sexual way). I’m guessing this is what it’s like to meet friends and foster those relationships… or not.

      Went to Keith and Michelle’s.

      a. Hung out with just Michelle for a bit. It was nice.
      b. She asked about “bartender Michelle” … that’s when I informed her that she was a lesbian, yada, yada, yada.
      c. On the back deck I got emotional when talking about the challenges ahead of me. It’s nice to have them in my life. They provide me with a level of comfort that I just don’t get anywhere else.
      d. Keith came home towards the end of my tear factory. He looked like he should be on a college campus with his button up short sleeve shirt, shorts, and name tag.

      Came home. Closed up chickens. Heard a deer fawn in the woods somewhere to the north. They have that distinctive little whine/cry/noise. I didn’t go investigate, but it reminds me of Starksboro when we heard a mom giving birth and East Thetford when there were two in/around Sarah’s arena and by the gator.

      a. Played a little guitar. It’s nice that my fingers aren’t hurting quite as much now that I’ve been playing more. It doesn’t help with the going to bed part though… It’s been nice being able to pick it up whenever… which just happens to be late night most of the time.
      b. Watched a little Netflix… honestly, don’t remember what I watched (I am writing this the morning after because I fell asleep on the couch).
      c. Texted with Matty for a minute. He was asking about places to stay. It wasn’t until the morning that I realized he should just stay here… or at least be given the option.
      d. Smoked copious amounts of weed trying to get me to go to bed… but over did it and crashed on the couch.
      e. It has been kind of nice not worrying about falling asleep on the couch when I don’t have to get up the next day. It doesn’t bother me… I’m still getting sleep… and it reminds me how I would always tell Kateri, “I don’t mind sleeping on the couch… it’s like camping!” I heard that as part of a joke from some comedian years and years ago… sorry dude, don’t remember who.
      f. Ate some Cheetos and a bag of Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups because I had them. I feel guilty eating that shit, but I get enjoyment out of it also because I never really have had them in the house… at least the Cheetos… but I need to stop eating the crap.

      I feel as though this was the first day that I have felt that “serious sadness” that is gonna be coming. Right now, it’s all still pretty raw, but when I had that feeling of just wanting to touch her, to hold her, to feel her hair in between my fingers I knew that a shift was starting to happen in the way I have been dealing with all of this.

      And yup….. fell asleep on the couch… at some point.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I don’t like that I fell asleep and didn’t post this last night…. makes me feel like I’m slacking.  I also didn’t realize how much of a challenge posting the first thirty days of notes… in thirty days… would be. Sometimes I wish I could spend more time on them… like this one… but it’s still kind of a fun thing and I think it’ll be worth it in the end either way.
      • I do like that I got to sit on the front porch for a bit for the first time this year!… I love sitting on the porch.

       

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      Posted in grief, loss, Uncategorized, Widow, widower | 2 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thefirstthirty, thirtydaysofmorning, threfirstthirtydays, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 348… 18.

      Posted at 3:30 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 6, 2019

      img_4732Sometimes, the ol’ balance scale is off kilter and I have to focus on whatever carries more weight. Sometimes the balance scale… feels like it has 7 arms.

      Some other times, I just want the night to last another twelve hours so that I don’t have to get out of my cozy bed… and start a new day. But then… then… it begins anyways.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 18… woke up at 6:12 on the couch… went up to bed until 8:00am

      Had a lazy morning… didn’t do much.

      At 11:00ish I got a newspaper (still haven’t read it) and went to the farm.

      a. Got a Mocha and a blueberry muffin. Talked with someone who I couldn’t remember their name.
      b. Talked with Anna on the picnic table about what’s going on. Maya came over on her way to lunch. She was stylin’ with a “Wolf” hat (almost airbrushie), grey long sleeve, swim trunks (palm leaves type)… Anna said she wants to do a photo shoot with her on “Farm Style”.
      c. Saw Michelle. We caught up. She gave me a Rose of Sharon (Kateri wanted her to order them) and some kale for chickens. We cried next to the Jeep.
      d. Went to the house to see Adie. She has to leave in a week to help with her father. Much earlier than expected which is hard for her.
      e. Chatted with Dave and Luke for a bit about drinking and shit.
      f. Saw Double E. We’ll get together and eat or play disc golf

      Went and got Death Certificates. Rich came running down the hill with them. He is a very nice guy.

      a. They looked fancy.
      b. It’s kinda strange having them.

      Saw Eric at the light in Norwich.

      Decided to go to Best Buy and get a camera for the computer.

      a. Passed Eric in W. Leb

      Came home and raked the rock walls and area next to the road. It was quick and easy

      Played a little guitar. Played a little Mappy/Pole Position/Galaga/Ms. Pac-man.

      Dinner: Hippie cup of noodles, iceburg salad, orange, Cheetos.

      Talked on the phone with Nate D.  Jared/Double E/Nate were all texting me at the same time… spoke with Nate.

      Fell asleep in the chair from midnight till 2:00am.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • The perfect gift for a widow/widower?… a back scratcher! It’ll change their life… and save their door frames.
      • It’s nice to look up and see the Rose of Sharon from the notes… in my living room. Six months ago I thought I had killed it!

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    • Widower Day 347… 19… A Good “meh” Day.

      Posted at 5:56 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 4, 2019

      Kateri Apple Picking! Early 2000's?.. 03ish?All I wanna say is… I really enjoyed reading through these notes… looking back on this one day.  At the time, the day itself was just kinda meh…  and I’m sure I was just floating around in a daze. But reading what I was thinking about and recognizing the mood I was in as I wrote down ideas… as I was first trying to figure out what it was that I was gonna do in my life… to survive (because that’s what it feels like)… it felt good. Instant gratification. A talk with a friend. Looking for good in… whatever. Saying, “Fuck it”… and doing whatever it was that I felt I needed to do to feel better.

      I remember this day. I like this day. It was an ok day with lasting ramifications. As a widower, I have to deal with balancing this new life with the old.  It’s hard to have to sometimes push Kateri aside just so that I can get through a day. Shitty way to put it, but bill collectors don’t care that your wife died and I can’t cry all day at work… or at the store… or at the dentist… or hole up in my little schoolhouse wearing comfy clothes with a year’s supply of ice cream (in convenient pint sized servings).Crater's of the Moon!  I like these notes because I can see a little bit of both chapters of my life in them and it was a “typical” day for me.

      Lastly, it’s just really cool to be able to look back on my own experience and see myself doing OK… that I was challenging my norms… that I was living my life… and… missing ours. Sometimes flinging shit against a wall pays off.

      There… that’s all I wanna say.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 19…woke up at 7:20ish

      Tried putting down as much notes as I could remember quickly about yesterday because I fell asleep in the chair. Yesterday was just one of those days. Wasn’t very motivated to write shit down.

      Went to work today. Got there just before 9:00am.

      a. Chatted with Eric for a bit. Did pars, plugged in Ian’s requests, told him we didn’t have coverage for one of the days… life doesn’t work out sometimes… he was cool.
      b. Annie got me by the front doors and said how she just felt like… she knew Kateri and I were soul mates. (sometimes I feel like that isn’t a fair term for the living. Grim future type stuff)
      c. Work…. Well, it’s work. I enjoy it and I’m excited to get back into it, but I’m just not there yet. I’m pretty much going through the motions. I may jump in the kitchen tomorrow… but I haven’t yet.

      Left work around 1:00pm… I’m sticking to the four-hour day for this week. To be honest, I’m not really looking forward to full days next week, but I’ve gotta get into it.

      a. Came home to get gas can. Got it and went to Farmway to see if they had any shoes for work… they didn’t. Mainly it was because I’ve got tiny feet and they didn’t have any 7.5’s in clogs or “dress shoes”. It didn’t really surprise me… that’s part of being small! (needed a little excitement).
      b. Mowed the yard. It felt good. Mowing the lawn is one of those instant gratification type things. It felt good to get the leaves out of there… to see mainly green. It neatens things up. I’m gonna try a new pattern in the back yard on the hill… it’s a bitch to mow and I don’t feel like dealing with it this year.
      c. Gave Rob a call… left a message. I feel weird not connecting with him yet… we’re not tight, but he means a lot to myself and he was something special to Kateri. She was just so proud of him and impressed with him. He held a special place in her heart.
      d. MPH called while I was taking a dump. I rushed and wiped because, I thought it was Rob returning my call… it wasn’t. We talked for almost an hour. It was nice to catch up with him. I’m really liking keeping in touch with people. It also feels good to have friends check up on me and then tell me they think I’m handling things pretty well. It was also nice just meandering around outside while chatting on the phone with a friend.
      e. Took a shower (because I was disgusting from mowing… fucking dust and leaves) and ordered a pizza and tiramisu from Colatina Exit. Ordered an All the Way (supreme, deluxe, everything… whatever you wanna call it). That’s one of those things that brings me a little joy… the fact that I can order a pizza with a whole bunch of toppings… like mushrooms and bell peppers.
      f. Went and got the pizza.

      When I got home I decided to play a little guitar before I ate.

      a. Decided to try and record what I was playing. Figured why not, there’s the technology… it might help me improve if I could hear what I was playing.
      b. Then…. THEN, I started talking to the camera and I realized that it helped me, it was some sort of release, some sort of coping mechanism since I don’t have anyone to talk to at home anymore. It felt good and exhilarating.
      c. Recorded three videos. Different degrees of breaking down between the three of them. Might do a fourth and think about posting it.
      d. It made me think about doing a bloggy type thing or just using Facebook about what it’s like to go through this process. I think I would have to start tomorrow, though. I would want people to see as much as possible of this figuring it our shit.
      e. I’m hoping that other people dealing with/coping with shit would get some sort of strength from seeing that someone else is dealing with shit, too.

      Ate pizza and watched some Altered Carbon. I don’t know what’s going on, I haven’t been paying attention, but it’s science fictiony and it’s something on while I putz.

      Decided to go to bed at midnight. Then decided that I should play some Mappy… so now it’s 1:22am. That’s part of the whole Instant Independence… I can play a game of Mappy at midnight and go to bed afterwards!… and then be annoyed with myself that I played a game of Mappy and it’s 1:23am.

      Goodnight.

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      Posted in grief, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, Widow, widower | 4 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, thefirstthirty, thirtydaysofmorning, threfirstthirtydays, widower, widows
    • Widower Day 346… I need to see a chicken run… 20.

      Posted at 10:34 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 3, 2019

      I’ve been doing things for the past 346 days just to try and feel better… maybe to push a bit of the pile of shit off to the side for a while… to hide it. In 19 days it will be the anniversary of Kateri’s passing.  It’s 8 days until she went into Palliative Care… 6 days until we found out there were no more options… or chances of her beating this thing.  Her dance was gonna end… soon.  I remember I even tried to prepare myself for what I knew was coming… but it was sooner than I expected.  Decades sooner than I wanted. And simply… too soon.

      FullSizeRender - CopyFor 346 days I have been filling time with projects, with work, tidying, cleaning, organizing, removing stuff, chickens… and chicken chores, moving wood piles, remodeling bathrooms, acquiring things to help in the future (I’m getting older… and definitely over shoveling snow off driveways!), watering plants, rearranging living rooms (just last week!… I like it, but there’s a strange feeling sitting at home in a space set up in a way that Kateri has never experienced), seeing friends once in a while, meeting new people, seeing family even more once in a while, taking baths, playing guitars, keyboards, or blaring music when it’s significantly past the one-two. I’ve tried to fill time with actions that would help me in the future and/or make me feel good… or better. Right now though, right this second… I just want to stop… and sit… and feel the sadness that the loss of Kateri has given me… because it’s the closest I’m gonna get to her. When I can feel the pressure in my temples, when I have to breath through my mouth because my nose is all snotted up, when the words are blurry after a good ol’ “moment” (like this one)… when it hurts the most… I can see her the clearest. I can almost feel her… feel her skin… her hair. Her beautiful black and silver hair. Again… almost. Now, tell me that’s not fucked up!… (it’s not)

      That being said, being really sad does get really old really quickly! So I’m gonna go let the chickens out on the strip of grass exposed between the snow banks, so that I can see them run. If you haven’t seen a chicken run… it’s funny. (And now I’m thinking about Kateri’s imitation of a chicken running… which was also funny… crap)

      ps… the evening got much better… in bed by ten!… and I’ve just spent 4 minutes and twenty-one seconds reading “much better” over and over again asking myself… “Does that sound weird?”.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 20… (Saturday, May 12, 2018) … alarm went off at 7:00am.

      Couldn’t get out of bed until 7:37am. Doesn’t give me too much time in the morning, but there IS enough time to do what I gotta do. I also haven’t been making lunch in the morning since I’m just doing halfish days.

      Got to work. Just Eric up on the dodec.

      a. Caught up with him a tiny bit. Let him know I was doing OK, but there have been some rough spots in the last couple of days.
      b. It’s good for me when its just us catching up with no one else around. I’m comfortable with him. I value his opinion… I guess that’s what friends do. I figure I’m also lucky that my friend is my boss.
      c. Actually, touched a knife and an onion… three of them, and blanched some spinach for the Mother’s Day quiche special thingy. It felt good to do some chopping and sautéing. Didn’t talk too much… 
      d. I did the US Foods order… like riding a bike.
      e. I have a more positive approach to how to handle things. I’m gonna try and be helpful, how do I help people move forward a bit.

      Left work and just came home. I was gonna go to the store but figured we/I (I accidently wrote we out of habit and didn’t want to erase it so that’s what you get… a we/I thing) have enough food to survive a night so might as well not spend the money.

      a. Stopped at the Thetford Village Store to get a couple of sodas… they didn’t have Sunkist in the bottle so I got a big can of Sunkist and a same size can of Cherry Coke… nostalgia I’m guessing. Also bought a lottery ticket… with power play… why not?

      Got home and decided to suck it up and sand the bathroom. It took me a bit to get situated… putting on coveralls…. Finding hats… safety glasses… etc. Then it moves to the excitement of working on it… getting it just a little bit closer to being a full functional bathroom.

      a. Had to break out the electric hand held sander… it was taking a little too long for my tastes and my shoulder was gonna feel it (in a bad way) if I did it all by hand.
      b. I used the little speaker for music. I put it under the piece of plastic covering the bath… that was good… taking advantage of what we had.
      c. Dust got everywhere. I mean, everywhere. I’m gonna have to get out the mop and sponge and water at some point.
      d. Shop vac’d as much as I could. I’m going to have to do it again… which is fun (not really, it’s kind of a bitch).

      Took a shower, Facetimed Maria, watched something, smoked some smokes, smoked some stuff, chilled most of the evening. Started watching Bojack Horseman… per MPH’s suggestion.

      a. Maria got to Jamaica today. She brought a little of Kateri. She’s kinda considering the trip a pilgrimage for Kateri.
      b. She smoked a joint in the kitchen by the back door. Shut the glass door to “block” smoke from going into the front room since she was waiting for dinner to be delivered
      c. Maria Facetimed with Keith and Michelle and they watched the sunset together.

      I left the chicken coop door open and didn’t check eggs this afternoon. I’m not too worried, if something can get them through all the mesh and wire fencing…

      It’s 2:10am and I’ve gotta go to sleep. This is my problem. I am lost through out the day and find myself just standing or sitting and either staring off into something (or nothing) and by the time I need to write shit down I can barely keep my eyes open… or function.

      Thought about posting videos of what I am going through on Facebook.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Yup… chickens… running… funny.img_4727
      • One thought right now is, “Guess who’s eating a bowl of cake tonight?!”… yes, a bowl.
      • I like reading these notes from almost a year ago. Some things I remember clearly.  Some things I don’t really recall… like most of this one… except Facetiming with Maria.  Love that memory. Cherry Coke… that’s a little rough. Sunkist?… it’s orange… it’s gotta be healthy.
      • It’s frickin’ WINDY right now! I’m glad my house is drafty enough that it whistles!… in stereo!
        • Aaaaand, goodnight.

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    • Widower Day 345… Rambling Number 21.

      Posted at 9:31 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 2, 2019

      I was gonna write about some of the things I was thinking about on my hour and a half drive home (over the river and through the woods) from the airport to the schoolhouse last night… as well as when I got home, but… wow… I guess I had a lot to jot down on ol’ day twenty-one!

      May 11, 2018

      May 11, 2018

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 21… woke up at 6:56am to no alarm. Stayed in bed until 8:00ish… got some coffee, had a smoke, washed up, brushed teeth, crawled back into bed with the computer.

      This was my FB post this morning.

      Widower Day 21… Some positive observations from the last 3 weeks, because when life plops a big pile of shit on you, you sometimes grasp tightly to any of the “good” that is buried in it. Here are a few that I have noticed for you to take with you as you deal with your shit.

      a.It’s much easier to make the bed in the morning when only one person sleeps in it.
      b. You can play music as loud as you want… whenever you want…. and you should.
      c. You can eat pizza 3 times a week.
      d. It’s gross… but you can sneeze without covering your face… just let it go! (this changes when you are out in public)
      e. Laundry slows way down when your wife dies from cancer… and you can use whatever settings you want… and you don’t have the constant fear of accidently putting her Darn Tough socks in the dryer.
      f. You can work on your bathroom project (that you started 9 months ago) anytime you feel like it… at any hour.
      g. When you flip through Netflix for 83 minutes searching for something to watch… you are only annoying yourself.
      h. You realize that these observations are because you just lost the most important thing in your life, your brain is going into those deep dark holes, and you are just grasping for something to feel better. So that’s when you think about the fact that the bed is easier to make when only one person sleeps in it… and you call your mom.

      Decided to work on the bathroom again today. I’m so close I just want to get to a point where I can at least use it for everything besides a shower… I’ll tile the shower last.

      a. I went to the Home Depot (look, they’ve got a lot of inexpensive stuff… cheap, but for what I need it doesn’t matter that much. I don’t know what the fuck I’m doing anyways) and picked up more joint compound.
      b. I also picked up some paint primer for the walls. I figure that once I’m done sanding and clean up I could at least put a coat of primer on. It would clean it up sooo much and make it feel like a bathroom.

      Came home and wrote to Ellen.

      a. Now, I had no plans to write a celebrity, but I’m pretty scared about what the future holds and figured might as well try anything I can think of.
      b. I had started to just write down a couple notes… then it turned into the whole letter.
      c. When I went to post the letter on her website… it was too long. Kind of bummed me out because I thought my letter had a good amount of info, let the reader know kinda who was writing, and I don’t think it was too long. Of course, when you get thousands of emails a day… it might have been too long.
      d. Although it was kind of a strange thing to do, I felt good about doing it. It felt good to say fuck it… I’m writing to Ellen, let’s see what happens.

      Called my mom.

      a. It’s Mother’s Day… I wanted to wish her a happy day.
      b. She told me that I have been on her mind which makes me feel good. Granted, I think I knew that I was on her mind… she’s my mom and I’m going through shit… that’s another reason I love her.
      c. Told her I thought they will be happier in the Airbnb house. It will be a nice Vermont experience.
      d. I’m worried about her in the airports when they travel. She said she may wear a mask, but the distance going from flight to flight she isn’t worried about.
      e. My dad was mowing the yard… normally mom does it. Sounds like it got a little tall and dad had to empty the bag quite a few more times than expected.
      f. They were going to Olive Garden for Mother’s Day dinner with Dina and the fam.
      g. I love them.

      I had a good cry. Not having been too emotional/crying lately it felt somewhat good to be able to let it out, but it sucks. It’s just that feeling of disbelief… of just wanting to hold her, touch her, feel her hair, her skin… and I won’t ever be able to again. I miss her.

      Mudded the bathroom a second time.

      a. It’s rather awkward… this whole drywall/mudding thing, but I think the final outcome will be ok.
      b. It definitely took longer than I had anticipated and used more joint compound than expected. Not knowing what exactly it is I’m doing… I may have also used more than normal. Then again, maybe I used less?!
      c. I didn’t do much IN the tub. I feel that since tile is going up… it isn’t as much of a big deal. I could be very wrong.
      d. Finished up around 8:45pm. Cleaned up outside with the hose.

      Checked Facebook… there were a lot of comments and likes n shit on my post. It felt good to read what people were saying. For not doing much on social media, I have gotten some comfort by using it.

      a. I no longer have someone to talk to. I need to release some things sometimes to the ether.
      b. I am kinda testing waters to see if I can expand this Widower thing. Maybe use it as a catalyst to something else that will help me keep my home and provide new experiences.

      Took a shower, got into comfy clothes, and made something to eat.

      a. I had planned to go to the store, but figured I had enough stuff at home to not go hungry.
      b. I made 2 Grilled Cheese with bacon, had a naval orange, and a bowl of Cream of Wheat… and 8 packages of Smarties (what Kateri would call pills) … and then I find myself getting choked up when I think about “pills”… and Kateri… and now I’m crying.
      c. Threw on an old HG Wells movie (well, a story of his) from 1936. I love old stories (books or movies) because they give you a little glimpse of what was going on at the time. This story was talking about war… and the state of Europe. I didn’t really pay attention to much, but I think the war was with something other than Europeans.
      d. Watched some standup comedy. It has helped me lighten the mood sometimes. I watched John Mullany (I think that’s his name) … I really enjoyed watching him. He seemed smart, had an innocence to him, wasn’t crude.

      Fell asleep on the couch again. Woke up around 4:00am and crawled into bed.

      a. I have been fine with falling asleep on the couch, but I do need to start actually crawling into bed at a reasonable hour.
      b. I need to realize that I have time to do the things I need/want to do with this new being alone thing. I don’t need to play Mappy at 12:30 at night or watch tv or surf the web or play guitar or keyboard or music on the stereo. I NEED to go to bed and get a good night’s sleep.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • A pictoral representation of the end of my drive and night last night.  Just gotta say that XM Fly was on point at just the right time for this emotional product of the 80’s and 90’s! And yes, I’m happy the snow came off the roof of the garage… no, I don’t like the fact that it was frozen solid… in front of my door.
      • Another yes… that package of Girl Scout cookies is almost…… ALMOST….. empty.
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    • Widower Day 344… Heading Home… 22.

      Posted at 4:38 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on April 1, 2019

      Me and My MomWell… I’m heading back home to Vermont! It was a quick trip to Boise to see my family… specifically my mother… but, I am soooo happy that I did it.  The look on her face when I walked through her door I will cherish forever.  The fact that I have never done something like that (surprise my family… or anyone… by just showing up) has made me think about the life I have coming up in front of me… this new life where I am solely responsible for what I want to do… and how I want to do it.  My perspectives have changed on everything.  What I view as important has changed. My goals in life have changed.  All because my life has changed with the loss of Kateri.

      With this trip, I feel as though I have taken another step in grabbing control of my life.  After almost a year without Kateri, it was one of the few actions that has given me a sense of , “I’ve got this! I’m not helpless! I have control!”.  It has also reinforced for me that there are a shit ton of people out there that are willing to help me out as I go through this process, whether they be friends, family, co-workers, or strangers.

      The goal wasn’t just to surprise my mom with a happy go lucky visit… I needed to see her for myself.  When you just lost your wife due to cancer and your mother is living with cancer in the lungs and brain (who was diagnosed before Kateri), but you live 2,400 miles away… things go through your head… a lot of bad things start creeping their way into the ol’ noggin.  Questions come up.  Images start showing up… based on nothing except for what is swirling around up there. When I got off the phone with her last Tuesday, I realized the only thing that would help me stop the swirling was to see her with my own eyes… to hold her with my own arms… to sit next to her on the couch and talk… and it could be about nothing. (Or… watch reality TV shows about malnourished lemurs and the veterinarians who take care of them!)

      I’ll just say that sitting on this plane, heading back to The Green Mountain State, flying in the direction of my little red schoolhouse… going home… I feel a hundred times better than I did at 3:45am on Friday when I started my journey out west.img_4646  Those worrisome images that had found their way into my head a week ago have been replaced with relief and the expectation that there will be more than a few other trips for us to chill with each other because… well… she’s doing fantastic! I mean, she’s not running marathons and we won’t be doing any bungee jumping any time soon (I don’t think), but she’s doing much better than… you know… I expected!

      I will always hold my mom up on a pedestal. Not just because she’s “Mom”, but because she is an impressive woman… an impressive person. She is strong… she is compassionate… she is selfless. Like a lot of us, she has had challenges in her life. For me, any speed bumps that I have hit at 35mph, she has been the perfect example of how to face those bumps with positivity, strength, and grace… whether she agrees with my assessment or not!  I love her… and I’m glad I took my life in my own hands so that I could tell her that in person.  It was a good trip.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 22… woke up at 7:40ish, laid there… alarm went off at 8:00am. I set the alarm because I need to get into a more regular routine and didn’t want to accidently sleep until 10 or something.

      Finished writing notes for yesterday.

      a. Cried a bit after thinking about how much I miss her… rough.

      Keith came over around 10:40ish so that we could go for a drive.

      a. Stopped at the gas station in Bradford for some drinks (V-water for me)
      b. Went across the bridge to 25 on the way to Rumney.

      a. It was strange doing something that Kateri and I did a lot except being the passenger and not with Kateri. We came to a town near Wentworth that has a Rocket in the green. Before we got there, I mentioned that I thought there was a Rocket (no idea why I capitalize it) around here… 3 seconds later we pass the Rocket.img_2472
      b. It was also strange going for a drive and having the opportunity to watch shit go by, but everything is still kind of a blur… it’s that numbness.
      c. Took some side roads. One just looped around. One dead ended (no pun intended) at the Glenclif Healthcare Facility. It was cool. Perched on top of a hill. Kind of creepy. Wouldn’t want to be there at night. Have no idea what type of “healthcare” they provide.
      d. Was gonna eat in Woodsville but went to Tuttle’s Family Diner in Wells River. Never been there before and can’t tell you how many times Kateri and I went through there.

      a. It was a good experience. It was nice to sit at a counter. The place was a little thrown together, but my Ruben (pretty sure that’s how it was spelled on the menu!) was good and the service was friendly, but not overbearing… entertaining at certain points, but good. Keith and I were even told we have beautiful eyes.

      e. Came home, sat on the porch for a second, Keith took off.

      Finished sanding the bathroom drywall. It went much quicker today. The frickin dust gets EVERYWHERE! Wiped down the walls with a sponge and tried to clean it up as much as possible. Left the cardboard down for when I paint… well, primer… hopefully tomorrow.

      img_2471
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      a. The blue I got may be a little dark, but the amount of white should make it ok. I’m pretty sure Kateri wouldn’t mind the color… at least what’s in my head right now. I am a little mission bound right now, too. Not that I’m rushing it, but I figure, “it’s paint… it’ll all be ok”.

      Got cleaned up. Had to get the dust out of every crick and cranny. I’m excited to add the primer, then I can pull up the cardboard, add a sink and mirror, and have a mostly functioning bathroom upstairs!

      Played music pretty loud all the way to Worthy. Ended on the Caliente Station. It’s just fun to listen to once in a while… I have no idea what they are talking about, but it’s got some moves to it.

      Keith and Michelle came up behind me when I was turning in South Royalton.

      a. Bauman and Laura were the next to show, then Sarah L., and Jeff and Cristina. It was a nice group of people.
      b. Not really being in the loop lately, it was a nice surprise that I saw Sarah… she’s just a wonderful human.
      c. Got the ol’ Worthy Burger with cheddar and bacon. That’s why you go there.
      d. Had nice conversations with Jeff and Sarah. Filled Bauman in on what I’ve been up to the last few weeks. Told Sarah about how I want to write a book or something… she’s gonna speak to some writer friends for me to see how stuff like that goes.

      a. If I can get paid some money to write… I’ve gotta try… what have I got to lose? (I told Keith that on our little drive)

      e. Ate inside in the corner. It was comfortable enough. Really, we stood a fare amount of the time.

      Drove home and decided to just brush teeth, get clean, and crawl into bed. I want to wake up earlier tomorrow and I can use the computer in bed so might as well give it a try.A love note.

      a. On the way home, I thought about how I am in the process of figuring out who I am… again. Almost like when you are younger and insecure, but I don’t have those insecurities. I know it will take time, but it falls in line with the, “here’s your new life… what are you going to do with it? How are you going to act? How are you going to live your life?”

      Went to actual bed around the one-two.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • You are always welcome to like/repost/share if you think someone else may get something out of this blog post or blog… and I’d kinda dig it!

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    • Widower 343… 23.

      Posted at 1:47 am by Darren Lidstrom, on April 1, 2019
      Sunset May 15, 2018

      Sunset on May 15, 2018…Widower Day 23.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 23… Woke up at 6:30ish… tried for earlier, it wasn’t happening.

      Was able to get out of here quickly.

      On the commute in between The S. Farm and Andy L.’s I had to come to a crawl for 2 grown geese helping their 2 geeselings cross the road. You could see the mom/dad pushing them along.

      a. It was such a cool little spectacle that it made my brain start thinking in big broad thoughts about big life experience stuff and what we go through.
      b. I passed a car and it was just another reminder that life just keeps on moving. The thought of, “you have no idea of what I’m going through!” popped into my head… just one of those moments. Then I realized that of course they don’t… I have no idea of what they’re going through, why should they know my life?

      Work was ok. It feels a little bit more normal. I want to make sure I am being true to myself and making the most of this opportunity… who do I want to be?

      a. Jeremy invited me to Ziggy’s to play pool with a group of people. 90% sure it’s work people, but not 100%. I’m sure there will be people.
      b. Work made me think about jewelry… which made me think about if/when will I take off my wedding ring?
      c. Cracked some eggs, did some schedule stuff, made a tomato basil tart. I don’t really care for it, tastes like pizza to me. We’ll see in the morning. It felt good to see something and then just test it out. That’s how a cook gets better.

      On the drive home, I thought about how I am just coasting right now. The next step will be organizational, and then it will be survival. Went to the store and picked up pot pies and some other random stuff… fruit n shit, so there was some “good for ya” stuff.

      When I got home and was putting groceries away I saw how much food we/I actually have, and I don’t know if I would ever be able to go through it all.

      Decided to go ahead and start painting the bathroom.

      a. I thought I could paint and then have time to call Paul, but it took much longer than I had expected.
      b. Started it at 4:45 I think and ended around 8:40. It feels good to have it look more and more like a bathroom. I pulled the cardboard from the floor.
      c. Mopped the house, even our bedroom. Had to start getting all that dust out of here. I also want the option of working on bathroom whenever I want and not have to take a shower afterwards.
      d. The first coat of primer looks good. I’m happy with it. The next coat won’t be to much. Not much paint left either, soooo.

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      Put on some music afterwards… Khalid

      a. It brought me back to after Kateri had passed, but before Maria took off and we were here smoking and putting on music videos and one came up of him and kind of his life. We were so impressed by the young man. We/I dug it.

      Took a shower and ate a chicken pot pie and a salad.

      a. Watched a little standup comedy. It’s good to watch funny shit.
      b. Thought about what I would like to do for my video for Ellen… yup, still on that train. Why not?

      Went to bed at 1:20 am.

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    • Widower Day 342… 24.

      Posted at 12:00 am by Darren Lidstrom, on March 31, 2019

      57566087796__993faea9-9410-4415-a5ab-5c0cb33df8e4It was a good day… I mean today was. Looks like Day 24 wasn’t all that horrible, but I’m talking about my day in Boise. Aaaand… I ate a banana for breakfast… I hate bananas.

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 24… alarm set for 6:00am… got up at 6:45.

      I’ve been trying to get on a routine, a schedule as I go back to work. It’s been hard forcing myself to actually get to bed with this new independence.

      (I am writing this the next day because I keep falling asleep on the couch and Anna just sent me a message… she has reached out to me more in the last 2 weeks than ever before.)

      Went to work.

      a. Nothing super exciting at work. I didn’t think I would be able to hang for very long with how I was feeling during the morning. Sadness had just hit me, and I couldn’t get out of it. Before I went to lunch, I found Eric and Teri on the back porch and said I don’t know how long I will stick around for. Eric just mentioned that I have tomorrow off (Thursday) and that helped me push through the day.
      b. I used that weird energy to simply make a soup. I made Chicken n Bacon Corn Chowder to use up some product. It felt good to use up some stuff and to make something just a little different. I do feel it came out a little blander than I expected, but I am also using this experience to kickstart my cooking again and to get back into it, into something. It will only help me in the future… with work and also at home to provide me with a good meal, to learn something new, and to consume time.
      c. There are some members of the crew going through personal stuff as well. I am trying to provide them some guidance and to be supportive, but it’s funny going through something like this and then being in the position to hear other people’s issues… I’m like, “really?… how about you don’t take those actions anymore?”… or “Is that really affecting you this much for this long?”. But I have to remember that you can’t put a measurement on someone else’s pain… we don’t know HOW MUCH pain something causes another person. Only they know how they feel.
      d. Left work around 3:30.
      e. Eric told me the DailyUV is hiring bloggers… or blog writers… or something.

      Ran to the Home Depot to pick up paint, a paint liner, rollers, and a brush for the bathroom. I figure, I am so close might as well bust it out. The fact that most of the dirty shit is done makes me feel good and excited to get it closer to usable.

      a. Picked out a darker blue. I think the primer was a good gauge but is a little to “baby blue”. I went with a darker shade. Something like “perfect sky” or something.

      Met Luke and Gardner at the house. Luke had bought a new dump truck for the Hindquarter and Gardner built the walls for the dump. Our house is kinda in the middle, so I lucked out and get to see both of them!

      a. Planned on 5:00, Gardner got here at 5:30ish. Parked on the side of the road. We realized that probably wasn’t the best place for a big ass truck with people flying down the dirt road.
      b. Gardner milled the wood himself and built the walls over 2 ½ days… it’s beautiful. It will be cool to see once the wood burn The Hindquarter logo into the side.
      c. Luke got here soon after and we all just kinda shot the shit and played around on a brand new black dump truck… you know, lifting the tail gait up… and then lowering it.

      a. I felt kinda like the cool kid as people drove past my house and three dudes are just sitting around shooting the shit with a dump truck in the driveway.
      b. It did also make me think about getting older. We were at my “HOUSE!” looking at a BRAND NEW DUMP TRUCK that Luke bought for HIS business. We were talking about QuickBooks and shit. It just felt like we were grown ups.

      d. We took a little walk to show Gardner the back yard. Went to the fire pit and just kinda hung out.

      a. Gardner told Luke and I what the different trees were on property. He is amazing that way… wealth of knowledge.

      e. Raphael and Tara came over on his motorcycle and 4 wheeler and met us at the fire pit… (we were not having a fire)

      a. They are a kick. It was fun listening to them meet Gardner and listen to him share his experiences with them. They were talking about being in Hawaii and Gardner mentioned how he lived there for a bit and they probably walked on trails that he built.
      b. It was pleasant. It was nice to hear people just shoot the shit. Yes, there was a little of what I/we are dealing with, but mainly just people chewing the fat.
      c. When Raph had to leave, he and Gardner dorked out over the motorcycle for a bit… and then Gardner took if for a quick spin.

      f. Luke took off before the sun went all the way down… and left his pencil!
      g. I left a bag up at the firepit so Gardner and I went to get it and just took a mosey on the path above the house.

      a. It was nice to talk to him, to talk to someone and he was perfect. I just dig him and find him very impressive because of his experiences and approach to life.
      b. Have to mention that he is another one who has quit drinking and has found such strength in that decision, is experiencing that clarity that drying up provides.
      c. I look forward to spending more time with him, either working with Luke, him visiting, or me swinging by his place when out for a drive.

      Was gonna put a second coat of primer on, but it was 8:30 by the time everyone left and I just wanted to chill. Didn’t even cook. Threw in a frozen Chicken Pot Pie and called it good.

      a. I was gonna watch a movie, Life, and started it, but fell asleep.
      b. It’s a horror/sci-fi/thriller… not sure if day 24 as a widower is the right time to start watching scary movies, but I fell asleep, so it wasn’t a big deal.

      a. I’ve always liked scary movies, but for the last 18 years I’ve had Kateri and knew that if I ever really got scared that she would be there. I don’t have that anymore, so I wonder if I am gonna like scary movies as much.

      c. Ate a bag of Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups and fell asleep. Woke up at 4:38am… had a smoke… washed up… and crawled into bed.

      I told Gardner this is how I feel… “No one is gonna make a story about this experience if I don’t tell it”.

      I’m still wearing my bracelet almost every day.

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    • Widower Day 341… (technically 342, but that’s ok… it’s been a long day)… 25.

      Posted at 4:12 am by Darren Lidstrom, on March 30, 2019
      img_4635
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      It’s currently 6:53am and I’m sitting at the end of a terminal in Burlington Intl. Airport. International!… funny. The first alarm was set for 3:45am (Harp), by 4:00am the chorus of old car horns and telephone rings started… so I got out of bed… got coffee… took a shower to wake up a bit… put on my travel clothes, double checked the schoolhouse to make sure I turned off things that needed turning off, threw my backpack in the Jeep… and headed off to Burlington.

      The reason I was going to the airport was so I could surprise my mom… by showing up.  The short of it… because it’s 3:35am right now… is that I basically wanted to see my mom, to see how she was doing, how was she holding up with this cancer shit.  I haven’t seen her in four and a half months and I just didn’t want to wait any longer to see with my own eyes.  This is one of the challenges of moving away from your family… they aren’t around… and neither are you.

      She had a doctor’s appointment today, and thankfully she is doing well! Things are stable!  For me, I was able to see with my own eyes that she is doing much better than the images that have been racing through my brain… and it was relieving.

      It’s quite the fun story… and I  really enjoyed surprising not only my mom, but my entire family by just popping in! When I first went to my father’s work… where my sister works, as well… she told a co-worker, “that guy looks a lot like my brother” when I was in the parking lot getting out of the rented 2019 Nissan Altima (fancy).57559573514__2936d1f8-f988-4da6-b2e5-bba755d1a770.jpg  When I walked past her window and she saw my Cedar Circle sweatshirt… she knew it was me!  My father… well, I just walked into his office while he was on the phone with a client… and then caused him to fumble over his words for a second!  I’m sure the client was like, “ummm… you ok?!”.  My mother… well… the look on her face when I walked into the house… it simply filled me happiness.

      But now… I gots to go to sleep! (stories for another time!)

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 25… woke up at 8:00.

      Although, I am trying to go to bed earlier, for some reason I didn’t mind falling asleep on the couch and then crawling into bed at 4:45 in the morning. The bed felt REALLY comfortable.

      I tried to figure out Dropbox. I figured it out a little bit. It should be fun to learn.

      Drove up to Burlington to talk to Northcountry and thought I would take care of Community and try to get in touch with Paul, Rob, or Flatbread Chelsea.

      a. On the way up I thought about how I think I’m still in shock. I feel numb and like I’m just floating through life. Not focusing on anything.
      b. I also thought about the party. I would like there to be some sort of arts involved in the remembrance. Maybe a dance by Paul… some sort of thing going on while something else is going on?
      c. Thought about how everything is just a stepping stone for something else… cliché, but that’s what I was thinking about. Since we are getting older, you can see how something just feeds something else… growth. Ice Cube and Dre had NWA, then Dre had Snoop, then Snoop had Warren G, then Nate Dog (could’ve been the same time, but this is how I am providing an example).

      Northcountry

      a. Launa helped me. It was straight forward and painless. Changed my password before writing this.
      b. As I was leaving, I remembered Kateri in the ER (the second time, it was a Friday, Hastings helped her off the floor and back onto the toilet… I was in town talking to Kureisha and getting groceries n shit).

      Community

      a. Spoke with Erin. I can’t do anything about Kateri’s solo accounts without being her executor. I’ll just have to go to the court and see what they need me to do.
      b. I remembered her from when I worked at Leunig’s and went there to deposit checks.

      Ran by Flatbread to see if I could meet the GM… Chelsea. Spoke to a bleach blond bartender with some solid make-up on. Chelsea was in a Manager’s Meeting. Bartender took my name and said she would call me when she had a moment… she hasn’t called.

      Went to Zero Gravity to see if Paul was there… he wasn’t. So, I went next door to The Great Northern to see if Jeff was around… he was.

      a. He gave me another one of Rookie’s flavors. Something citrus and mapley
      b. Talked with Jeff, other bartender guy, Marnie, Boo, and Frank… it was a good visit.

      Drove to W. Leb and hung with some of the crew. Jeremey, Margot, Justin, Ian, Kelley, Jim, and Jim’s wife. It was a nice evening of playing pool.

      Came home, watched the rest of the not so scary educated. (note-“not so scary educated”…? Yup, no idea what that means!)

      a. On the drive home I thought about how a lot of people tell you, “You look good!’ after your wife dies from cancer.
      b. An owl flew right in front of me as I was passing Heman’s place.
      Went to bed at 1:25am.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Sometimes, when you think it’s 3:35am… it’s really just 1:35am because your computer’s clock hasn’t changed from Eastern Time to Mountain Time.

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    • Widower Day 340… 26.

      Posted at 9:48 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 28, 2019
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      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 26… Got up at 7:37ish… I knew I needed to sleep a bit more… and it was comfy.

      Ran over a squirrel with a nut in it’s mouth on the way to work today. That kinda sucked… and popped.

      Work was fine, nothing to write home about. It was a desk task oriented type morning. I was pretty subdued and just wanted to get some things done. Not in a bad mood or anything.

      a. Ya, work was work. It’s still a little weird seeing some people, talking to some others… it’s nice.
      b. Chatted with Tami for a minute as I was leaving. It was also nice. We don’t chat that much just the two of us that often (at all really) so it felt good to fill her in a bit and to let her do what she needs to do so that she doesn’t feel weird being around me.

      Came home. Planned on maybe going to the Dinner Under the Balloons, but wanted to paint the bathroom and make some phone calls.

      a. Called knights funeral home about death certificates being mailed back and picking them up next week. Asked about money owed and he said no worries (not those exact words).
      b. Put the second and last coat of primer on in the bathroom. I didn’t do some of the lower section… running (ran) out of paint. It’ll get covered by wainscoting. Its looking good. I feel good about where it’s at and I’m confident I’ll be able to start setting it back up a little soon.
      c. Called Paul. He was fantastic. He told me that he and Rob feel as though they would like to throw the party. Their generosity is amazing and is just another part of this whole pile of shit that is good. June 20th… Flatbread.
      d. Decided to have Friday night pizza so I ordered one from Colatina E. I had enough credit things that the girl asked if I wanted to use them for a free pizza?… HELLS YA! It was fantastic. Threw in an orange soda and my bill came to $1.94
      e. Came home. Played a little guitar. Was about to hop in the shower and then got a little disgusted by it so I cleaned it. I threw away the whole chain thing because it disgusts me a bit, but the whole shower was pretty disgusting. It felt good to clean it.
      f. Played a game of Mappy… and Pole Position. Lea Jae texted me, just checking in. She’ll be stopping by at some point. Glad I texted her back… still trying to stay on top of things, of the people.
      g. Threw on a documentary on names and the effect they have on us. Names as in funny/challenging names. Like “Dick Large”. It was cool, but it also made me realize there are people out there just trying to figure out the next step in the movie process. (a note from today… I have no idea what I meant right there!)
      h. Texted with Matty for a bit… because it just feels good sometimes. I wanted to talk to my parents but didn’t.

      Having to call it a night at 1:35am… it’s just too much right now

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I actually really enjoyed reading those notes… and love that there was a squirrel in them! (not so much that it popped… that was disgusting)

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    • Widower Day 339… 27. Two… then seven.

      Posted at 9:11 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 27, 2019

      Ummm… so, I’m not reading these notes until I go to copy and paste them each day.  I just scroll on down until I hit the day and hope for the best! I’ve actually been doing pretty good with it.  I would even venture to say that it’s kinda nice to revisit them.  It at least keeps the evening interesting!

      img_4618

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 27… alarm went off at 6:30am… turned it off until 7:30, got out of bed around 7:45am… yup.

      Worked. Wasn’t really into going to work, I’ve been pretty sad and unmotivated to get out of bed. Once on my way to work… by 244, I start to feel somewhat OK. Limiting my smoking on the way to work.

      Work was fine… Saturday. We had a line to the kitchen door.

      a. I was just there… somewhat helpful, but I still don’t feel like I’m being very productive.
      b. I saw Karen in line so I went to say “thank you” for the card. It makes me feel warm and fuzzy… special… that she would take the time. It gives me hope that KAF will be able to help me survive in the future.

      Luke swung by to chat.

      a. I thought he was coming home from Boston and that his family would be with him… wrong on both. He was heading to Boston for Binks’ graduation party… solo. Before I knew he was solo, I figured KAF would be the best place for all of us to chat. It was just him, which was perfect so that we (I) could talk without interruption.
      b. I hadn’t seen Luke since before Palliative. I told him how I have been coping: projects, talking/texting peeps, working, can’t look at pictures, remembering the beautiful things that happened in this experience, trying to stay positive.
      c. I told him how I have been writing and how it has been a nice release of emotions and energy. It has been good for me and also provides me with some hope that it may go beyond my computer. Hopefully, it will be useful to other people. I mentioned how I am thinking about a book and a blog. He said he could help me with the blog.
      d. We talked about the Scotty story, Kateri’s last day, the day after. I was a little emotional, which happens when I get around close friends. I am so thankful that we were able to catch up, even if it was just for a bit.
      e. He was in our wedding… a Man of Honor… if that says anything.
      f. David texted saying he was at Farmway.

      Met David at the house.

      a. He grabbed the key from the turtle to get in since I wasn’t here.
      b. I filled him in on where I was at emotionally and how I was coping with everything. Basically, the same things as Luke and I talked about.
      c. We decided we needed to eat sooner that later and I thought we could go to Samauri… it’s close and decent. Went down Blood Brook to show him Raph’s house.

      a. It was ok. Food was good, service was horrendous. David went up to order our drinks because we were sitting for so long.
      b. Griffin and Celeste were there. I saw them when we walked in but didn’t say anything because I figured we would see them when they left… we did.
      c. I hadn’t seen Celeste since Kateri’s birthday party, so it was nice to fill her in. Mainly it was how I was doing, which is weird.

      We came home and pretty much caught up.

      a. I told him about the Scotty thing and the Heman story from Day 1. Those are the things that help me push the dark shit aside.
      b. The sadness of missing her is starting to set in and I don’t know what to expect from that, but I like to think that it is good that I recognize it… of course, I could be way off base.
      c. I told him about Kateri’s last day… that was hard for me.

      a. I haven’t had to talk about it for a bit but realized there are people who haven’t heard it.
      b. It was hard, but I am glad that I can recall the day so vividly.
      c. It was a pretty emotional evening between Luke and David, but it was also so easy. This is what I feel I need to be doing when the opportunity arises… and our friends need to know the story… at least as much as I can share with them.
      d. Crying felt… not good, but better… or relieving.

      Went to bed at 2:45am

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    • Widower Day 338… Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning… 28.

      Posted at 6:22 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 26, 2019
      Lil' Bitch!
      Lil’ Bitch!
      Grass!
      Grass!
      ummm... Chicken!
      ummm… Chicken!

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 28… woke up early but stayed in bed until 9:40ish… in and out of sleep. It was a cloudy/drizzly morning which makes it hard to get up… bed is just so comfortable on those mornings.

      Had a pretty lazy morning with David. We hung out, put music on the TV.
      He gave me body work at noonish.

      a. It felt really nice getting some work done from him. He is really good at that shit. I started face down and after a bit my head just filled up with snot and I could breath through my nose or swallow… takes away a bit of the relaxation.
      b. When I flipped to my back, the relief on my head was fantastic… relief from snot, not my mental well-being… that was good too.
      c. It was a little hard just laying there because your mind does start to wander. Although the massage is relaxing and you focus quite a bit on that, the fact that your head can think about anything meant that it was gonna go to some sad places as I laid there.
      d. When I was getting off the couch and taking my clothes off to get on the table my right elbow got tweaked and still hurts… it’s called getting older.
      e. He did a combination of massage and Reiki… I don’t really know when he was doing the Reiki… I’m guess at those moments when he stopped rubbing me.
      f. Afterwards, we had a smoke, cooked some bacon, and made some egg tacos.
      David left around 3:30.

      I went to the store quickly to grab a few things: soda, Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, milk, seltzer, fruit, etc.

      Sean, Angela, and I were gonna go for a hike, but it was rainy all morning. We decided they were gonna come over here and make tacos around 6:00.

      When I got home I thought I could bang out painting the bathroom before they got here… I was wrong. I did get quite a bit done, so when they did arrive I just covered brushes and paint and shit and left it for after they leave. (Independent… I can do it later… at night)

      a. I have been finding that although I want to get projects done and shit, if I have the option of working on something by myself or hanging/talking with a friend… I’m gonna go with the contact with friends… that’s what I REALLY need right now.
      b. They came up and saw the bathroom… could smell the fumes.
      c. I rolled a joint and we went out to the front deck to smoke, catch up a bit, and to enjoy the evening… then the cool wind came up and we went inside to start cooking… well, Sean started getting everything ready. He has done this for us twice and I have to say… he has it down (bringing shit to someone else’s house).
      d. Chorizo/chicken tacos with guac, he brought pickled cabbage, cilantro, tomatillo salsa, corn tortillas… it was fantastic.

      a. I felt good about my eating the last two days. Going out and then having people bring you food is very helpful.

      e. It was a very nice evening… I like hanging with them, it seems kinda easy and laid back which is what we/I like. It was nice to get to know them a bit more.

      a. Angela mainly worked for/with family in Wisco until coming here, Sean grew up in Miami (gross), they worked at The B@#$%^& (which I don’t really know what that place is about), they wanted a BnB also, they want to buy a house (but don’t know where yet), Sean went to culinary school, they may need to move since housemates are having a baby… but is supposed to move out in December when their house is built (not Sean and Angela’s), Angela was sort of a wild child… said she would love to go back to high school!… said she could do whatever she wanted to!… Sean and I are not those people who would go back to HS if given the chance.
      b. As Angela and I were talking, Sean went to the kitchen and made caramel popcorn… love having cook friends!

      f. They took off and I finished the painting the bathroom.

      It was nice having both David and Angela/Sean visit. I’m still not very emotional when I’m alone, but when I get around people I love, it lets me release a little.

      Busy day, but a good one with good people. I fell asleep in the chair until 4:28am, had a smoke, washed up, and crawled into bed. I set the alarm for 7:30am because I am still trying to get back to a normal schedule.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      Tuesday March 26, 2019

      Tuesday March 26, 2019

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    • Widower Day 337… Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning… 29.

      Posted at 7:40 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 25, 2019

      img_4586It’s the second day of my weekend and after staying up way too late last night… but enjoying no alarm!… I decided to try and pluck some things off of the “To Do” list today.  You know, those little things that you just keep meaning to get to… or are blatantly disregarding?! So I did chicken chores, replaced the Daytime Running Light on the ol’ buggy, brought wood over from the potting shed… with help from said buggy… and a sled, changed out the drip pans on the stove because the old ones had literally disintegrated, and then… well… I rearranged the living room.

      Now changing up the living room was no where near my list of things to do today, but I am actually almost giddy thinking about sitting back on the couch in comfy clothes… chicken pot pie on the lap… and getting lost in a movie in my new surroundings!… a whole new experience! It feels good to have done something today, spur of the moment, that will also provide something new… a little variety… in my day to day.  It is kind of a strange feeling sitting here in a space in which Kateri has not seen set up this way before. It’s a moment where the Old Life and New Life overlap in my head… but I feel good about it. I also feel good about the fact that I still have two Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups for my movie!

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 29… woke up at 7:30am to my alarm, snoozed until 8:15ish.

      Made coffee and crawled back into bed to write notes for yesterday. I would really like to get to the point where I am going to bed earlier and spending time in bed writing.
      Went to Randy and Vicky’s to drop off my drills. They were gonna mend their garden boxes.

      a. We hung out behind their garage and smoked a joint away from O#$%^… who was in the house.
      b. They had been having a rough go at it the last couple of days. Stress of everything (Kateri) kinda bearing down on them. Randy wanted to drink a bottle of whisky the other night. Thankfully he chose not to. Although, with how well he has changed his life around, I don’t think tying one on is the worst thing in the world.
      c. Randy mentioned that he had been getting angry lately.

      a. I don’t have any room right now for the anger. Once you get into anger… it can lead you down some deep, dark paths.
      b. They asked that I check out a screen door for them at LaValley’s…. I never got one… or went back to their house.

      Went to LaValley’s and Home Depot

      a. They didn’t have the wainscoting I was looking for so I just went to Home Depot to see if they had anything.
      b. They had sheets of bead board which is what I was looking for. I had to have them cut them in half hoping they would fit inside the Jeep… they didn’t. I had to strap them to the top… and then pull over at the Powerhouse Mall to redo it so that they wouldn’t fly off and go through someone’s windshield.

      I was able to get them up on the wall. I don’t know how well they are attached… a lot of nails just went into drywall. I didn’t glue them or anything in case I needed to remove them.

       

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    • Widower Day 336… Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning… Starting with 30.

      Posted at 2:47 am by Darren Lidstrom, on March 25, 2019

      img_2349I thought I was gonna write something a little more in depth of what I’m about to do for the next thirty days, but it’s 11:41pm and I got home a little later than anticipated… and I’m… well… kinda tired.  A friend and I went up to BTown for a get together of absolutely wonderful people who wanted to show a friend of ours that we love him… that we support him… that we are there for him as he does his dance with cancer.  This is a man who I met when I first came to Vermont… who I have cooked with and for… and who Kateri considered one of the early “Pocket People”… which should tell you something about this guy.

      I wanted to explain in detail what is going through my head and my plans for this bloggery in the immediate future, but being in the same space… in a wonderful space opened up by wonderful peeps to all of us “Industry People”… is the thing that took priority this evening for multiple reasons.  The main reason, I wanted to show my friend I cared for him… and to tell him I love him.  Luckily… these are my peeps… and I got to tell more than a couple of them that I love them.

      Sooooo… here’s the gig. March 24, 2019 starts the last thirty days before the 1st Anniversary of Kateri’s death. In thirty days will come Widower Day 365… one year without my wife.  I am going to share my Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning (my notes from the first thirty days without Kateri) for the next thirty days starting with Widower Day 30 (I don’t know if that’s a little odd to start with 30… but, I’ve got my reasons. They may not be rational… but they’re reasons!).  I’m gonna also put those notes in the “My Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning” site page area thing… just in case someone wants to see how this widower dealt with being sucker punched by life. FYI… I’m giving myself leniency if circumstances don’t allow me to get to posting blogs n things. The notes aren’t very exciting and there are some things I don’t feel comfortable sharing out of respect for people in my life, but I feel I sorta wanna to get this all out before the start of “Year 2”.img_1599 You are more than welcome to share any of this if you feel it may help someone out who is going through their own shit… to show them that they aren’t alone in having to cope with such a gut wrenching, confusing, scary, and lonely time. I don’t know how this will all go, or what going back to these notes will bring up, or if I should wait till after the year is up… or if I wanna even do it! But here it goes anyways!

      Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning

      Day 30… Tuesday May 22, 2018.

      Woke up around 6:30 so that I could get to work. It’s a strange day for me. I gave myself 30 days to write about this experience. Part of it was I don’t want to forget some of the things that have happened over the last month, part of it is I wanted something I could look back on as a reference (how was I feeling? Simply what did I do on ___day of this process, part of it is I want to write a book because I feel I have a story that is interesting… I have an experience which was/is horrible, but I’m living through it, I hope that my story could help someone else going through their own shit storm, I hope enough people would be interested in what I have to say that they would give me $ for it… with the hope of keeping my life as I know it together.

      It was a strange day at work.

      a. Although I was aware of what I was going through and that it had an affect on my attitude, I was still kinda hypercritical of a lot of things at work. Some of which I feel was justified, but for some things I definitely could have dealt with a little differently.

      This is what I posted on Facebook after I made 7ish videos to share what I was going through after I had sat in the car for 25 minutes crying and not being able to get out. I wanted to share my experience and be in the moment, but I also realized I wanted to be happy with what I was going to purposefully send out there.

      Widower Day 30… In the last thirty days I have felt the love and support from friends, family, and strangers. I have been trying to get to a “starting point”. I have come up with terms like “nesting for one” and used terms like “little victories”. I have tried to stay busy to keep my mind off the sad shit. I have pushed my own comfort zone out of fear for the future which I have been given. I have laughed… and I have cried. I also made a video where I say I’m a widower at 43… I’m 42. This is what happens at the end of what I’m calling my 30 days of Mourning. Yup.

      a. I am happy that I posted this. It was on the liberating side of things.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Ummm…. “Widower Notes n Thoughts” aren’t part of the original notes… and I’m not changing any parts of the originals (unless it deals with respect and/or privacy issues)… which is quite the challenge… I’m pushing comfort levels!… it’s sorta  embarrassing.
      • I wanted to attach the video I posted on Facebook… but now it’s 1:59am… and I don’t know how to get it on here! Yup… me smart! I’ll add it in when I can… later…  at some point… somehow.
      • I kinda laugh when I look back on this day… it was a different time… I was different. Some things just change.
      • Goodnight (technically, it’s Widower Day 337!… Soooo, Good Morning!)

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    • Widower Day 334… Eleven Months…I lost 4 days somewhere.

      Posted at 9:52 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 22, 2019

       

      img_4545Yup… I didn’t really realize it until I was driving home from work that today was the eleven month anniversary of Kateri’s passing.  I felt a little off today, but didn’t think much about it.  Plus, coming off of Kateri’s birthday and the ringer that that put me through, I was actually just looking forward to a little bit of a mellower time for the following few days… hopefully weeks… and so far it is.  At this point, having gone through birthdays and holidays and anniversaries of cancer stuff… the month anniversaries are just a way to track time.  Compared to Kateri’s birthday… or the date of the diagnosis of Melanoma in the brain… or the anniversary of her death coming up in a month… all the other months have just been a countdown to that 1 Full Year moment.  So, for me right now… it kinda sucks to think that Kateri has been gone for eleven months, but I’m emotionally hung over… wanna take a breather… and just prepare (if you can) for 1 year. (wow… that just fucked up to think about)

      So, out of laziness… this is what I did today:

      • Worked… well, I was at work. Ya, chopped some romaine n shit… but there’s a snow storm happenin’ so we were a little slow.
      • It was after the turn at the lake that I realized it was “Eleven Months”. (It could’ve been before that, but “the turn at the lake” sounded better than “on the interstate”… and a little more rurally romanticized sounding!)img_4575
      • There were boulders of wet heavy snow at the end of my driveway that I got to plow through… and then get stuck halfway up the driveway! It was a nice challenge to overcome… and another reason to SNOW BLOW!
        • The snow was nasty.  I had about 8 inches of just water logged white stuff than was slick as shit!
        • Getting stuck in your own driveway isn’t like really getting stuck.  I mean… c’mon. Of course, it helps if you have sand in the garage…. and a shovel.
      • I added shavings to the ladies house.  I absolutely love the smell of wood shavings… much more than the smell of the build up of what comes out of the chickens’ butts.
      • I had to run to town for more gas since I used it all up snow blowing… and it’s supposed to start snowing again… around now. I like to be prepared… and it gave me an excuse to grab a pizza!
      • Some friends stopped by on their snowmobiles… I love that I live in a place where friends can just show up on their snowmobiles.
      • I realized I am four days off on my “Widower Day” counting… I don’t know where I lost those four days… but I’m to tired to go looking for them!
      • Things are good… well, decent… I guess not too shabby. It’s not been horrible… and sometimes… down right fun.

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    • Widower Day 327(today is 8)… The End of My 3 Day Weekend.

      Posted at 9:29 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 20, 2019

      img_4535I took an extra day off at the tail end of my weekend because… as I figured… Kateri’s birthday was probably gonna be the peak of the emotional mountain expedition. (no… I’m  not a mountain climber or have any desire to scale Mt. Kilamenjaro or anything. Walks though… those are good)  I wanted to make sure I had a little extra time so as not to have the sense of rushing it… and I’m glad I did!… cuz it’s been rough! I mean, yes it’s been rough, but I have come to expect that. However, I was surprised by the amount of crying I did. I was surprised by how early the water works and the “I miss those days” reminiscing started… a couple of weeks prior to her birthday. I was surprised by just how much… how many emotions… I had pushed to the side as I try to figure out how to maneuver, how to live in the present, how to get everything done in this new life… without her. And I knew I was gonna need a couple of days to recover from the onslaught of everything on Kateri’s birthday… on St. Patrick’s Day.

      Yesterday, I basically tidied and cleaned the house.  I wanted to for that whole “organized” feeling it brings me. It’s in my head that if I keep my house in tip top shape, if I don’t let things turn into “piles”… mail doesn’t count… (and piles is in quotes because I refuse to define what a “pile” is), if I stay on top of most stuff then… well… I should be good! Or, at least I think it helps. So yesterday was my “Gettingshitbacktogether Day” before I’m to be reintroduced back into normal life… and today… I went for a drive.

      5b7e4f0c-8231-4ab0-8e2e-5791a1bba4f5I had gotten up around six and hit the road at 6:30am for breakfast at George’s… in Gloucester… two hours and forty-three minutes away.  It was gonna be my “I’m taking Kateri to the ocean for her birthday” end to the weekend, but when you drive for a few hours by yourself… the brain kinda does it’s thing! (having control over the radio has it’s advantages, though) As I thought more and more about it, I wasn’t taking Kateri to the ocean… I was taking just a part of Kateri to the ocean… and I was taking only a tiny fraction of what is left of her physical body… that which we cremated. I could try and make myself feel better by attaching her… by attaching Kateri to my little road trip, but she wasn’t by my side.img_4533  She didn’t order bisuits and gravy or shoot the shit with line dude. She didn’t feel the ocean air on her cheeks. And I didn’t take a selfie of us on the beach with her in the background doing some funny little kick… or doing anything at all. Yes, Kateri was with me in my memories, thoughts, emotions, and spirit as I drove 71 miles per hour across New England, but she wasn’t by my side… and I realized I just needed to cover some ground for myself as I remembered my wife… and all the wonderful “Let’s go to the ocean!” adventures we had.

      img_4536So I had breakfast, I saw the ocean, I sat and thought about life. Luckily, Kateri’s birthday was the day for bawling like a baby so the last two days of my 3-day weekend were a little more manageable on the tear factor and I didn’t have to tell myself, “I don’t care if people see me crying on this bench… as I stare at the water”… while other tourists snap and bark at their partners because they aren’t holding the paper doll cutout correctly while posing beneath the memorial to fishermen lost at see! I mean, I got emotional here and there, but it has been a much mellower couple of days.

      This whole gig is just a matter of getting through… of holding on until that one day… that one good day.  After one of those days came for me… I waited for another… and it came. I’m still in the time of “firsts”… birthdays, holidays, wedding anniversaries… the first March 20th without Kateri. As I thought about it on my drive home… from not taking Kateri to the ocean… I realized all these firsts are basically the same on some levels… and on the most basic level.  “Widower Day 1” came the day after Kateri passed away.  Just the same as “Widower Day 244” came the day after Christmas or Day 211 showed up right after Thanksgiving… and 156 didn’t care that our wedding anniversary was on 155. Some dates are harder than others, sometimes the emotions are a bit much, sometimes the date has nothing to do with the emotions!… but it’s all a challenge…….. and tomorrow is still gonna come. Although I would not say I have a bad life, the hope is that tomorrow is in some small way… just a little bit better.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • A men’s rest area bathroom on a Tuesday morning reminds me of why I will never have a roommate… the noises alone!
      • I didn’t really think about the fact that I took my drive on the last day of winter… I just kinda like the attachment to the whole “change of season” thing.
      • I don’t know how I feel about this, but I found myself bobbing my head to… The Jonas Brothers.
      • The snow is melting! I’m so excited to hang out in my garage!… and I just can’t hide it.img_4562
      • I’m up to between 3 or four pints of ice cream a week… finally might need to cut back a bit… but the shit keeps calling me man!
      • PS-I was gonna go to the ocean on Monday… but a half hour in I realized I had forgotten Kateri.  Yup, the brain has been a little scattered.
      • PPS-My buddy replenished the “pill” supply… I love that man.

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    • Widower Day 325… Straight up.. St. Patrick’s Day/Kateri’s Birthday=Long Post.

      Posted at 7:44 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 17, 2019

      img_4484“YOU’RE AS OLD AS JESUS!”… Kateri loved to take advantage of any opportunity where she was able to say that. If it was someone’s birthday and they were turning 33… well, she would start with a, “Happy Birthday!”… and finish with, “You’re as old as Jesus!”… and then the birthday boy or girl would stare at us like, “What…?”. Now, I’m not a religious man and although Kateri grew up Catholic (she said she was a “Recovering Catholic”), she wasn’t very religious… spiritual, but not religious. So the addition of Jesus into the well wishing on birthdays is kind of a conundrum to me of how and why it started, but really it was just a fun little quirky thing that she brought into my life… that has been there over the years… that has put smiles on friend’s and strangers’ faces… and something I will probably say to every 33 year old I cross paths with on their birthday till my birthdays stop coming. (ps-I guess JC died at 33… how’s that to make you feel unaccomplished in life?! Jesus… he was a go getter!)

      img_4489It seemed only natural to incorporate the whole “You’re as old as Jesus!” into the day when Kateri turned thirty-three.  We were working in Burlington slinging “breads”… pizza… and we were renting a little cottage in the Green Mountains 50 minutes away that looked at the back side of Mad River Glenn. Life was starting to roll… we were at that stage in life where old friendships were solidified in their place and we were meeting wonderful new people to start new friendships with… people who became a part of our family.  I wanted to capture some of those people… some of those memories from “When we were younger” to look back upon… decades down the road.img_4485  So I asked a friend to make a sign and I drove that sign to other friend’s houses and to their places of employment. I carried it with me in case I ran into someone on the road so that I could snap a picture of them holding it and wishing Kateri a “Happy… you are as old as Jesus… Birthday!”. I developed the pictures (yes, they were taken with a camera… with film) and grabbed a stupid little photo album to put them in.  When I gave it to Kateri I watched the corners of her mouth turn upwards to a smile as she flipped through the pics and saw her friends and their well wishes.  With every turn of the page, I got to see that simple smile turn into pure innocent love for the people who were holding that cardboard sign. Unfortunately, since that album was made, we only got a decade and a bit under our belts to do the whole “Remember when” thing together… to reminisce about turning thirty-three.  Now I use the gift I gave her not so much to remember our friends… but to remember Kateri… and she’s not even in the album.

      img_4491
      img_4493
      img_4492
      img_4490

      A year ago, our house was filled with some of the most amazing and wonderful people in our lives.  With family… with friends. It was the end of February, right after Kateri was discharged from the hospital after her colon had given out… and she was taking 135 milligrams or so of steroids to keep her going.  That is when I witnessed Kateri accepting what the reality of the situation was… that she was probably going to die.

      I had been sleeping in the spare bedroom because she needed space in our bed to be comfortable.  On Sundays I would wake up, grab a couple cups of coffee, get her pill regiment ready in the fancy little dish that her father had given her and place it on the tray with her breakfast of Cheerios and almond milk… in the specific little glass pitcher because it held the perfect amount… and bring it all up to the bedroom so that I could crawl into bed with her… and we could just be together (I’ll admit… it kinda sucks writing this in our bed… on Sunday morning).

      Her brother had called this one morning and we were all talking about him coming out for a visit, that maybe it would work out so he could be here for her birthday.  This is when Kateri said, “I think I wanna have a party.”  I just looked at her… scared shitless… and said, “But you don’t like parties?”… and it hit me. Kateri knew what was up.  And now I knew that Kateri knew what was up. On the inside… it destroyed me. Kateri didn’t want to party because it was St. Patty’s Day or to celebrate her birthday.  Kateri wanted to see people she loved… she wanted to hug them… she wanted them to be in her home… she wanted to hold them one more time because she knew time was running out.  So, we had a party in our little red schoolhouse on St. Patty’s Day 2018… we had a birthday party for Kateri.

      Although Kateri never really cared for parties, she loved her birthday and we always took time to celebrate it… usually with a trip to the ocean. Good thing about traveling to the coast of Maine or Massachusetts in March… hotels are inexpensive! And if your birthday is on St. Patty’s Day?… there’s usually music or festivities going on somewhere.  One year, we were eating breakfast at George’s in Gloucester (go there… the people are fantastic)… it was St. Patty’s Day… and Kateri and the dude cooking breakfast didn’t agree with the selection of Irish music that the owner had chosen. So Kateri and the dude persuaded Dean (owner) to put on The Pogues!… which made for a different, but much more entertaining ambiance to shove hash browns in your face to.

      img_1832Sometimes, the plan was to just hang in a certain area and relax… or do something fun and fancy like go to a piano concert in some historical and beautiful concert hall or theater that overlooks the water. You know, pretend like we were fancy as we rubbed elbows with fancy people. Sometimes we would bring our espresso machine with us on these trips, set it up on the dresser in the hotel room, and drink cappuccinos on the porch as we looked down the line of empty rooms and listened to the water as it tried to run up the land… thinking about how lucky we were not to have to share the space.

      One year, 15 years ago, we went to the Dominican Republic! I had never been out of the country… except for Canada… which doesn’t really count… and we took advantage of the opportunity of having time after one job ended and before the next one began.  It didn’t hurt that we had also just gotten our tax returns!… so why not blow it?! Kateri planned it so that we would fly back into Boston and be there for the St. Patrick’s Day festivities.  Which, if you aren’t aware… there are a few Irish people in Boston… and they like to party on St. Patty’s Day! She wanted me to have that experience considering the fact that I grew up in Idaho… where yes, they party on St. Patty’s… but it just doesn’t compare! Unfortunately, halfway through our stay in The Dominican… Kateri started getting the belly cramps and shits… and by the time we were back in the states she was in no mood to party. That didn’t stop her from telling Alex to take me out on the town so that I could have my “St. Patrick’s Day in Boston” experience. So after some pizza and Survivor (he was addicted to Survivor… we had never seen it)… he took me out… and we got smashed… as Kateri was curled up on his floor in Cambridge… trying not to crap herself.

      We never actually found out what caused the belly issues… we thought it was the water! Unfortunately, whatever it was also decided to make her kidneys shut down for a bit. What a way to ring in your Thirties, huh! Although we never got an answer to what happened, she recovered after a stint in the hospital, we changed certain habits, learned a little bit more about taking our health into our own hands, and things kinda went back to normal.  (Funny how time makes that happen… returns things back to normal… or changes them into “normal”).  It was also the moment when Kateri really started looking at “alternative” medicine and found her “Witch Doctor” (that’s just what she called Donna… who she absolutely loved). After having a bunch of White Coats stand over her and just shrug their shoulders… she was done with them. Ten years later, when she was 40… she had to put her trust in the White Coats again… because that is when they found melanoma on her arm… and when this big ball of shit started rolling.

      I could write about so many of Kateri’s birthdays and fill paragraphs with stories of friends sneakily decorating apartments in East Thetford with green streamers or giving her gifts of jewelry like the necklace I asked a friend to make her for her fortieth… and then asked him to write a paragraph on the back of something which is the size of a dime!img_4149img_4151  I could write about the debates birthdays created between friends pertaining to when your “Mid Forties” start… and no, they don’t start at 41! There are a lot of good memories accumulated over the years I could share, but today is the first time in nineteen years that I’m not spending Kateri’s birthday with her… because life decided it was so… and presently I don’t have the time or energy to remember twenty years of good times that are simply all just memories now. That’s what I’ll use the future for… to remember the past.  Today… after I write this, I guess… I’m just gonna sit in the present for a bit and see how it goes.  Being a widower is rough… it’s hard… it’s emotional. Jesus Christ!… it’s emotional.  Losing Kateri is harder… she was a part of me… and still is… because I love her… and I miss her………. so much.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Kateri would always make sure I wore something green on her birthday… I currently am.
      • The phone rang a couple of times and my cell went off with notifications from friends and family as I wrote this, but I didn’t answer anything until I heard my mom’s voice on the machine. It was perfect timing and I instantly fumbled for the phone.  I needed to talk to my parents. At 43… I needed to talk to my mom.
      • Today… I’m just rolling with it. I’m allowing myself to be emotional, to not worry about this or that for a day, to do whatever I feel I need to do at any given time. This is the only “First Birthday as a Widower” I will have to go through so right now I have no reference.  I figure, if I have no idea of what to expect… might as well just go for the ride… and hopefully enjoy the relief after I realize I made it through the loopy loos with just some tears… and not throwing up or going off the tracks!
      • Being sad sucks… it sucks balls.
      • Happy St. Patrick’s Day!
      • Happy Birthday Kateri! (I don’t know how I feel when people do shit like this… wish their deceased a Happy Birthday and all… but I did it anyways)

      (I was gonna post a video here of me reading this blog post… but it was like 10 minutes long… and I haven’t figured out how to get videos like that from one place to another!)

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    • Widower Day 323… it’s Friday… and that has nothing to do with this post.

      Posted at 8:53 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 15, 2019

      img_4392I had to leave work early today.  I knew when I was driving in at 7:24am that I probably wasn’t gonna make it that long. I knew at 6:50am that I was probably gonna be useless.  As well as at 6:15am when the first harp started the progression from a musical instrument made to create beautiful sounds… to a car horn made to scare the shit out of someone who is unaware of the tin can behind them. It’s my version of the “Sunrise Alarm”… something which I will never own.

      At 5:04am, when I woke up in Kateri’s chair, I really just didn’t want to go to work.  But… you know… sometimes we have to do things even if we don’t want to… so I bounced my way up to bed, to at least get the feeling of waking up under the cozy covers!   Wrapped in perfectly weighted sheets and blankets with just the right amount of chill in the air… yes please!  And just made better by the pressure on the feet and ankles from the king size duvet. (Which… FYI… doesn’t help the “Seize the Day!” motivational side of things) A duvet that somehow got packed into our belongings when we were leaving a ranch gig over a decade ago.  And by “somehow”… I mean “Kateri stole it”. (Now before you judge us too hard… the people were dishonest, disrespectful, assholes who used inappropriate words and sometimes threw temper tantrums… just take my word for it. Ya, ya, ya… they had some good qualities too, but c’mon… there are some things you just don’t do… or say)

      The last little stretch (week… and a half… ish) has been kinda rough for me.  Kateri’s birthday is coming up on Sunday… St. Patty’s… and I think it’s been bringing up a lot of things.  I’m gonna write something on her birthday so I’m not gonna get into that right now, but Kateri loved being half Irish and being born on St. Patty’s Day. Her birthday had a big role in her life… and it was a big part of ours’s, as well. These types of dates… the “first ones as a widower” types… are always emotional to some degree or another, but I think this one kinda put me in a funk. It has made me miss Kateri more… because there is so much attached to the day… the memories… the meanings. I’ve been emotional… I’ve been sad… and I’ve been crying a lot. I’ve been crying… more.  It’s somewhat annoying.

      Part of what I’m having a hard time with is the “All-Inclusive Experience” being a 6c58dbed-8b08-4c7a-95b0-557042579241widower provides.  It’s relentless.  The brain just doesn’t stop.  There are periods where I can balance the “loss” and “living”. There have been times where “living” overshadowed “loss”! Other times… not so much. Right now, it just so happens to be a “loss” time. Yes, there is still “living” happening… just not a ton… and mostly in comfy clothes.

      There is a numbness I have felt all through this, a kind of floating/zombie like thing.  It was definitely stronger at the beginning, but I have noticed that it’s still there.  Once in a while it will go away when I’m focused on something like snowshoeing, work, or eating Chinese food, but it’s still present.  It’s a fog that doesn’t allow me to see things.  I can tell that the light hitting the naked birch trees from the west and casting shadows on the snow covered ground is a beautiful sight out my windows, but it just doesn’t impress me the way it used to. I have stood between the schoolhouse and the chicken coop to watch the sun go down… and the sunsets were gorgeous, but then they end and I’m like, “Yup, that was a sunset.”.   Of course, one time I turned my head and saw all the ladies huddled in the corner of their yard next to the coop and the picture it provided me brought up so many memories of Kateri… good memories… fun memories of chickens in trucks, on decks, and in bathrooms… that I realized I sorta rely on them when I feel lost and lonely.  They help me temporarily clear a bit of fog and see a little bit of beauty. And then I get closer to the coop and remember that they also crap everywhere and are pretty much just looking to me for food… and water.

      Although I talk to the chickens every day, I haven’t really talked to many people… or been social. I’ve been keeping to myself lately.  Not really sure why… just have been.  I’ve had ambitions to go out n about… to drive up to BTown and drop off a thank you “card”… to ask a friend about engraving something… to randomly stop by a friend’s work in Essex and snag a hug… to see a friend who’s doing his dance with cancer… and to give him a hug. I wanted to stop by a studio… a kitchen… a restaurant.  I actually drove up there… it was a beautiful drive… and then never got out of the Jeep except to get some gas.  On the way home I wanted to stop by a friend’s soon to be restaurant!… didn’t even do that.  I had intentions!… of course, intentions only go so far when it comes to seeing people. Yup… I’m a jerk and didn’t even say hello!

      (A jerk is a tug, a tug is a boat, a boat goes in water, water is nature, nature is beautiful… thanks for the compliment!)

      img_4460Well there… all of that sad shit just to get to a point where I could raise my spirits by giving myself a compliment! In actuality, I don’t need to give myself compliments to try and make myself feel better.  I’m a lucky person and have some good people in my life who are supportive, loving, and fun. There are a shit ton of things in my life that I am grateful for.  There are a lot of good things in my life… many more than horrible ones.  The horrible ones are just… well… kinda gross.  This is a hard experience to go through and there are a lot of challenges, but people have been going through it ever since the first Pat fell in love with the first Pat… first Pat loved first Pat back… and then first Pat died from Metastatic Melanoma in the brain… with mutations. People survive death. It just kind of sucks that it’s a part of the gig.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • It’s good to know people who can make pork and shrimp dumplings… and who bring them to your house… who eat them with you… and then leave you big bags of them. I’m in a pattern of 5 a night.
      • The snow is definitely melting.  Kateri would want me to hook up the sump pump… I should probably do that.
      • I miss holding Kateri’s hand… always on her right… as we made fun of couples doing the uncomfortable walk. (It’s not comfortable… don’t do it… your partner will thank you. They don’t think it’s comfortable either… they’re just being nice)
      • I have a hard time watching anything about losing a spouse/partner/parent/kid.img_4465  New show on Netflix?… nope! Hell, I’m getting emotional during sitcoms about high school kids, puberty, and first loves!
      • There are four packages of pills (Smarties) left in the house…  I don’t know how I feel about that. (I know there are only two in the picture… I put two next to Kateri on the jelly cupboard… just because)
      • I still can’t make myself go to bed. I always plan to hit the hay early… I just don’t.
      • Smoliver… I miss Kateri calling him Smoliver… and all her little nicknames for people she loved.

      IUBVE8087

      ps. share if you want.

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 7 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, melanoma, mourning, widower, widower thoughts, widows
    • Widower Day 313… Love Strings.

      Posted at 1:29 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 5, 2019

      img_4343.jpgI slept in until 9:24. Well, I first woke up at 5:04am on the couch.  One of those open my eyes… realize I’m still downstairs… check my phone to see what time it actually was… and then listen to the Smarties that were on my belly… from when I fell asleep… four hours earlier… roll across the hardwood floor as I stumbled to throw a couple of logs on the fire… before I stumbled up the stairs and flopped into bed. It’s a pretty normal occurrence these days on my Fridays (your Mondays)… the pile of Smarties just hanging out on my belly for 4 hours… not so much. For whatever reason, I have a tendency to want to stay up late… and if I have the next day off… helloooo couch-bed!  I don’t know why I keep doing it.  Every night I say to myself, “I should go to bed earlier!”… but I don’t listen.

      Today… I just needed to catch up on some much needed shut eye.  I haven’t been getting much shut eye this week.  Work has provided some challenges recently and I have been in one of those “Sad/What am I gonna do?/What do I want to do?” cycles… which has been a fun combination to try and navigate… without losing my shit.  I’ve done pretty well, but I think it mainly has to do with the fact that my perspective on life has been changed so drastically since the loss of Kateri… my perspective on what is important… that I kinda have been floating through it in a numb state… with a laissez faire attitude.  Of course, chaos and heartache are still taking turns giving me noogies.

      54648317156__b0f88c47-92b0-4b26-9264-2f80ee161f42

      Who’d a thunk this would provide so many great memories?!

      I’ve come to expect the unexpected emotional roller coaster, which sounds like it would make it easier to deal with situations when they arise… but sometimes those unexpected emotions are REALLY unexpected… like when I’m trying to free up space on my phone by deleting pictures and I come across the one taken on April 26, 2018… four days after Kateri passed… of her hair stuck to the side of the downstairs shower that we had been using since we were still trying to remodel the one upstairs at the time of her passing.

      I remember that moment from ten and a half months ago. I saw that clump of hair… of her hair… right there!  A physical part of her that I could see and touch… just hanging out on the side of the shower… and I wanted to hold on to how that made me feel.  I guess that meant I needed to take a picture of it… so that I could go through all that again 10 and a half months later when I needed more storage on my phone.

      In a previous life, a life before cancer, I wouldn’t have thought anything about it.  I would’ve grabbed some TP (I don’t know why I never just used my fingers… it’s just hair) and thrown away the clump of hair.  This time… that clump of hair had significance… much more than I ever expected a clump of hair to have!  It was a physical reminder of our life together.  It was the catalyst to my brain remembering when I would pull a piece of hair off of my shoulder… or out of my much shorter beard… and Kateri would say, “Those are my Love Strings!”. Man I miss those Love Strings.

      Other times, after Kateri would drag her fingers through her hair and she was left with a nest of black, silver, and grey Love Strings… and she would make a little bow out of them. I remember some of her siblings… one in particular… being somewhat grossed out by these festive little hairy homemade neckties. So, over the years, we had done what we needed to do… and from time to time would mail them to her.  I mean, who wouldn’t get excited about getting a clump of hair in the mail!… in the shape of a bow! At the time, it was just a funny kinda thing.  Nowadays, it’s a wonderful memory of Kateri that puts a smile on my face… I mean, once I finish with the waterworks… because I even miss the clumps of hair in the shower.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I honestly don’t know if I’m repeating myself with a lot of this stuff. I tried going back and seeing some of the things I had written before on this ol’ blog… but that was a little rough… so I stopped it.  Awe… memories.
      • I sometimes worry about “What if this breaks or that stops working?”. I simply just don’t wanna have to deal with it. I don’t wanna be forced to have to deal with a lot of things… but I am… and I do.
      • Mary J. Blige has been the recent “go to” music station.  You just can’t help at least bobbing your head when Family Affair comes on.  (And just now I remembered when Kateri wanted that song on the play list for when we threw her “Kateri’s Kick-Ass Party”.  Either she or Maria wrote it down next to all the other songs Kateri had picked out)img_4337
      • The Smarties are almost all gone.  I saved two rolls and set them next to Kateri on the jelly cupboard… she loved her “pills”.
      • I still sit in my car… sometimes for a while… when I first get home.  If I glance at those big schoolhouse windows and lose my shit because it reminds me of how good life was not so long ago… I sit a little longer.
      • Recently, I’ve been crying a bit more… the quick and intense kinda crying… mainly 57334671038__390d2704-bee2-4386-a18f-adc0f8f4ba40at home in the schoolhouse… and then I move on.
      • I finally washed the three dozen eggs that have been hanging out on my counter.  I may not be right on top of everything… but everything still seems to be getting done! (and I should start eating eggs)
      • I’ve realized I’m probably gonna go through some strange shit for the next couple of months… with Kateri’s birthday coming up on St. Patty’s Day… and the  1st anniversary of her passing in April.  You know… those types of dates. (That might explain some of the things I’m feeling!)
      • All in all, though… life is better than bad.

       

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 1 Comment | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, love strings, marriage, mourning, widower, widower thoughts, widows
    • Widower Day 312… A draft I found from 246… 3ish days after Christmas.

      Posted at 11:06 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 4, 2019

      66 Days late… but it still looks like Christmas! Well, minus the tree, presents, ceramic villages, big red bows, Christmas cookies, kinda creepy/kinda fantastic little wooden Carolers, stockings, Christmas lights… besides the ones lighting up the chicken coop!, ornaments, Elf, and fried dough. So really… there’s just a lot of snow… and it’s cold.  Both of which I’m fine with. The wood stove helps.

      I opened my computer to make some notes of things I didn’t wanna forget… and then found this little gem… and have since forgotten what it was I didn’t wanna forget. I’m sure it was some sort of… “I was watering her plants and it made me think of when she would… blah blah blah” thing.   You know… when you think about how you can hear your wife’s laugh in your head… and then realize you will never hear it again unless it’s in some video or some shit. Or maybe I was thinking about Kateri and her invisible suit. The one she would put on when she didn’t want anyone to see her… at least the people she didn’t want to see. I would look over at her in the passenger seat as she scanned out the window for possible unwanted sightings… from unwanted people.  She seemed so innocent to me at those times. She was like a kid. She found enjoyment in pretending that people couldn’t see her… all because of her invisible suit.  And that smile when we got through town?!  Hell, Kateri’s smile… and that laugh!… simply beautiful.

      All of that to say I saw this draft and just wanted to make sure it made itself onto the old Bloggery.  Merry Christmas!… in March.

      Widower Day 246… First Christmas Alone… But Another One With Maria.

      I was gonna document on Christmas… but it just wasn’t the time. I was gonna document the day after… but then I de-Christmafied. Plus, Christmas was definitely one of those emotional roller coaster type couple of days that leaves you wanting to just lay on the couch and flip through Netflix for 73 minutes trying to find something mindless to fall asleep to. Of course, I have fallen asleep while looking for something to watch on more than one occasion. Long story short… Christmas was exactly what it was supposed to be… just not how I would’ve preferred.

      I’ve known for quite a while that I was going to be home at the schoolhouse for Christmas. After being in Idaho last year and Kateri staying here… I just needed to be home. I’ve also known that I was either going to be alone or Maria would be here… and thankfully, I got to spend it with Maria. Kateri loved Christmas… and if you threw Maria into the mix during the holidays… Hark the Angels I tell ya! Definitely “Festive to the Left!”. Kateri, Maria, and I have spent more time together during the holidays than we have with anyone else (in “Adult” life). For this Christmas… I feel Maria and I both needed to spend it together… at the schoolhouse.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • It kinda grosses me out that I can just hold my beard up to shave my neck… it’s getting hairy!… and I honestly don’t know if I have changed my razor since Kateri passed.
        • March 4, 2019-Ok, so the beard has… well… gotten longer. I was gonna say that I have definitely changed my razor in the last 66 days… but I can’t do that in good conscience. I’m not saying I haven’t changed it… I’m just not sure if I have.

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      Posted in cancer, Christmas, Uncategorized, widower | 1 Comment | Tagged cancer, Christmas, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, widower, widower thoughts, widows
    • Widower Day 309…

      Posted at 9:33 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on March 1, 2019

      Sometimes… I think to myself, “I just don’t know what the fuck I’m doing.”


      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I was forced to buy the 8 pack of soap. As a widower… even one that cleans himself regularly… it seems a little overkill. (yes, it’s non-hippie soap, but the only kind of non hippie soap Kateri would use… if forced to).

      (This is where I was gonna insert the artsy picture of the Lever 2000 eight pack sitting on Juanita… that’s the table’s name… with my cute little rubber duck in the background, but I didn’t know if you get in trouble for doing stuff like that on bloggery things!)

       

       

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    • Widower Day 302… Ten Months.

      Posted at 5:31 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on February 22, 2019

      img_1599I’ve been on a little “lists” kick lately. I feel like there’s just so many thoughts running through my head… and I don’t have Kateri to blurt them out to anymore! That, in conjunction with the whole “feel like you’re running out of time” gig you get when life seems to be overwhelming… well, lists help me organize… and remember.

      There’s so much that I wanna do, but I’m in the time of frantically doing just a bit of this… and then just a bit of that… with long pauses in between. I look forward to swimming… and not treading water. Plus, it’ll be warm… because you swim when it’s warm… and hopefully without little blood sucking slimy things… they’re gross.

      So this is just me at ten months a widower… 10 months without Kateri… making notes of a couple of thoughts.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Part of the pisser is that it’s all just kind of a big let down.  It was twenty years of build up… stopped in it’s tracks.
      • The image I have of her in my head… of Kateri in her hospital bed at Palliative Care… on that last day… has been the one that has been popping up… and then down I go with sadness.
      • Sometimes, the tears feel cool on my cheeks… I can see them weighing down my eyelashes… notice them drip through the beard… and it feels as if I just splashed water on my face… it can be refreshing.
      • I say, “Goodnight Ladies!” to the chickens. Every……. single……. night.
      • I’m gonna miss hearing Kateri say, “Go Speed Racer! Go!… Speed Racer!”… adding a cute little lispy thing… when she didn’t approve of someone’s driving. I definitely heard it the most, but that’s strictly due to the fact that we spent a lot of time together in the car. Much more than in other people’s cars. It’s a numbers game…and also, do not drive like Speed Racer! I’m more of the turtle. It was always entertaining for me when I would hear her start the little ditty in a friend’s car. Or if a sibling was driving?… Forget about it!
      • I couldn’t just throw away her shampoo… but now, sometimes I get a whiff of Kateri from my beard. That’s kinda fucked up… but at least I wash myself!… and have a vitamin enriched and rejuvenated beard that smells like coconut.img_1073
      • Ten months… 302 days. Sadness and pain has touched me on every one of those three hundred and two days, but so has love and compassion. Happiness, Joy, and Excitement poke their heads in from time to time… sometimes for a little bit… sometimes, for not long at all… but I suspect they’ll return for longer stays in the future.

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      Posted in anniversary, cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 0 Comments | Tagged anniversary, cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, mourning, widower, widower thoughts, widows
    • Widower Day 300… A Good Even Number.

      Posted at 9:06 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on February 20, 2019

      Straight up… just a list of things I’ve been thinking about.  300 seemed like a number to do something on! I mean, besides work, kindling, chickens, baths… well, bath. I took a bath… not the chickens. (It’s too cold for them to take baths right now… and they don’t have towels)

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I’m not going to experience sitting on my porch when I’m old… in the evening whenimg_4264 it’s cooler… and the sun is running to the west providing another spectacular Vermont sunset… and feel Kateri’s skin as she holds my hand.
        • But, I am going to sit on my porch when I grow old… maybe with a dog… I’ve always said with a whiskey (I’ll be real old… old enough to not be worrying about the booze! Probably worried more about “accidents” in public places and obstacles on the floor like… carpet)
        • Also, I’m still going to enjoy my porch while I have it. Kateri and I spoke a lot about growing old together… and it literally hurts to think about… but, I’ve got our porch now… today. I plan on having it for years to come, when I am old… and hopefully retired… financially stable wouldn’t hurt. Kateri would want me to enjoy our porch… and grow old… and I wouldn’t mind, either! So why not? The sun will always run to the west. Sometimes, it’s cloudy and it just goes from gray to black… good for scary movie nights.  But sometimes, as Kateri would say, it provides us with a Maxfield Parrish sky… and those show us there is still beauty in the world… and I’d like to see quite a few more. (I had no idea who ol’ Max was until I met Kateri… he’s from these parts or something… pretty pictures)
      • I’m never gonna have to go to a store in a mall to buy Kateri a hair clip as a stocking stuffer ever again.
        • But I am always going to remember which ones are her favorites… and for what occasions. (and they are currently in my bathroom… in her purple bag)
        • And I ‘ll always remember how she would joke that she could use the carved img_4266.jpgbone hair stick thing as a weapon… and TSA never questioned it.
        • Her hair in braids… two braids… after about a day… are still my favorite.  But I like the clips over the hair ties.
      • Kateri and I are never going to write our book, “How We Think You Should Raise Your Kids”.
        • But I’m glad the man and woman who were the inspiration for us to come up with a title for a book… while we were in bed… laughing at the situation… because we’re judgmental… I’m glad those people will always be in my life.
        • Kateri and I talked about a lot of things we wanted to do. We were dreamers.
        • No… we don’t have kids.
      • Kateri and I are never going to go to Ireland for a two week vacation… and never leave.
        • But I still hope to go to Ireland! (Don’t know how I feel about flying over water for however many hours, but might be worth it?)
        • Although I don’t really like being away from home these days… kind of my comfort zone… I still love a road trip.  Kateri and I drove across this country many a times and every time was an adventure. I love the short ones… a couple hours and a night… maybe two… simply for a change of scenery. I’m gonna keep having adventures… just not in airplanes over giant bodies of water for right now.
      • Sometimes, I can’t get out of the car when I get home and I lose track of time… then I remember I have ice cream in my bag. (Ben and Jerry’s… Mint Chocolate Cookie that day)
      • I feel there are some things that are kinda cyclical in this process… they come and go.  I’m currently in the one where it’s hard to look at random shit in my house.  A Shel Silverstein book caught my eye on the way to a bath… and I was just hit with memories… and sadness.
        • It’s sorta like walking around with tunnel vision… foggy tunnel vision.
        • Yup, took a bath. No bubbles… just a bomb. A bath will always remind me of Kateri.
      • I walk past shit all the time!… like past my destination!  Oh, you wanna go to the coffee table? Nope!… now you’re in the kitchen! Put wood on the fire? Crazy talk!… How about stare at the washing machine instead and try to figure out what it was img_4263you were actually hoping to do! It’s kind of annoying… but has also made me chuckle out loud a couple of times.

      Being a widower is hard, but losing Kateri has been harder (it makes sense to me). Either way… it’s apparently not the end of the world.

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    • Widower Day 299… FB Thought I was Spam… I’m not.

      Posted at 3:21 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on February 19, 2019

      img_4254It was quite the psychological and emotional hit when Facebook started sending me notifications that only I could see my posts because I had “Violated Community Standards”… and then they removed them from my page.  Those little messages brought up all sorts of questions for me… questions about my blog and it’s content.  Did I infringe on some Trademark? Did I offend someone?… (Which I don’t really care if I do.  I just don’t wanna say something and have someone think I’m trying to be mean or malicious. I know I can be a jerk… but I’m really trying not to be!) Questions about technology! Did I not set something up correctly? Why do these sites/apps/corporations work together, but these other ones don’t? Where do I go for help?

      I’ve never really been a tech guy.  I can check my email on my phone, post pictures on Instagram and have them show up of Facebook. I’ve only seen Twitter because of this blog.  When I was setting it up, it asked if I wanted to link it to my twitter account… or create one or something.  I thought, “Why not?! That might be useful somehow, right? I can tweet!”.  So, I’ve now got the app.  I know I set up an account.  I know I have one Jamaican follower… pretty sure… but I haven’t done anything more than that! Haven’t even seen it for months! (You kids with your dancing and your Rock n Roll!) Kateri and I were just doing other things. “Screen Time” (besides the boob tube) was pretty darn minimal… compared to a majority of the country. But things change… and the loss of img_2692Kateri has had a profound affect on me and my life. There are things I want to do… and there are things that I need to do. If dipping my toe into the modern digital world will help me overcome some challenges and obtain some goals… well… I’m not afraid to download the app! (Until I delete it because my phone keeps harassing me that the storage is full with the gray bar… not the blue, yellow, or red bars… and I don’t know what “other” means… so I just start deleting shit)

      Now back to Facebook, Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning, and the thoughts and emotions that an algorithm forced me to face. Initially, I thought I had done something wrong like mention a card company… or boobs. Then I thought maybe I had said something or mentioned someone that someone was offended by.  Or maybe something was taken as a threat… like me mentioning I hope I don’t see certain doctors outside of certain walls… which I don’t. I had no idea how I had “Violated Community Standards” and it was frustrating trying to find answers. No, I don’t want to ask “The Community” how they had to deal with this same issue… I want to talk to the person/company who took down my links! I just wanted someone to tell me… specifically… what the violation was so that I could fix it! (Sorry, I’m getting all worked up!) It was frustrating, but my lack of computer skills, my limited social media/blog/internet skills, and Facebook’s limited communication skills gave me the opportunity to overcome a challenge. It also gave me the opportunity to see that people care about me and are there to help, to give guidance when I am faced with those challenges. That part was awesome.

      It was one of those friends who mentioned to me that after they had done a little research… read some blogs… that maybe Facebook thought I was Spam. Me?… SPAM?!… but it made sense. The social media world is all just algorithms… and I knew I had recently posted a ton of links to my page.  Plus, I remembered seeing a little “This is not spam” or something button, so I was just gonna go with it… and it made me feel better about the situation. When I saw that the same thing had happened to a blog I follow (From Cave Walls… I dig it) I decided that I just wasn’t gonna worry about if I had done something wrong or what not.

      img_2349I feel the need to share a bit of my thought process on Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning, the timeline, and some of my intentions with sharing the experience of losing Kateri.  At first, at the very beginning, it was as simple as “I don’t wanna forget”.  So on that first night, after I crawled into our bed for the first time in months… for the first time alone… I wrote shit down. Now comes a little insight into the mind of a widower… well, I guess into my widower mind.  When I first lost Kateri, right after watching cancer cause her physical pain and force her to live with an unexpected outlook on life… after seeing it create the worry in her eyes… and me trying everything I could to hold on to the last experiences I was going to have with my wife… I was confused, lost, scared, and felt absolutely alone. I freaked out. My brain was going 8 million miles a minute… but through the dense fog that cancer creates when it comes into your life.  And when it took Kateri away, for me it blocked out all those other good memories that were on the other side. Writing things down helped me cope with some of the ugly emotional stuff.  It helped me be reflective on this experience. It helped me remember. And I hoped it would help make room for some of the other twenty years of good memories.

      As I was trying to maneuver the gauntlet of grief that life had slapped me with, it also reminded me that I live in the real world and there are other challenges besides just the emotional and psychological ones.  I was worried about my future (even though the future was a hard thing to think about right after losing Kateri).  Through the thoughtfulness and graciousness of friends, family, and strangers I didn’t have to worry about the immediate future of my finances, but it occurred to me that I needed to figure out some way to make up for going from a two income household to one… so I thought about what is was that I wanted to do… and started flinging shit against the wall hoping something would stick. Hence, Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning. All I felt like I had was this experience… so maybe I could take it and turn it into something positive for my life. Maybe there would be people out there who were interested in what I had to say.  Maybe those people would get something out of me sharing what it was that I was going through. Whether it be entertainment, inspiration, reflections on their own their own lives, or just a check-in from a friend. I felt Kateri’s and my life was a good story… a very sad story… but a good one. Why not share it? I also wanted people facing adversity to see that they’re not alone. So I started the process with a blog. (well, I started by emailing Ellen DeGeneres asking for help, but she didn’t respond… so I went with the next logical thought of, “maybe I’ll write a book?!”… which also hasn’t happened)

      img_4257.jpgCreating this blog has been a learning experience.  It has been therapeutic. With each blog post I learn a little bit more about who I am, who I want to be, what it is I want to do, and how I am going to do it.  Every time someone visits Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning… I feel good.  Every time someone likes a blog post or leaves a comment… I feel good. When someone I have never met emails me saying that they can totally relate to my words because they just lost their husband or wife and it has helped them… I feel good.  This blog has led me to Widower/Widow forums and support groups which have been fulfilling, insightful, and have provided perspective… which has made me feel good.  So when Facebook’s algorithm decided I was spam and I thought I wasn’t gonna be able to share my story on the one social media platform I know… it was kind of a personal and emotional hit. Although I don’t really know where this blog or experience is gonna take me or what doors it may open or how long it will keep going… I do know that it feels better when 47 people check out a blog post than when 3 do! (That whole positive affirmation thing)

      The lesson I learned through Facebook blocking my posts (for whatever reason) was that I still have hopes and dreams.  They may change here and there or may be tweaked because of this experience or that, but I still have them… even on days I don’t wanna get out of bed or mingle with society.  I have been given a new life and I am in the process of relearning what those hopes and dreams are. I have goals… and there will be challenges I face as I try to attain those goals, but I’m not going to give up on those goals until they just aren’t a possibility anymore. Some of my ideas may just be pipe dreams.  Some might be straight up irrational.  But my life… this new life… was unwanted and unexpected.  So what do I have to lose?!  I don’t exactly know what I’m doing with this new life or how I’m going to do it, so I’m just gonna keep flinging shit against the wall… and see what sticks.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Have goals. Have Hopes and Dreams. They don’t all have to be big ones. Hell, feeding yourself as a widower is a good goal… and pipe dreams are just always fun to think about! (That’s why we all talk about what we would do if we won the lottery!)
      • You’ve read enough… and I’ve gotta water plants… so I hope you have a good day!

       

       

       

       

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 4 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, mourning, widower, widower thoughts
    • Widower Day 294… The First Valentine’s Day Without Kateri.

      Posted at 7:34 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on February 14, 2019

      img_4244.jpgI don’t remember if Kateri was coming home from the restaurant or from the art/artist/fancy store on Church Street, but I remember I was frantically learning origami so that when she came home and walked into the studio… which was above a garage… she walked in to her own little field of flowers… in February.

      It was 2002, we had just moved out of the thriving metropolis of Burlington (because trees make better neighbors), and it was our first real Valentine’s Day together as a committed couple. We had met in 1998 and were one of those lucky couples that were friends before we started… you know… doing it. The September before, I was living in Burlington after Kateri and I had driven cross country from Wyoming… where we met.  She was painting down south a bit since… well… I needed “my space” and didn’t exactly want to be in a relationship.

      That lasted 3 and a half months until we were talking on the phone one evening and she had mentioned she had been hanging out with this guy who was really interesting and cool. (Those weren’t her exact words, but that’s all I’m gonna say about him. Although, he seemed very interesting… from what I heard) At first, I told her that I needed a little time to process the information and to see if I could live in this type of scenario… I couldn’t.  It hit me… and it hit me hard. Although we were just really good friends at the time… that also had a little extracurricular fun once in a while… it was at that moment that I knew I didn’t want to live without her… and she was slipping away.

      So one evening (who’s kidding, it was the middle of the night… I was a twenty something cook) I sat at the little desk in the room I was renting with a forty of Foster’s, rain was hitting the roof and nose diving to the ground, and I wrote a letter to Kateri professing my love for her. It’s weird thinking about that desk in that room and all the memories that come with it, but none of those are really that important.  I knew at that moment that I wasn’t willing to let her slip off into the world and become just another memory of my twenties. I knew I wanted her in my life… I needed her in my life… because she made it better.  When I thought of her, images of life… of a wonderful life… filled my mind.  When I thought about a wife… when I thought about a family… when I thought of adventures and the mundane… I thought of her. When love hits… it hits hard… and I’m glad I didn’t let it just fall by the wayside.

      img_4250.jpgLong story short, we wanted out of the house, out of Burlington… we wanted our own space to start living our lives together.  We had met this kid in Wyoming, who was also a Vermonter, and he mentioned that his father had a home with a studio attached to it above the garage.  He made the introductions.  It was perfect.  It also helped that the giant house the studio/garage was attached to was empty… and on 28 acres. So when Valentine’s Day rolled around, I asked Steve (the dad) if I could use the bathroom in the big house so that Kateri could take a bath (it was a huge bathtub… and anyone who knows Kateri… she loves to take a bath… unless it doesn’t cover her boobs… then she finds that to be annoying… remember?). I got candles, some music, and all that jive.  But she was gonna come to the studio first… so I wanted to do something that she would instantly see… like fifty origami tulips.  Now, I wish I could say that I chose the origami tulip because I’m a hopeless romantic and there was some epiphany with Valentine’s Day, but it was really only because people give you things like books on origami for Christmas and we had a couple in a corner. So I thought, “Well, that would be kinda cool… and I don’t need to leave!”. So I started folding the bases of the tulips… and then the flower… then put them together and carefully placed them all over the studio to greet her when she came home from work. Side note-when you sorta just wing it, sometimes your origami tulips come with all sorts of colors and patterns.

      I know Kateri liked it. I remember she kept one of the tulips for quite a while… it would show up here and there, on this move or that. It made Kateri feel good to be shown affection, to feel wanted, to feel like a woman. Which sounds pretty straight forward, but she was a rugged bitch (her words), too. One of the goals our friend who made our wedding rings had was to make her a ring she could change a tire in… or maybe dig in the dirt… but I’m pretty sure it was a change tire. Kateri loved dressing up… once in a while. Put on the fancy earrings. Heals…. very once in a while. Kateri loved to dig in the dirt, wear overalls… T-shirts with Neil Young on them. She was strong and independent. She was also feminine and liked to be girly here and there.  She was absolutely perfect to me… the perfect balance… and I loved it when she had those relaxed, droopy eyes after sitting in a tub long enough that she had to add hot water and move on to Dinah after Etta. Kateri liked romance.  And I loved trying to be romantic with her.

      As this day has been approaching, I haven’t really had any concerns about what it may bring up.  Yes, it’s a little weird, but it’s just one day. Kateri and I loved each other every moment of every day we were both on this earth… together.  I know that if she is hanging around somewhere… she is loving me… and I know I will love her until the day comes that I leave this earth.  People in love don’t need a holiday to show each other how much they love one another… that’s what life is for… and everything that comes along with it.  Honestly, because of the last year I can’t remember many Valentine’s Days with Kateri.  Yes, there were dinners and sometimes a trip, but they blend in and get lost with all the anniversaries, birthdays, Easters, Christmas’… Wednesdays, Sundays, and the 7,300 other days we were in each other’s lives. It’s those other days, and the challenges they bring, that gives us the opportunities to show just how much we love someone.

      Boxes of chocolates and flowers are always nice, but when you are in the middle of witnessing cancer kill your wife… when you see the worry and the pain… when you visibly see the love of your life’s body being ravaged by something you can’t see… well, a box of chocolates on Valentine’s Day doesn’t really seem to cut it… or matter. Those rough times are the times you show your wife you are there… no matter how dark it is.  Those are the times that test the “I do”… those are the times that hurt… those are the times when love is hard… and not necessarily always brought to you by Hallmark.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Love gives us strength, inspiration, happiness… it puts a smile on our face. Sometimes, it also gives us a beating and punches that face… and it hurts… and we cry.
      • Love is in the eye of the beholder.
      • Love makes us do some pretty stupid things, but they’re in the name of love… so there’s leniency.
      • You can search for love… but it waits to find you.
      • Love comes in degrees… and from all over the place… sometimes when you least expect it… and from people you didn’t expect it to come from.
      • Loving Kateri is the most beautiful thing I have ever experienced… because she is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen… and I miss her.
      • Kateri liked tulips… but not if they were planted in rows.
      • Man… I wish I had a box of chocolates.

       

      Valentine’s Day 2019

      Valentine’s Day 2019

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      Posted in anniversary, cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 2 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, loss, marriage, mourning, Valentine's Day, widower, widower thoughts
    • Widower Day 292… A Year Ago, I Needed to Install a Toilet.

      Posted at 11:38 am by Darren Lidstrom, on February 12, 2019

       

      img_2157

      His and Her bags (ours) in the hospital room. The Green State Lager hat went with Kateri when she was cremated.

      It was around 6:30 in the morning and I woke up to the sound of Kateri screaming my name from the downstairs bathroom.  I had been sleeping in the spare bedroom because she needed space in our bed to try and get comfortable… to get some rest.  Hearing her voice, hearing her in pain, hearing Kateri calling for me for help will always be in my head.  I ran downstairs to her holding her stomach as she was hunched over, sitting on the toilet, dealing with pain in her guts… and she had been calling for me for half an hour. This is the moment that things got serious… as if they weren’t serious already.

      Kateri asked me to call her doctor… or the hospital… or anyone who may be able to help or provide some direction.  The pain in her stomach was too much to take so I made the call.  After talking to a Doc, we decided to try and get her to the ER.  I got her dressed in warm comfy clothes, started the Jeep, let it warm up, and then helped her outside.  She got in the back seat so that she could lay down… well, curl up and hold her stomach.  Once she was in the car, I ran back inside to grab something… her drugs, a bag, a blanket… I don’t exactly remember.  What I do remember is when I came back out, the door to the car was open, Kateri’s head was hanging over the edge facing the asphalt as she was dry heaving, and she had lost control of her bowels. So I helped her out of the car, held her and walked her to the front door, stripped her of her soiled clothes and threw them into the ice and snow covered back yard, got her inside, cleaned her up, got her into clean comfy clothes… and called an ambulance.  In the moment… I did what I needed to do.  A year later… it destroys me to think about her having to go through that.

      This was the beginning of seeing just how fucked up this situation was.  After half the day in the ER, after watching the nurses and LNA’s gag from the smell of her bowels losing all control for hours, after watching doctors poke and prod her while monitors beeped and alarms went off… after witnessing one doctor tell Kateri that she “needs to stop crying” (ya, I hope I never see that dude outside of those walls), she was admitted to the hospital because, from what we understood, the immunotherapy had caused her colon to stop working.  For me, I didn’t know if this was just part of the treatment, a side effect, part of what happens with cancer, something routine… or if I was literally watching my wife die in front of me.  Thankfully, I had two more months with my sweet sweet Kateri.

      img_2120

      My bed until the cot came.

      Because Kateri didn’t have control of her bowels, she had a room to herself. I guess when someone doesn’t have control of their innards and are shitting all over the place… they consider it a biohazard.  Although it was a stressful situation, although we were scared, although we didn’t really know what was going on we felt lucky that she had privacy… that we had our space to deal with this together.  Kateri did find comfort in the fact that she was in a place where there were people to take care of her and because of that, didn’t want anyone to come visit her… didn’t want anyone else to try and take care of her… didn’t want friends and family standing over her where she could see the worry in their eyes.  She just wanted to let the docs and nurses do their job… and make her better.  I’ve gotta tell you, having to inform your best friends… her best friends… having to tell family members that they weren’t welcome to see her because she wanted to be left alone for the time being… well, that just sucks… and made for some intense situations.

      Kateri was in the hospital for a total of two weeks.  During the first week is when she had CT scans, tests, pokes, and prods.  One late morning/early afternoon one of the docs came in to let us know about some of the results… another moment where hope is kind of hidden by the slap of reality.  He said that the good news was the larger tumor they had found had shrunk a little.  The bad news… they found nine more. This was after a radiation treatment and two immunotherapy treatments… consisting of two drugs at each treatment.  Cancer… it can chip away at hope.

      (I’ll admit… thinking about this shit, remembering this shit… well, I just lost my shit.  I mean like the loud, uncontrollable crying where the body shakes as your hands cover your face and it almost sounds like you’re laughing.)

      img_2134

      Monday Night

      Luckily, Maria had planned to come up for a visit during this time and Kateri only allowed myself and Maria to be in the room with her. I say luckily, because it had occurred to me that while my wife was having major gastrointestinal issues… we didn’t have a toilet upstairs because we had decided to remodel the upstairs bathroom before all this crap started. That meant that Kateri couldn’t sleep in her own bed… and that wasn’t acceptable.  When you love someone… you do whatever you need to do to take care of them… and I needed to learn how to tile a bathroom floor, how to do some plumbing, and figure out how to get a functioning toilet in a bathroom… while still working, still being at the hospital, still being there for my wife. So that’s what I did.

      img_2140

      Tuesday Night

      I think Maria got there on a Saturday… maybe Sunday. We were under the impression that Kateri may be discharged by that next Friday so I relied on Maria to be there with Kateri at night while I prepared the bathroom.  While Maria was here, I would go to work in the morning… briefly, then go to the hospital and be with Kateri while getting updates from Maria about social services, future options (Palliative Care), and to talk to doctors and nurses.  In the evening, I would go home and work on the bathroom until about 4 in the morning, sleep for a couple a hours… and do it again.  I was driven.  I was under pressure. I was stressed out and worried, but just kept going.

      img_2147

      Wednesday Night

      For the first time, I also called on a friend because I knew I needed help.  I told MPH the situation, Kateri may be discharged by Friday and we needed a toilet.  We decided that he would come down on Wednesday, we would figure out how to do plumbing (we took the approach that although neither one of us really knew how to plumb, together we could figure it out), and have a toilet in place by Thursday.  Well, Kateri got discharged on Wednesday. Luckily… again, she only had to sleep downstairs on the couch for one night because as friends and family were downstairs welcoming her home, getting her situated, putting sheets and blankets on the couch, supporting her… MPH and I were running up and down the stairs as we got ready to install a toilet upstairs (which I had to buy on Thursday). Thursday came, I went to work, went to the Home Depot, bought a toilet, brought it home… and we installed it.  Kateri slept in her own bed on Thursday night.

      img_2152

      Thursday Night

      I wish I could say that we got a toilet and things went smooth after that, but then Friday came.  MPH stayed Wednesday and Thursday night, and on Friday morning we took advantage of him being there (Maria had to go home).  I ran into town for groceries and to make phone calls to doctors and to Kureisha… the wonderful lady helping us with social services. When I got home in the late morning, I walked into the house, walked into to the dining room, turned to my right and saw MPH hunched over Kateri as she sat on the toilet in the downstairs bathroom, and he was rubbing her back.  This is another instance when I witnessed what truly good friends we have… what it is that good people do.  Kateri had fallen off the toilet, was in pain, was scared… and MPH was there for her. He picked her up and stayed with her until I got home… and then we went back to the hospital… for four more days.  This time, Kateri allowed friends to come see her… she knew what was going on… she knew it wasn’t good.

      img_2129

      Us showing off the new “slippers” to Maria

      Two weeks.  Two weeks of a twenty year life together.  I wish I could write about everything that happened in those two weeks.  About Maria and I doing a modern dance outside of Kateri’s hospital window. About roaming the halls of Dartmouth Hitchcock while on the phone with my mother and father as they supported me and worried about Kateri.  About watching the Olympics… because Kateri loved the Olympics. About interactions with nurses and the housekeeper whose family owned the produce shop in town.  About the support and time that my work gave me through those two weeks.  About family members showing up after they were asked not to and having to have those conversations in the hospital parking lot… and then better, but harder ones at their hotel room. About Leo leaving raviolis sandwiched between two crates on the porch so that animals wouldn’t eat them. About Maria taking Kateri on art tours of the hospital in the middle of the night. About the photographs and little sponges with faces on them that I put on the shelf for Kateri to look at. About the drug regiment that caused both of us anxiety for so many reasons.img_2165 About Kateri opening her eyes one afternoon as a new doctor came in to check on her and her saying, “You’re really good looking.”… he was. I wish I could share so much more, but it’s rough… and exhausting. Life is big… and it’s complicated.  Sometimes it’s hard. Sometimes… it’s worse than that. Sometimes… for some things… they just don’t get better… no matter how many times you tell yourself that they are. I said it a lot… and it wasn’t true. We just weren’t gonna allow ourselves to give up. We didn’t want to.  We couldn’t… because that’s not what you do.

      That is what I was doing a year ago.

       

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I eat yogurt now… blueberry… even though I think yogurt is gross.
      • What if I slip on the ice and break something or get knocked out?  There’s no one here to find me.
      • A hospital at  3:37am is actually quite calming and quiet.
      • The crying is more sporadic these days. It doesn’t really matter to me anyways… I’m fine with crying… whenever… wherever.  I figure, if someone has an issue or judges me over crying in the coffee shop because I’m sad my wife died… fuck ’em. They’ve got issues… and don’t know what it means to be a man.
      • I still wanna watch a scary movie by myself… but haven’t. (I live in a drafty old schoolhouse in the middle of the woods… and can easily freak myself out)
      • It’s weird meeting new people who don’t know Kateri… or who have only heard of her.
      • Yup, still playing guitar to fill the silence… and because I enjoy it. I just never thought I would be trying to learn a Shawn Mendes or Twenty One Pilots song, but love that I learned Tracy Chapman’s Fast Car.  And no… I don’t sing.
      • If you are going through shit, just realize you are not alone. There are tools out there for you… and people. Use them.
      • This is a fucked up way to approach life, but… it can always be worse. Keep your eye on the positives.  They’re out there… just hard to find sometimes.

      img_4168

       

       

       

       

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    • Widower Day 289… and a video from 288.

      Posted at 9:34 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on February 9, 2019
      img_4214

      Yup… lost power.

      Soooo, I’ve been having a pretty “Widower Centric” week as I’ve been thinking about life and this blog thingy.  After emailing, communicating… and talking with other widowers and widows I wanted to post something specifically dealing with this type of experience instead of something that was just for myself.  I wanted to engage… support… show that there are people out there that know what you are going through.  Exactly what you are going through?… No, but losing a spouse is a unique event in a person’s life and unless you have experienced it… you don’t know the gravity it has on one’s life.  Of course, that is true to any type of traumatic experience… and they are all unique.  I lost my wife, but I didn’t lose my wife of 50 years… or lose my second wife to a freak circus accident after the first one died from a heart attack… or lose my wife, daughter, and son in a car wreck involving a drunk driver. (Another reason I am glad Kateri and I never had children… that would complicate things… as some of you are aware because that is what you are going through.) I don’t know what it’s like to go through something like that… but I lost my wife to cancer… and I know what that feels like. It’s complicated, confusing, and it’s… hard.

      In all honesty, I was gonna write this last night… well, I was gonna write something… but I got interrupted by Ann… a 70? something lady standing about four foot eleven who I had met caroling this last Christmas (because I went caroling)… knocking on my widow asking me where my door was! It was dark out and I didn’t have outside lights on because there’s really no need, so I couldn’t see her on the other side of the window. I’ll admit, it was a little startling hearing a voice talk to me as I sat in my chair watching a video I just made while being kinda lost in that whole experience. Yup, I almost freaked out! Luckily, I didn’t freak out because Ann was looking for help with a tree that had fallen, blocking her path home up the road just a bit. When I turned the light on and opened the door we realized we had met in December when we went caroling, so there was this cool rural small town comfort level thing… neighbor type gig. The tree was down because there was a nasty wind storm going on at the time… which, if you watch the video I think you can hear my drafty windows at one point! Long story short, white haired Ann and I pushed a 15 inch tree… in diameter… 90 degrees… with pulls, shoves, and a shovel! It… was… awesome! Ann and I are gonna go walking one of these days when it isn’t so nasty out.  Yup (again)… making friends.

      Anyways, this is me rambling for five and a half minutes about the nine month reminder letter.

       

      Widower Day 288

      Widower Day 288

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I just need to say that there are some great people out there being a part of “The Good” in the world.  With this experience, I am grateful to have been introduced to the Hope for Widows Foundation (even though I’m a widower), Herb from the Widower’s Support Network and the men making up that brotherhood, and the widowers and widows who are supporting each other on a few other social media pages I came across. Thank you.
      • I went into the downstairs bathroom and was reminded of Spider Joe… who lived in my downstairs bathroom for the first little bit of this new life.  He was named after the LNA at Palliative care.  Fantastic man… the LNA… Spider Joe was just a spider.
      • I haven’t taken my wedding ring off yet… and it’s not coming off for a while.  I figure I’ll know when.
      • Time still poses to be a challenge.  There just doesn’t seem to be enough for everything I feel I want and need to do. Plus, when I just sit there and stare off into space for unknown amounts of time… well, that takes time.
      • I miss Kateri. I just miss her.
      • Pros of being a widower… the beard.  It grosses me out sometimes, but it’s a great thing to experience… and you don’t have to do anything! You could literally just sit there in a rocking chair and BOOM… whole new look!… with snacks attached sometimes.
      • Aaaaand…. Goodnight.

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    • Widower Day 283… Va(stay)cation, Remembrances, Piles, Atlantic City… and a Hooker.

      Posted at 12:16 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on February 3, 2019

      img_4116.jpgWell, I’m more than halfway through my time off from work for a week.  I had such dreams of grandeur when I first decided to use up some earn time for myself!… it hasn’t been that exciting.  It’s been good… just not that exciting.  At first, I thought I would try to drive to Key West and back, but I realized the end of January is a pretty popular time for people to go hang on a beach in the Florida Keys… and they like to jack up the prices!  Then I thought about hitting ol’ Ned for a few days, be back in the Rockies, chill with one of my best friends… but that “best friend” already had plans to be in Utah!… jerk.  (He’s not a jerk… well, yes he is, but not because he went to Utah… and I still love him). Soooo, I decided to stick around a bit, take a couple of short road trips, and attack a few things around the house I’ve been meaning to get to.

      The Jack Byrne Center for Palliative Care had a Service of Remembrance for the patients they had cared for in the last year and had sent me an invite… so I went.  It was a little strange being back in the space.  I had gone back a couple of times just to give the nurses and docs some pastries, muffins, and Danishes from work and to say thank you, but I hadn’t done that for a few months and didn’t realize all the emotions that would kinda creep up as I stood there listening to older people (not all, but a majority) read poems about loss and light and love and all that crap. It was a nice service, but standing there you are also reminded of some of the things Dartmouth overlooked when designing the place… like they have to wheel patients in through the front door… where we were all sitting/standing and listening.  Not to mention… they have to wheel people out the front door, as well… like when they aren’t breathing anymore… with a blanket over them.  Not the best sight to see when you are in the thick of losing the love of your life… or your daughter… or your friend. I mean, we all know why we were there, but maybe limit the “in your face” type things as it pertains to death.  In all honesty though, the care and support that was provided for Kateri, for her family, for her friends… for me… went way beyond anything I could’ve imagined for having to go through such a traumatic ordeal.  I am forever grateful to the care providers for the way they treated my wife and the people that loved her.

      After the service, I was approached by a nurse (Mary) who remembered Kateri and myself from the January before when we went to radiology for Kateri’s only radiationimg_4160 treatment.  She had seen the worry on Kateri’s face and gave her a little four leaf clover pendant/pewter thing because she thought she needed it… it’s still in the downstairs bathroom on a plate with some other of Kateri’s things.  I didn’t really remember Mary at the time, but I knew exactly what she was talking about because I had been seeing that little medallion every day for the last nine months and on the drive home it hit me… the memory of the day she was talking about… I could picture it… I felt it. It was one of those heart warming… and heart crushing things.  As a widower, you get to have a lot of those experiences.

      The lady that runs the Palliative Care place also approached me to say thank you.  When we were there for Kateri, there were issues with the Wi-Fi and very limited cell service.  As you lay there next to your dying wife and are going through all the fucked up emotions that a situation like that brings with it, it sucks to not be able to get information out to family and friends on top of everything else… because you still have to relay information. While we were waiting around one day, there were a bunch of… you know, important people walking around the facility getting a tour and my nurse friend pointed out who one of the ladies were… the one who made decisions… and asked if I wanted her to introduce us… and she did.  I mentioned to the important lady what the situation was, how not being able to communicate with the people I need to communicate with was just another added stressor on someone going through an already stressful situation. I wish I could remember her name because she was fantastic then… as well as on Tuesday when I saw her again.  In April, it took 45ish minutes for a dude to show up with a Wi-Fi hotspot for me to carry around so that I could always be in touch with whoever I needed to be in touch with.  On Tuesday, she thanked me for bringing up my concerns and informed me that because of my concerns, they have added a cell tower for the building and provide all the families with their own Wi-Fi hotspots.  It felt good to hear that they listened and acted on those concerns.  It makes me feel proud that I was vocal and because I said something there are now other people who are going through a stressful time… with one less stress to have to deal with. I’m glad I went.

      img_4122Wednesday I just took care of some normal everyday errands… oil change, clean the house type stuff, but on Thursday… I went to Atlantic City! (I’m not sure why there is an exclamation mark… it wasn’t that exciting) I knew I wanted out of Dodge, but wasn’t sure where to go.  I had never been to Atlantic City… probably because I don’t drink or gamble, but it’s on the ocean and it’s the off season… which means you can get an ocean view room for less than $100! Soooo, why not?!

      It was a nice drive down… I love road trips… covering ground. I wish I could say it was action packed, I won tons of money, and lived the life of a high roller… but that’s not the case.  I think I spoke with the security guards as I walked back and forth from my room img_4128.jpgmore than anyone else.  I did a lot of just walking around and people watching… took myself out for a steak. Did I gamble?… yes.  Did I win a ton of money?… no. Did I lose a ton of money?… nope! I gave myself a hundred bucks… and played the penny slots… in rounds of $20.  Luckily, I have some self control… and it helps that I have put myself into my own financial austerity since going from a two income household to one.  When you have the fear of losing everything already, it makes it pretty easy not to bet everything in the hopes of an easy payday… because most likely, it ain’t gonna happen!

      img_4127.jpgI’ll admit, it was kinda fun… entertaining to say the least.  The highlight was probably my last 10 minutes in the casino as I was calling it a night and walking back to my room.  As I was heading to the escalator, there was a lady at the bar who made a gesture towards me which caught my eye… and then she proceeded to the base of the escalators to intercept me.  Now, it became pretty apparent to me pretty quickly what her intentions were… especially when she said her name was “Angel” and was just wondering if I wanted to “conversate” with her?! “Conversate”!!… with her!! I mentioned to her that we could “conversate” right here and I took 5 minutes get to know a hooker a little better.  She was really nice, had been in AC for 7 years, she was from Alabama… or Georgia… or something, she didn’t like that there wasn’t much fully nude dancing in AC, but has also met a lot of nice guys! (I’m sure she has!) It was actually the perfect end to my night in Atlantic City… and no, we did not img_4126“conversate” up in my ocean view room.  Now, I don’t exactly have any problems with that line of business… it’s been around for a while… but I just don’t think it’s my cup of tea. (And I don’t want my ding-a-ling to fall off or feel like I’m gonna burn the house down when I pee!)

      I thought I was gonna keep heading south to Virginia Beach and make a loop back up to Vermont over a couple of days with stops in Philly, DC, and maybe Annapolis or something, but I just kinda wanted to get home so that’s what I did.  There were other things I wanted to get done on my time off… like get rid of the box of clothes Kateri was gonna donate… which has been in the hallway for 10 months.  I went through the piles of img_4148.jpgbathroom stuff from when we were remodeling the bathroom.  I hung the banner from Kateri’s Kick Ass Party (our funeral) which has been draped over the spare bed for seven months.  Basically, I’m trying to get the most bang for my buck with this time off so that I can hit the floor running when I go back to work.  I understand that this is going to be a long process… this new life… but steps do need to be taken.  Widows/widowers still need to live life and are constantly trying to figure out how to do that.  Although I’m in no rush to figure everything out, I do have a certain sense of urgency for some things… or for things I’ve just been meaning to get to. So I adapted to what I was feeling and came home to my little red schoolhouse in Vermont… where there aren’t any hookers.  (I apologize if we don’t call them hookers anymore… prostitutes?… ladies of the night?… rentals?… it’s not my area of expertise)

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Yup, I’m in that time where I’m taking care of the “piles” of stuff that are in different areas of the house.  Things that widowers just don’t get to because they just aren’t that important at certain times.
      • I’ve learned that I am literally the second slowest driver in Connecticut.
      • Sometimes driving home I literally say “Fuck it”… and don’t look for deer.
      • I’ve been crying less, but I’ve still got my moments.  Those memories… the hard ones (last breath, touch of the skin, smell of her hair, Kateri’s laugh, having the love of your life… and then not) will always be there… and they make me cry… like I am right now.
      • As a widower you are constantly on guard.  You are aware that at any moment something may pop up that brings with it emotions and memories from the life you just lost.
      • I don’t really understand why people are impressed with beards. If you literally don’t do anything… they grow.
      • People from Jersey keep telling me how pretty it is… I think they lied to me… unless they believe power plants and traffic are pretty.
      • If you are going through shit… keep your head up.  If you know of someone going through shit… help them keep their head up. Sometimes the weight on their shoulders forces them to look towards the ground… and they just need help to see the path forward.

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    • Widower Day 273… Doctor… Doctor

      Posted at 9:28 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on January 24, 2019

      img_4069In the days after Kateri passed away I told myself I wasn’t gonna go to the doctor for at least a year.  The main reason being… what did I care if there was something wrong with me?  I had just lost the one thing in my life that I didn’t want to live without… yet that’s what I was doing.  So what if my organs were on the fritz?… or that headache was something more than just dehydration or lack of coffee?… or that pain in the tummy was more than just the Boston Baked Beans from the night before?  So what?  I was good with life and if life wanted to take me just as soon as it had taken Kateri… well, so be it… it was a fun run.  Now, I’m not a religious man, but in the back of my mind there was the hope that if something did happen… it just meant I got to see my sweet Kateri sooner. I wasn’t gonna do anything to hasten that journey, but I was comfortable if life handed me that card.

      Our life wasn’t perfect… no one’s is… but it was really… REALLY good… until April 22. Even when life was unraveling as cancer was taking Kateri away day by day… at least we were together.  We were doing what husbands and wives are supposed to do… be there for each other… hold each other… tell each other it will be ok… even when you don’t know if it will be.  After going through four months and three days of worrying… of watching… of watching friends and family come and go and to see their worry… of doctor’s appointments… of hospital stays… of ambulance rides… of colons giving out… of picking out canes or moving boxes next to the bed so that she could climb in all by herself… after April 22, I needed a break from the White Coats and I gave myself a year.

      Well… ummm…. that lasted nine months and 2 days… because I got the flu/sinus/head sickness or some shit and as I was curled up on the couch under a blanket I realized that I also don’t like to be in pain.  I feel the need to point out that catching some virus… of getting sick for the first time without Kateri actually has a ton more weight attached to it than the dismissive tone of the “I don’t like pain” comment (most people don’t like pain).

      Part of being a widower is all the firsts… and this was another one for me. I don’t get sick often, but in the two decades Kateri was in my life… I did get sick… and she was there for me.  This time, I was alone.  I had to make my own tea, draw my own bath (they’ve been fantastic), make my own soup, and get my own blanket. I also had to chop my own kindling, bring in my own wood, start my fires, feed/water my chickens, unflood my bulkhead… shovel out my bulkhead so that I could get into my bulkhead. Now, I’ve survived this little bout of the plague and have managed to stay on top of the things needing staying on top of… but it’s still a strange thing when these firsts come along.

      As I was laying there motionless on the couch… because movement just didn’t do me any favors, it hit me… I do still kinda wanna stick around for a while so I probably should take care of myself. Although I no longer have Kateri by my side and there’s that whole lost purpose part of this experience, there are still things in life that excite me and if I need to face this new life and all it’s challenges, might as well try to make the right decisions… like going to the doctor when you have questions about your health! And it felt good.  Well… I felt like shit, but making that shift in thinking… from no doctor’s to take care of yourself dumbass… was a huge moment for me. I mean, I was surviving… but I can definitely be healthier… for example, my diet hasn’t been doing me any favors, but it’s been tasty! (mmm, the gas station Chinese food… that’ll be hard to limit)

      Yup… so I went to the Doctor three months before I said I would… and then went to the Dentist.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I got nothing.  Really, now I just wanna wrap up in a blanket, throw something on the ol’ boob tube, and zone out for a bit.

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    • Widower Day 271… 9 Months… I Got a Snow Blower.

      Posted at 11:52 am by Darren Lidstrom, on January 22, 2019

      First…. I think I may have the flu.  Which is kind of a weird thing to say because I generally don’t get sick.  I don’t think I can tell you the last time I felt like smashed asshole… but I do. It’s a strange feeling not having anyone around to help take care of you when you just aren’t up to snuff.  Luckily, I do have some pretty amazing people in my life… good friends… who have already offered to bring me soup or to check in with me later.  I think I’ll be ok, though… I’ll survive.  It’s just an odd thing to experience for the first time.  Besides, it’s my day off… I’m ok with being forced to not do too much.  Hellooooo couch!… and Netflix! (well… and I guess blog thing, too)

      Last week a friend and I went to Farmway to do a little shopping.  We both had gift cards img_4094.jpgto use up and figured that was a good place to drop some dough.  Plus, my friend had never been there before so I thought it would be a nice introduction to a wonderful, local store.  We didn’t actually buy anything, but it was fun walking around looking at flannels (real flannels), winter coats, knit caps, work gloves, shoes, and messenger bags that cost 372 dollars (gift cards combined couldn’t buy that shit!). But it was seeing a good friend who works there and chatting with him that was the catalyst for me throwing a snow blower on a credit card.  When he told me that the storm this weekend was expected to drop about two feet of snow on us… my brain went into panic mode on how to get a snow blower to my house!… and no, Farmway doesn’t have snow blowers.  After the storm the week before… and my shoulders taking a week to recover… I was gonna do everything I could to not have to move all that white shit by hand.  I mean, yes… I get a huge sense of pride by staying on top of the driveway using nothing but man power, but I’m not THAT proud!  I figure, we (humans) have come up with machines to do certain tasks for us for a reason… and I was more than happy to figure out a solution.

      img_4088That was Wedensday.  It was Thursday that I jokingly asked a buddy to just pick one up and drop it off at the schoolhouse… 45 minutes north of him.  This is where I was reminded of just how many good people I have in my life.  I was actually at work when I texted my buddy and he, without hesitation, offered to meet me at the hardware store, load up a snow blower in the back of his truck, and drive it 45 minutes north.  So I quickly chatted with my co-workers, jumped in the Jeep, and zoomed to Home Depot to try and snag one of the last remaining machines.  It was a good thing we did it when we did.  As I walked in, so did another gentleman with the same thing on his mind.  This is where I felt lucky on the timing.  There were only 5 machines left.  Two were reasonably priced… the other three were twice as much.  I staked my claim on one of the lesser expensive ones… he took the other one.  It was at this moment that a wave of relief came over me knowing that I would not have to shovel my driveway… and more importantly the end of the driveway where the plow likes to push four foot high piles of snow, ice, and dirt that form a nice little barrier to keep out the riff raff.  Of course, it also provides a nice barrier for when you are trying to get to work at 5:30 in the morning.

      img_4097That was a Thursday and the storm wasn’t coming until Saturday night/Sunday, but do you think that stopped me from firing it up when I got home?… because IT DIDN’T! Yup, I did some snow blowing.  Plus, I wanted to make sure I new how to work it BEFORE the storm actually hit.  It would kinda suck to have a storm come through… to have a snow blower… and to have it NOT work.  Don’t worry though… it worked… and it was fun!  As a widower, this was one of those things that I viewed as an investment.  Not just in the machine, but an investment in my well being… in my life.  I am here alone now.  I need to figure some things out.  There are challenges and problems that I need to find solutions to and this is just one of those things.  It’s such a stupid little thing… getting a snow blower… but I can’t tell you how much it improves my quality of life (side note-I hate the term “quality of life”.. it just reminds me of Kateri and cancer because doctors like to mention it quite a bit).  I think about days like today. img_4108 What if a storm came through… I feel like shit… and would still need to shovel my way out?  Well, now I could just fire up the snow blower and make a path! It’s pretty exciting!

      Soooo, the storm came through… it was awesome.  There is just something about a blizzard.  I enjoy how big snow storms like these take center stage to everything.  It’s all anyone can talk about… everyone is in it together.  They also provide you with the opportunity to fire up machines at 5:30 in the morning on a Sunday!  Luckily, my neighbors aren’t exactly that close and I’ll admit… I don’t think it would’ve mattered if they were. Plus, it was fun.  So was the two hours of clearing the driveway and a path to the chicken coop… and in front of the chicken coop… and over to the potting shed… and in front of the mailbox… and between the house and the garage.  I think I made a good investment… I know my shoulders agree!

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • When you overcome a challenge as a widower… it makes you feel as though everything will be fine.
      • I still cry… a lot.  Pretty much on every day off… and 20% of the drives home.
      • You may be able to survive on Gas Station Chinese Food and Pizza… but it won’t make you feel good!
      • It’s hard living a life when you know what your wife’s last breath sounds like… it haunts you.
      • Someone left a note on the schoolhouse door saying they would be interested in buying the Toyota. I may have just gone from a 2 income household to 1, but that was Kateri’s dream car… so I don’t think I’m gonna sell it… even if it doesn’t currently run.  (Actually, Kateri’s dream car was a Toyota with a wooden bed!)
      • I love living in the woods… I hate the mice.
      • As a widower, being sick also brings up unrealistic questions… like, is there something growing in me?
      • It’s strange to think Kateri has been gone for over twice the amount of time as it took cancer to take her away… and it’s only been 9 months.
      • I haven’t been making my bed everyday… it’s not that big of a deal.
      • The nice thing to focus on is even though there are a lot of rough days… all the other days are pretty good!
      • I’m gonna go take a bath… maybe… if I get out of bed.

       

       

       

       

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    • Widower Day 264… I just needed to hear that laugh.

      Posted at 8:22 am by Darren Lidstrom, on January 15, 2019

       

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      Another storm came through. Soooooo… that means some shoveling. When I was done and saw that the piles lining the driveway were getting to be somewhat significant… it reminded me of the sledding run.  More specifically… that one run… where her laughter is caught in time.  If you need your innards warmed… or know of someone who does… this is the sound of simple joy, child-like innocence, and pure happiness in the woods of Vermont… in the sorta dark.

       

      Kateri and I Sledding in our Front Yard.

      Kateri and I Sledding in our Front Yard.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • Before, I kinda thought I knew what I was supposed to be and do on this earth.  As a widower, you have to kinda figure that stuff out again… you sit there and search for purpose.
      • I still don’t sleep much.  It’s not that I have a hard time sleeping… I just have a hard time putting myself to bed.  I think I just don’t wanna miss anything.
      • I’ve noticed that long beards shed… and makes it look like there is pubic hair all over your bathroom.
      • It’s hard living a life where you know what your wife’s last breath sounds like… you think about it… and hear it.
      • It’s been in the negatives here so I turned on the heat lamp for my chickens.  I know56875024246__c042741d-b955-4a41-a40a-0ac79b304dc8 they’re supposed to be tough and all, but I want them to be comfortable.  And if I have the ability to make them more comfortable… I should do that.
      • I have found that blaring Lady Gaga in your ears is a great motivator while shoveling the driveway.
      • Sometimes, I get sad and find that I don’t wanna do anything… at all… but then I realize there are things I need to do… so I do them.  Then, I remember there are things that I want to do and I find myself looking forward to doing them… and I feel better.
      • All in all, life ain’t too shabby… besides the whole losing Kateri thing… but I’m still plugging along.

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 2 Comments | Tagged cancer, friendship, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, melanoma, mourning, videos, widower thoughts
    • Widower Day 252… I guess I Needed a Lobster Roll

      Posted at 11:13 am by Darren Lidstrom, on January 8, 2019

      IMG_3970I went for a drive yesterday.  As a cook, you get to be lucky and have days off like Tuesdays and Wednesdays… while your friends are working.  I haven’t really taken any time off for myself since Kateri passed.  The time I have taken has been loaded with the heavy shit… 2 weeks after she passed, 3 days for Kateri’s Kick Ass Party (our version of her funeral), a long weekend for my parent’s 50th Anniversary, and a couple of days for Thanksgiving to spend with the fam in Boise.  For whatever reasons, it’s just kinda hard for me to take time for myself, so I have decided to take it when I can in the form of a day here and a day there.  Hence, I am currently laying in bed on a Thursday morning, the I Love NY coffee mug on the stool I call a nightstand (with a quarter inch of cold coffee in it), and I’m typing away… well, slowly… procrastinating the shoveling of snow I’m gonna need to do… again… while trying to capture some of the things I thought about yesterday on my drive from my schoolhouse in Vermont, through the middle of New Hampshire, to York Beach in Maine where I sat on a folding chair as it sank into the sand…. with Kateri by my side.

      I like driving alone because it provides you with a comfortable space to think…. warm, protected, and you have control over the music. I live in New England, so it also provides you with beautiful scenery no matter where it is you go. For yesterday, I just needed to decide if I wanted to take a left or a right when I hit 25. I thought Kateri would have dug sitting by the ocean for a bit at the beginning of the new year… feeling the battle between the cold wind coming off the water and the warmth of the sun as they collide on her face while the rest of the body is covered by layers of winter clothing.  So I took a right, took the scenic route, took my time, took the folding chair out of the back of the Jeep, and sat on the beach listening to the waves in the 32 degree ocean air.

      Once I had the destination, everything else just kinda fell into place.  The ocean… the coast… is just a special place.  We… and now I… have made the two and a half hour trip to the Maine Coast many a times so there is sort of a routine, I guess.  By the time I got to the Maine border I had to pee pretty bad so what better place to relieve that bladder pressure than the Kittery Trading Post?!… and maybe buy a new pair of boots!… or a hat!… or a flannel! So that was stop number one. I peed, but didn’t buy anything.  For me, it was just kinda nice walking around looking at stuff, being amongst “the people”, but being in a place where the comfort of anonymity is nestled between all those people. It felt good to just “mosey” around.  At one point, I did find myself walking up and down aisle after aisle of rifles and shotguns.  It was an unfamiliar experience… the sound of other customers testing the pump action of that brand new 12 gauge or sales people asking little old ladies if they want holster for the right… or left. I wouldn’t say it was uncomfortable (I have no issues with guns themselves… they can be useful and at times fun), but it was a little weird the nonchalance of the environment…. “just running to the store for a pair of long underwear and glock!”. Once I had peed and decided that I wasn’t gonna get a new hat… or Colt 44… I decided I should get some food before I hit the beach.

      IMG_3967I planned on grabbing some clam chowder from Lobster Cove, but they were closed until Friday.  So I parked on the side of the road, grabbed the folding chair, and walked across the low tide beach, plopped down in said folding chair, and placed the little jar Kateri was in down on the sand next to me… and just sat for a spell.  Although hoodie hoods and winter hats muffle the sound of the waves as they try to reach land, I could still hear the rhythm of the ocean and feel the salty air on my face as I sat there… once in a while looking around and wondering if there was anyone who could tell that I was crying beneath my sunglasses as my body sunk deeper into the chair. It’s not that I cared if anyone would see me crying… as a widower, you become comfortable with the fact that some emotions may bubble up at any moment… day or night… here or there… but it’s still nice NOT to be a babbling idiot in public or have a stranger stare at the frozen tears on your cheek or snot stuck in your mustache.  Luckily, not that many people go to the beach on a Wednesday… in January… so for me, the experience was just what I was looking for.  Well, except for the plan to smoke the joint that was in my pocket on the beach… Kateri would’ve loved that.  I, however, am too much of a Nervous Nelly to be so brazen with those types of things when I’m out and about alone.  Just another thing I miss about Kateri… she was the instigator… she liked to egg you on… she was the one telling you to “jump, jump, jump!”.  If you listened to her, she would provide you with experiences that you wouldn’t of had if she wasn’t there… like smoking a joint on the beach.

      Since Kateri wasn’t there to push me to do illegal activities on the beach, I got up out of the chair, picked up her little jar, and walked her to the water where I stood and staredIMG_3972 at the absolute vastness before me. I’m sure there are all sorts of beautiful things you could say about the scenario to make it sound poetic… or you could attach metaphors to the water, the land, the vastness, the sun, or the wind, but it was really quite simpler than that.  I was just a man, saddened by the loss of his wife, who was trying to find some way to feel closer to her. Although Kateri loved the ocean, although she would’ve loved sitting on the sand with me in Maine, although she would’ve loved to get some clam chowder, although she would’ve smoked that joint on the beach… she wasn’t there.  So I left… got a lobster roll at Bob’s… and drove home… alone… with her by my side.

      Widower Notes and Thoughts:

      • It’s actually Widower Day 257 now… time is still a hard thing to manage.  It’s hard to fit everything you want to into your day.
      • If you’re a widower… eat something… and drink water.  Sounds simple… it isn’t.
      • My beard has gotten big enough to where I can hold it out of the way to shave my neck.  Although I’m kinda digging the beard… it’s kinda grossing me out, too!
      • Yes, I just cut the crust off of the bread for my chickens.  No, I don’t know if chickens eat the crust or not… and no, I haven’t googled it.  These are the things widowers think about… if the crust of bread is hard for chickens to eat! (I’m learning)
      • My mom started immunotherapy the other day… January 3rd… two days before the anniversary of Kateri’s 1st immunotherapy treatment.  Yup, that brings up all sorts of things… currently being, just how much I love my mom… and miss my wife.
      • After 257 days… I’m still exhausted and going through life kinda numb, but there are moments of relief, fun, and laughter.
      • Purpose-a widower doesn’t have a sense of purpose. For 17 years my purpose was to share my life with Kateri… whatever that entailed. When your wife has cancer, you have one purpose… to take care of her, support her, love her.  When she dies, that goes away… instantly… and you have to once again find that purpose life has for you… because it has changed.
      • Yes Kate… that pony on that boat caught up to me on my drive home.  Music… whether it be Dre and Snoop, Tom Waits, Lyle Lovett, or playing Shawn Mendez on the guitar… I can’t tell you how important it has been for me throughout this experience. I also never thought I could get so emotional listening to modern pop songs… but I have.
      • Well, now I’ve gotta go shovel the driveway because I still haven’t gotten a snowimg_4012 blower… and there is more snow coming tomorrow. Yup, a widower still has to put pants on, water the plants, go to work, get oil changes, feed the chickens, do the laundry, clean the house, chop the kindling and bring in wood, replace faucets, fix gutters, shop for food… prepare that food… and to eat that food (which sounds easier that it is)… all while living in a world that isn’t gonna slow down because you are sad. Soooo… I’m gonna do what is hard for a widower to do many a mornings, but we do it anyways… and get out of bed.

       

       

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    • Widower Day 251… A Note from a Year Ago.

      Posted at 8:05 am by Darren Lidstrom, on January 2, 2019

      I recently found this note in my email drafts folder.  I had written it 17 days after we had found the initial mass in Kateri’s brain…. that was one year ago today.

      Wedding Kateri with WineI am starting 2018 with a wife who I love more than I did in 2017…or ’16…or… (which I didn’t think could happen), a beautifully drafty little red schoolhouse nestled in the hills of Vermont that I share as a home with my wife, my friends…my family, and with hope for a bright, fun, fully lived life time to come. The last chunk of 2017 has provided me with perspectives on life that I didn’t expect, don’t want, and don’t wish upon anyone else, but this is…what it’s about… life. In the past four months I have felt that absolutely crushing emotion when you realize that life isn’t fair. In the past two weeks I have felt that stomach wrenching emotion everyday at some point, whether it be for a minute… or ten… or more. In those two weeks, I have also witnessed, heard about, and felt the love and support from friends and family that is quite simply put… overwhelming. Life. This is our life and it is filled with compassionate, artistic, respectable, honest, hard working, sometimes hard headed, but always hard loving people. Perspective. Knowing what kindWedding Ceremony with Jake and Trees of life you live and how the past got you there. Knowing what is important. Being a part of “The Good” in the world. I have hope, because I know what it feels like when “The Good” in the world reaches out and replaces that bottomless pit of despair feeling with the memories of good times and laughter, with plans for the future, with food, art, jewelry, games of Uno, snowshoe trails, music, and more. I have hope because I have you in my life… and you… and you… and you. Soooo, thanks.

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    • Widower Day 249… New Year’s Eve

      Posted at 6:32 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on December 31, 2018

      IMG_3950It doesn’t matter what challenges you faced or hardships you endured or successes you achieved… it can always get better.  As a cook, it’s ingrained in you that New Year’s is just another day you may have to work.  As you get older, you’re just as fine going to bed at 10:30. As a widower, the New Year is a point in the timeline that brings up all sorts of thoughts, questions, emotions, and memories.  Personally, I don’t know if I would necessarily consider myself happy as I go through this experience… but I’m getting happier.

      A lot can happen in a year… here’s to another go around the sun.

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    • Widower Day 240… 3 Days Before Christmas (8 months).

      Posted at 8:43 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on December 22, 2018

      It’s December 22, 2018. A year ago today, I had traveled across the country… by plane…  to spend time with my family… with my mom… for Christmas. Kateri stayed at the schoolhouse… Kateri stayed home.2018 Village

      It’s also the 8 month anniversary of Kateri’s passing.

      Tonight I ate 2 eggrolls and take-out Beef Lo Mein from a gas station while watching Blue Planet…. II. I think it’s time for a Christmas movie!… maybe something with Chevy Chase.

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    • Widower Day 237… Last year, 12-19-2017 Diagnosis… Melanoma… in the brain.

      Posted at 11:31 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on December 19, 2018

      IMG_3673I don’t really have much to say about this right now… just thought I should jot something down.  For me, the finding the mass in Kateri’s brain was the significant date. It didn’t matter what type of cancer it was… it was in the brain and that didn’t seem to be a very good thing… any which way you cut it. The diagnosis was three days after finding the mass and we new of the melanoma in the arm from a couple of years prior so it wasn’t much of a shock.  The shock comes when you barely even scratch the surface on the information out there on melanoma… when it reaches the brain.  You’re immediately thrown into a world filled with word’s like “Stage 4″… and “Metastatic Malignant Melanoma”…  and “4-5 Months”. That’s when the shock sets in.

      On this day last year, we had a diagnosis. We didn’t fully grasp the weight… the gravity of that diagnosis and I sure as shit didn’t expect to be writing about it at this particular moment in time… but we had a name to what we… to what Kateri was facing.

      I remember we had hope.  This is probably THE day in which there was the most hope. Which may sound weird to say, but every time we learned something new… or went and talked to the doc… or got a letter from this person or that… hope was just getting chiseled away. There weren’t any discussions of “Quality of Life” at this appointment. This was just putting a name to a face. A name we had heard before… and beaten. So yes, we had a shit ton of hope… and we had each other.

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I got what some might consider packages out to family today! It felt good to be a little Christmassy and out in the hustle n bustle.
      • And basically… I didn’t do much else today besides pick up some shit… wash some shit… moved some shit… and burned some shit.
      • I’ve definitely been in my own little world lately. This experience throws you a lot to think about… so I’ve been trying to give each thing it’s appropriate time.  And sometimes I wonder how long I’ve been zoning out and staring at the corner of the wooden box.
      • My little red schoolhouse for the village came. My… LITTLE RED SCHOOLHOUSE!! 2018 Village Red SchoolhouseWE LIVE IN A LITTLE RED SCHOOLHOUSE!! I love that I found one for the village that Kateri sorta started for me. It seemed like the perfect piece given the circumstances!
      • Get a real Christmas Tree… they smell much… much better.

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    • Widower Day 234… 1 year from when they found the mass.

      Posted at 6:28 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on December 16, 2018

      December 16, 2017… The day life changed.

      It was a Saturday when we got home from Kateri’s MRI… or CT Scan (don’t know which, but one of those types of things)… at around 3:00pm. Kateri’s head was still hurting so she laid down in the spare bedroom to try and take a nap. She had been getting headaches the past couple of months which had become increasingly frequent and less tolerable. In the summertime, I remember her telling me she would see stars… but not the same as when you stand up too quickly or bang your head on the Kateri and Garlandunderside of a counter. Headaches and stars… that’s all they were at that time.

      Two…ish hours later, at around five something,  the phone rang. It was her primary care doctor asking to speak to her. I brought the phone up to her and sat next to the bed as I listened to her side of the conversation. She was calm. She spoke clearly. She took in information and relayed the information to me that was important at any given minute… but all I really remember hearing is, “They found a mass in my brain and you need to go get anti-seizure medication.” I didn’t cry. She didn’t cry. There wasn’t any significant outburst of emotion at that time. There wasn’t any freak out by either one of us. All there was… was an immediate need to get a medication that would help whatever it was that was happening in her brain. So I kissed her… we held each other for just a moment… and I went out on a snowy Saturday night to find a drug that my wife needed for her survival. It was a moment in my life in which I knew exactly what I needed to do… even if I had no idea what was going on. The task at hand was clear as day… in the middle of an evening snowstorm. My wife… my Kateri… needed me. Not to scratch her back, not to make her dinner, not to shovel the driveway or pick up some dirt for her flowers. She needed me… she needed her husband to go out into the world and find something because her life… her life depended on it. So I did.

      When I walked into the drugstore in town it was immediately apparent that the pharmacy was closed for business. The lights were off, the windows were closed, there wasn’t anyone in sight with a lab coat on. One of the two young girls working the registers up front also informed me that they were closed and all I recall saying was, “But my wife needs anti-seizure medication.” So I got back in the Jeep and drove to the grocery store… hoping their pharmacy was open… it wasn’t. This is about the point where the gravity of the situation started to punch me in the chest. I exited the store, spoke with Kateri on the phone and decided she was gonna call the doc to see where we could go to get the prescription filled while I looked up pharmacies in the Upper Valley on my phone… then I waited. The snow was coming down at a pretty good clip and I’m sure there were all sorts of thoughts going through my head. But sitting in that parking lot, all I really remember is Keith calling me as I waited, not having any answers for him, and feeling a sorta numbing panic start to set in. I knew I would get the prescription filled that night, but living in a rural setting just made it so that I would have to travel further away from Kateri in a moment when she needed me close.

      I ended up having to drive 45 minutes south, in the snow, in the dark, trying to comprehend what it was I was actually doing. I don’t remember if the radio was on. I don’t remember if there was much traffic. I don’t remember seeing the flashing lights of a plow truck. All I remember seeing is the lit up sign of the pharmacy saying it was open 24 hours and having a sense of relief that I had made it…  I was gonna get Kateri what she needed… and soon I would be on my way home to our little red schoolhouse… to be with her. Of course, when I informed the pharmacist of who I was and what I was picking up, it was a little nerve racking when she told me that they don’t work with “that” insurance anymore… they didn’t renew the contract or something… yup. Fortunately, she was a wonderfully compassionate woman who went above and beyond to help out a stranger in a time when that stranger needed help.

      I don’t remember what happened after that. I know I went home. I know I spoke with Keith. I know I held Kateri and wished that this wasn’t happening. I know I was scared, ornamentsbut I can’t picture any of the specifics in my head… it’s a blur. It was three days before we heard the diagnosis of Melanoma… six days before I hopped on a plane to spend time with my family for the holidays… and nine days before Kateri spent her last Christmas in our little red schoolhouse… without me.

      (We were both going to go out to Idaho for Christmas… and I know it sounds horribly sad that Kateri and I weren’t together for the holiday… and it is… but everything went the way it should have.  I’m sure I will fill you in at some point.)

      Widower Thoughts and Notes:2014?

      • Wow, Kateri did A LOT during the holidays!… I’m festive, but sheesh… definitely not up to speed.
      • If you’re a widower and you go to work on the first anniversary of your whole life being sorta torn apart… prepare to be absolutely useless.
      • The house is festive! It makes me feel good to have decorated for the holidays… even if it isn’t quite to the level it has been in the past.
      • I’ve come to realize that I need time alone to reflect and to take care of myself… but not too much time because loneliness sucks balls.
      • I keep buying candy… I have bowls of candy (some might say 6 bowls) and just keep saying, “It’s the Holidays!”.
      • Yes, I blared Motley Crue’s “Kickstart My Heart” on the drive home tonight with the windows down (a balmy 32 degrees) and cranked it up way past 11. No, I’m not a hairband type of guy, but just went with it… and then sat in the driveway until JT finished “Can’t Stop the Feeling”. (same station… back to back… go figure?)
      • I went caroling last night… it was an absolutely wonderful experience… and I met the oldest lady in town! Mary Jane, she’s 98… and said my hands were cold… as she tried to warm them up in hers.
      • All… ALL of the plants are still alive!
      • Always remember to look for “Festive to the Left!”… but sometimes it’s on the right… or all around.
      • And simply… try to be good… to yourself and others… all year long.

       

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    • Widower Day 230… 31… Christmas Decorating!

      Posted at 12:27 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on December 13, 2018

      2018 Charlie Brown TreeI thought it would be the Christmas decorations that I would have a hard time going through, seeing, remembering the memories attached to them, but it was the tidying of the house, organizing it, making room for Christmas that slapped me in the face with the reality of my life.  It was the taking down of Kateri’s Birthday cards that have hung abovekateris-birthday-cards-20182.jpg my kitchen for nine months… and reading through them… seeing the words of friends and relatives giving my wife support… celebrating her life in a time when it was approaching the end… thirty-six days later… that threw me for a loop. The last card in the pile was from me… and I kinda had to take a sit on the floor. It was the tidying of the book shelf and finding pictures spanning the last twenty years… of horseback rides in the Tetons and snowmobile rides in the backcountry.  Images of road trips to Ohio (where we said we would never go back to… and then went back 5 times), sailboat excursions in Maine, snowstorms, beaches, adventures with friends, and adventures for just the two of us. Images of sister in-laws when they were twelve, at their college graduation, and then from this year holding my wife… their sister… for one of the last times. Pictures of the various places we’ve lived in… from the Rocky Mountains to our little red schoolhouse in Vermont… pictures of IMG_2352various cabins and cottages filled with the richness of what was our life… pictures of our various homes. Snapshots of a life I don’t have anymore… and no Christmas miracle is gonna bring back my sweet sweet Kateri.

      As we get deeper into the Holiday Season, as Christmas “sneaks up” on us and people freak out because they can’t find this gift or that, try to remember what is important… and it’s not a stupid video game, or gift certificate, or pair of Darn Tough Socks (although, always the perfect gift!). It’s the spirit we find in ourselves to carry on living in this world2018 Some Christmas Ornaments! with the people who are here sharing it with us. It is the relationships with those people in our lives that we celebrate as we prop up trees and decorate them with artifacts from our past, pull out the flying Santa’s, set up various Nativities, and plug in lights to soften the darkness.

      Mistle ToeI haven’t hung up the smashed and weathered piece of mistle toe that I used to kiss Kateri beneath… and it may not ever hung up again. Things change. Significance and meanings attached to those things change… and we adapt. It’s not the mistle toe that’s important… it’s the memory of feeling Kateri’s lips, of holding her in my arms, of remembering how excited she would get during the holidays that is important to me… how she would treat people… love people… how she would put on Kenny Rodger’s and Dolly’s Christmas album at 7:00am or yell out, “Festive to the left!” as we drove through the hills of Vermont  at night during the holidays.  That is how I keep her with me.

      It’s been a strange holiday season so far and there have been some ups and downs, but I 2018 Christmas Living Roomthink Kateri would be proud of my decorating, happy with our tree (with 2 angels and a star on top), and excited that there is snow on the ground.  Although Kateri won’t be sitting next to me in her robe this Christmas morning as we open gifts of food storage containers, flannels, and Obama dolls… (actually, those are all old gifts… it’s a little more sparse under the tree this year without her), but she will be with me.  If you think about other people, if you remember what is important in life, if you are true to yourself and your intentions are good… if you get excited when you see an over the top display of Christmas lights… she’ll be with you, too.

      Be good and enjoy the season… whatever season it may be for you.

      2018 Kateri's Christmas

      Widower Notes n Thoughts:

      • I’m glad Kateri kept buying Christmas decorations… it makes the house look festive!… but it doesn’t feel as “Christmassy”.
      • First Christmas as a widower… strange, hard, emotional, reflective… but also heartwarming and comforting.
      • Holidays are just other days inserted into this process that sometimes makes you think about shit in a different light.
      • I have noticed that I fall asleep in “Kateri’s Chair” at every possible opportunity… and then fumble my way upstairs to bed between 2:00 and 4:00am. (It may also be that I’m getting older… and it’s closer to the T.V.)
      • I decorated the tree and house in silence.  I guess I just needed to think about stuff… Kateri would’ve been playing Christmas music… or the B-52’s… but mostly Christmas tunes.
      • The last three weeks have been difficult for a variety of reasons.  Sometimes we have to make decisions that push good things to the side so that we can confront the hard things that are slapping us in the face… it’s kinda fucked up.
      • I haven’t gotten a Christmas Ornament or new Christmas Album yet this year… but soon!
      • It took me four days to decorate my house… kinda… haven’t done any Christmas shopping… haven’t made any cookies… haven’t watched The Grinch or Elf or Christmas Vacation… haven’t written cards… haven’t done any caroling or holiday parties… and I’m good with all of that. I’m doing what I need to do.
      • I wish Kateri was here for Christmas… I just wish she was here.

       

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    • Widower Day 210… 7 Months… It’s Thanksgiving.

      Posted at 3:05 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on November 22, 2018

      Logan 11-20-2018I am thankful that I was just able to give my mother a hug… to hold her in my arms… on Thanksgiving morning… and I wish Kateri was here. It took me ten minutes to write that sentence.  Thanksgiving. The first Thanksgiving without my wife.  The first Thanksgiving I am spending with my family in years… in at least over a decade… and it’s where I’m supposed to be today.  The last seven… nine… eleven… twelve months have been filled with some of the most horribly inexplicable events that I have had to deal with in my life. My mother was diagnosed with lung cancer which spread to her brain.  Melanoma took Kateri away from me in four months and three days. There are many things in this life that I am not thankful for, but there are more people, friends, family, and experiences that have been in… or have entered… my life that have given me strength, love and compassion to keep moving forward through this timeline. It’s a strange life to live when your mantra is, ” Well, for being the worst thing I have ever gone through… ever felt… ever experienced… it went as well as it possibly could have.”… and it’s still going.

      Only a few of the things that I am thankful for:

      • To be held by my mother on this Thanksgiving morning and to be with my family.
      • To have friends that genuinely love me… and I love them.
      • To have had twenty beautiful years with one of the most truly unique and beautiful people I have ever met… and to have loved that person… to have loved Kateri more than myself, more than anyone else, more than anything else on this planet. That’s what love is.
      • To have a home… a cute home… filled with memories of a rich life.
      • To have a home… a cute home… to fill with new memories.
      • I have a job where I am surrounded by good people who I have formed real relationships with.  People who have given me things that I will never be able to repay.  People who have given me “time”… and they continue to be there for me.
      • Comfy clothes… I am thankful for comfy clothes.
      • Lil’ Bitch… she provides me with more than I ever thought a chicken could.
      • Neighbors.  I never knew the people up and down the road would provide me with such a sense of community.  Kateri and I have always said, “Trees make better neighbors!”…. but trees won’t tell you that you’ll be ok.
      • To have finished the bathroom where Kateri put the first hole in the wall with my framing hammer… well, have almost finished… 99% finished. I’m taking showers and my toothbrush is up there (in the cup I got for Kateri’s toothbrush when she was in the hospital in February).
      • For my woodstove… it keeps me warm… and a place to make s’mores inside the house with truly wonderful people in my life.
      • For Vermont and everything it’s about.  It’s home.
      • For take out Chinese food from gas stations and pizza from wherever.
      • For not taking a drink in over twelve years… boy am I thirsty.
      • For good weed and coffee… dark, strong, bitter coffee.
      • Airplanes… it would have sucked to walk to Idaho… and I wouldn’t have sat next to Janis… she likes to gamble.
      • For the generosity of strangers.  It strengthens your faith in humanity when we are surrounded by idiots.
      • Music… all sorts of music.  It is one of those things in life that provides us with what we need when we can’t deal with the silence.  It could be Tom Waits in the bath tub, Lady Gaga while shoveling the driveway, or whistling while walking in the woods.
      • My guitar… on countless nights at 12:27am (well, for at least the last 210 nights… our relationship changed after Kateri passed away).
      • For my families and friends. For Maria, Keith, Michelle, Adie, Matty, Matt, Jake, Todd, Scotty, David, Cristina, Luke, Braedy, Luke, Raph, Tara, Eric, Moose, Chi Chi, Trilla, Anna, Pocker, Pookie, Mary Ann, Tony, Dina, Tom, Jacob, Jared, Josh, Sadie, Jason, Gil, Sarah, Soren, Paul, Justin, The Levesques, The Owens, Amanda, Jessica, the kitchen (Jeremy, Margot, and many more), KAF, Paul, Rob, Burlington Hearth and Penny Cluse. For all of their families… husbands, wives, and children. For the countless number of other friends in my life that have loved me and my wife.
      • For my father.
      • For my mom.

      It’s Thanksgiving.  It’s just one day.  Remember the important things to be thankful for in life when tomorrow comes, because some of them may not be there anymore… but you will be.

      D.

      Sadie

      Happy Thanksgiving!

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    • Widower Day 201… it snowed.

      Posted at 11:16 am by Darren Lidstrom, on November 13, 2018

      IMG_3673There have been more than a few moments in the past couple of weeks that have made me want to write stuff down… to document things I don’t want to forget about as I go through this process, but it took four inches of wet, heavy snow to keep me in my bed… drinking coffee from the I Heart NY mug… to get me to open up the computer… and procrastinate shoveling the more than a few inches of wet/heavy white stuff from the first significant snowfall. Yup, it’s beautiful… but I’m really not ready to start pushing it off of the driveway or to chisel out a hole at the end of it where the plows keep stacking it up into a nice wall of ice chunks as if a glacier just went rolling past.  So, I’m just gonna jot down a few notes, drink my coffee, and rethink my decision to not get a snowblower (I don’t like the idea of having a 100 pound paper weight taking up space in the garage 352 days of the year… but they’re less expensive than four wheelers… and plow trucks).

      A week ago I voted.  It’s not that I’m proud of participating in my civic duty (which I am), but more the fact that when I walked in Candy and Kat (Cat?… I’m gonna go with the “C”… less confusing with the Kat/Kateri similarity) were there to check off my name and to take my ballot.  The last time I saw them at town hall was when I went to vote in March after town meeting specifically to support the Visiting Nurses portion of the town budget because Kateri really wanted it to pass (it did… it always does). It was the first time I had met both of them, but I had met Cat’s wife/partner/person a few days earlier as I was trying to get an absentee ballot for Kateri.  So Cat had already kinda heard about my situation and it just so happens that she is a wonderfully compassionate older lady who lives three houses down from me. Candy and her husband live a few more down the road… all of whom I don’t know well, but when it comes down to it… I know I can rely on them as neighbors, and as friends… and they can rely on me.  I feel that way because when I walked in to Town Hall to vote last week… they both gave me a hug… Candy and I  caught up on the shit pile in her life (cancer and loved ones)… and tears filled Cat’s eyes before she even said a word to me… or embraced me in her arms.  Her empathy was overwhelming.  The sense of community was overwhelming.  This is where Kateri and I had decided to set roots… and these women showed me that we had made the right decision… as I am left here without my wife to figure out where and what home is. It was heartwarming. It felt… good.

      There have been more than a few moments in the recent past that have made me feel good.  It’s a strange thing to feel after months of nothing but the pile of… yup… shit. I mean, I have tried to see the beautiful things in life throughout this whole process, but I gotta say… the dark stuff, the rough stuff, the sad stuff are really what consumes your life as you try to just get to the next day.  As those “next days” keep piling up, I have realized they are starting to get filled up with things other than just the memories that I’m surrounded by in my home, or evenings of contemplation of what the fuck to do… and how am I gonna survive this new independent life, or the crushing weight of losing Kateri (I miss her…. so much). Those “next days” are filled with new experiences… experiences without Kateri… and that is a hard thing to come to terms with.

      bathroom mirror picI shaved my head the other night (that’s just my hairdo… I haven’t paid for a haircut in seventeen years), looked in the mirror… and didn’t recognize myself. You wanna talk about a fucked up thing to go through… well… it was fucked up.  It could have been the fact that my beard is the longest it has ever been coupled with the newly trimmed noggin. It could have been the fact that it was the first time I shaved my head in the bathroom after working on it for over a year… a bathroom in which Kateri put the first hole in the wall and I was now cleaning up First hole in the bathroom walllittle pieces of hair from a sink and tiled floor in a whole new life.  A floor I tiled in the early morning hours over the course of three nights while Kateri was in the hospital… Maria being there by her side for her… while I did whatever I needed to do before Kateri was discharged with gastrointestinal issues from the immunotherapy.  A floor I needed to learn how to tile for the simple fact that my wife needed a toilet upstairs so that she could sleep in her own bed.  Staring at myself in the mirror… looking into my own eyes for the first time in a while… it was hard to deal with all the emotions that came flooding in as I recognized that specific point in the timeline… that life is different… but I couldn’t recognize myself. To my core… I am different… I haveTowels in a Box changed, because my life has changed. I cried… a lot…. as I leaned on the sink and didn’t move as I searched in those eyes for understanding to what was going on, but never really got an answer.  So what do you do? Well, I took a shower to remove those little bits of hair from my shoulders, beard, and body… put on some comfy clothes… texted with a friend… and waited for the “next day” to come.

      Life as we know it may change, but as long as we are here… it doesn’t stop… whether we want it to or not. Sometimes, you just have to shovel the driveway.  And sometimes… you have to do it alone.

      Kateri in the Bathroom

      IMG_3677Bloggery Post Addition…

      Although it is very satisfying shoveling a long driveway and I’m always filled with a sense of pride and accomplishment once it’s all said and done… I currently refuse to attach the word “healthy” to the task. (ya, ya, ya… it felt good to be outside and in the fresh air)

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    • Widower Day 180.

      Posted at 7:36 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on October 26, 2018
      img_2942.jpg

      Home

      This was our home… and now it’s mine.  There isn’t enough space on this interweb thing to explain what that means to a widower. It’s a complicated, hard, emotional life.  But it’s a beautiful one.

      D.

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    • Widower Day 179… Six Months and Friendship.

      Posted at 12:03 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on October 23, 2018

      Roxbury Gap ViewWidower Day 179… really 180, but 179 was six months and I just couldn’t write anything… I didn’t have the energy for it and simply… there were other things I wanted and needed to do.  I started this post because of the kindness and compassion of a friend and thought it kinda fit for the six month mark.  It’s the people that keep us going, that give us purpose, that give us reasons to get excited for life… even after you find out that it’s our relationships with people that sometimes makes us hurt, makes us sad, makes it so that we don’t want to leave our little schoolhouse homes and face the world… but we do because the risk is worth it… and because sometimes its just what we have to do.

      Six months… and it’s still all sorts of fucked up. Although six months isn’t a long time, it’s long enough to definitively break up my life into Before Kateri, Kateri, without Kateri… and that is a hard reality to try and figure out.  It is strange. It is confusing. It is emotional. I still don’t sleep.  I still don’t eat. I am stressed out and overwhelmed (with moments of stillness and calm). I still don’t know what I’m going to do with this new life that I didn’t ask for, but am forced to navigate. What I do know is… I am different. I am a different person because my life is different. I would say that my priorities have changed, but really my priorities are getting through today… and into tomorrow without making this experience worst… for the most part.hacket-hill.jpg

      Six months and I’ve been without Kateri for a longer stretch of time than when we first found out she had cancer in her brain… and the time it took her life.  I have spent more time not getting up and getting her pills together, delivering them in the fancy little dish with fancy little designs on it, before I go to work.  More time not running up and down stairs because it was the wrong little pitcher for almond milk for her cereal, or trying to find the perfect pillow, or calling doctors with questions, or seeing them and hearing bad news, or waiting in 3K with other normal people dealing with unfair hands, or having every bit of my energy focused on just trying to make her feel better… to provide her with even the slightest bit of relief, comfort, and sense of not being alone through this. More time not seeing the worry in her eyes… and her seeing the worry in mine. With Kateri and cancer I have now spent more time not worrying about losing the love of my life… because I lost her six months ago… and it only took cancer four months and three days to change my life forever. I would much rather be worried… but that’s not the hand dealt. So I rely on friends… on people… on “The Good” in the world to keep me going… and get me into tomorrow.

      This is where I started on Widower Day 171… I received the first text at 9:00pm saying, “Hola friend! What are your thoughts about me coming to visit Oct 6-10? Let me know if that works for you.”, but it’s the second one that made my night.  I didn’t see the first until I heard that little ding from my phone twenty eight minutes later saying, “No pressure… BUT I booked a flight because there was only one seat left coming home on the 10th…” yada yada yada. I couldn’t believe how two short messages from an old friend could fill me with such warmth, such…

      roxbury-gap.jpgUmmm, now its Widower Day 174 and I was gonna continue on with stories of grilled steaks, talking on the porch, and four hour drives to Quechee, but I think those texts speak to what I wanted to say today… what I needed to just get out of my brain after having a “moment” driving between the lake and my house… and then for twenty minutes in the driveway.

      This old friend is a man in my life who predates Kateri. Although all of us lose touch with each other because of  life, as the years pile up you realize it’s just the frequency at which we are all in the same space that is less… but the bond of a real friendship just digs deeper as our lives get richer and fuller with experience. I hadn’t seen my buddy for years.  I think we decided it was when Kateri and I lived in Nederland, but that’s not really relevant. What’s relevant is this man was there for me when Kateri was in Palliative Care. He texted me. He called and talked with me. He took time…. like so many good people and friends did . No, we haven’t seen each other in years, but he knows I am now hurting from the loss of my wife… the loss of my best friend… and the loss of that feeling of security in your life… in your world.  So he came 2,676 miles to my little schoolhouse home… just to be here for me, to listen, to talk on the porch.

      my pathFriendship. When you’re wading through that pile of poop (trying not to say shit so much), you rely on all sorts of friendships to get through the day. I feel the need to say that in the grand scheme of things, in this new “chapter”, I’m doing ok.  All honesty, I am excited to see what the future brings, to meet new people, to have new experiences… and I am. There has been laughter, and singing in the bathtub, and sitting by fires, playing guitars, fun texting banters with friends… old and new, and beautiful fall scenery.  There’s still enough Good in the world to show us that it’s worth putting pants on for… especially as the weather is turning. But when dealing with this shit (twice, sorry), this upheaval of life, I am grateful to have people in my life who share the common value of what it means to be a part of “The Good” in the world… who understand what is important in the world…who are present when needed even with distance in between. Just knowing that I could call any number of people at 3:07… a.m. … and they would be there for me is not only heart warming, but I also rely on it to keep some of that feeling of being all alone at bay. It’s not that I call people at three in the morning all the time, but if I did!… they’d answer! Everyone should have those types of friends and friendships in their lives, but more importantly… you should be that type of friend.

      OK… now it’s Widower Day 176 and I don’t know exactly where I was going with this IMG_3512blog post except for this… I have had a rough go lately.  I haven’t wanted to do anything… at all. To just stop everything for a bit.  I have wanted off this ride… to change the song… or at least the tune. (side note… NO, I do not want to slit my wrists in the newly tiled bath tub while drinking a glass of whisky… smoking a joint… and a cigarette or anything. I kinda figure this is all sorta normal “widower” stuff. Life—beautiful…. sometimes a pile of shit. 3 times… I’m gonna stop apologizing) I have been sad, lost, and lonely. And it’s not that I need anyone to do anything because…….    I guess here is the point I’m trying to make. This has sucked, these things suck, but it’s the people in my life… the people who are still plopped here on this earth with me… whether they be from when we were making memories as stupid boys 26 years ago or from this new “chapter” in life… it’s the people who provide me with strength, security, and reassurance… with excitement and smiles… with joy. It’s my friends… and I find them everywhere. Friendship comes in all shapes and sizes… in varying degrees… and with all sorts of intentions. When going through a traumatic event like this you need people. You may not talk often and you may not live in the same town.  Hell, you may not even know each other very well!… but that’s not the important part of friendship.  It’s being there at the right time, for the right reason… however big or small. That’s what I have… that’s what everyone should have… because that’s what let’s you know you’ll be ok.

       

       

       

       

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    • Widower Day 155… happens to be our wedding anniversary.

      Posted at 6:00 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on September 28, 2018

      I Pick YouJesus… where to start.  Although our wedding was the happiest day of my life… it’s not the story I’m jotting down here.  This is about losing Kateri and having to face the overwhelming onslaught of “Firsts” that a widower goes through because the clock just won’t stop ticking. The first month… alone… the first five. The first summer. The first fall which will lead into the first Stick Season.  The first load of laundry without her sleeping socks mixed in. The first home cooked meal with mushrooms. The first trip to the store when you realize you are shopping for one… and you can get whatever you want. The first trip away with no one to call home to and say “Goodnight”. I guess from day one… everything is a first in some way or another.

      This widower thing is fucked up.  Your brain is thrown into chaos at a time when all the responsibilities of life are put on your shoulders. But because of that whole time thing, you are forced to take that first breath… in that new world that life decided to slap you with. There’s gonna be all sorts of firsts in my future. Some I’m excited for. Some may make an impact… some may not. Most are tiny little things that pop into your head in the middle of it. And I’m sure there will be some that I probably won’t pay much mind to.  I don’t try to anticipate how I’m gonna react to dates n stuff, still rollin’ with it. Quite honestly, up until my drive home from work I was doing pretty decent with this whole first… our Anniversary.  I knew I wanted to write something about this experience, butKateri wedding writing also knew it wasn’t gonna be an easy thing so I should probably start today on Anniversary Eve. The thought crossed my mind that going through pictures had the potential of taking a bit of time and energy so I might as well get the memories started. I have to say… I was correct in my assessment… going through pictures was rough.  Beautiful… but rough.

      Wedding Ceremony with Jake and TreesOur wedding was awesome.  We had it on a Wednesday at 4ish because we thought it would be easier for all of our friends in the food world to make it. It was held at a wonderful camp in central Vermont… before all the camps realized they could rent out their places after the kids go away to brides and grooms from far away places who want that “rustic” or “Vermonty” wedding experience… for an exorbitant amount of money. For us, it was a place we could afford that was in the next town over and it turned out to be the perfect choice for us to celebrate our love for each other… and our commitment to each other with around a hundred and twenty-five of the most caring, fun, loving, artistic, and just plain fantastic people around.  Actually, as I was on my front porch this evening, it was me thinking about those people… one in particular… that put into a certain perspective where I was in life and what this date means for me.

      Yes, this is the anniversary of when Kateri and I got married, but Kateri isn’t here and IWedding Kateri with Wine can’t tell you how hard that is to accept. I find solace and strength in the fact that the man who was there standing, speaking, and guiding us through the ceremony of our marriage was in our home days after we first found out about Kateri’s cancer, when she was in palliative care, and is here for me now as I struggle with a loss that has been absolutely crushing. I know I can call any one of the men who stood up for us at any time of the day… for just about anything… and they would do everything they could to help me out (side note-we only had “Men of Honor” in our wedding party). Thinking about those men is what made a slight shift in my brain as I thought about what our wedding anniversary meant to Kateri and I… and what our anniversary means to me now that I am in a this strange widowed state. I’ve been struggling with that whole breaking life up into segments (before Kateri, Kateri, after Kateri) and am just starting to get used to the fact that different periods of life like to mingle for a bit before moving on or slipping off into the past. As traumatic as this experience is, I don’t think anything will be slipping off into the past anytime soon. Kateri will always be a part of my life… I’m just hanging on for some more hours in the day to not feel so crappy.

      IMG_3486

      Our Wedding Invitation… the one I’ve carried around for seven years.

      Our wedding was beautiful.  With the help of our friends… we did everything.  We made the invitations (which I still carry one in my bag).  We painted wooden signs… one of which is still in a garden out back. We made luminaries with Trilla, night after night, in our little cabin on the hill while episodes of Glee continually played on the television. Kateri and I cut little pieces of fabric and covered jar after jar of pickles that we made in a friend’s kitchen… at their restaurant… where we worked… for people to take home with them.  We used twine and tied cute little bows while in the parking lot of the laundromat… before we had a home with laundry… which is glorious.Wedding Pickle Jar We smoked a pig… another glorious thing.  Along with smoking the pig, we were able to have some entertainment when the grease lining the lid and walls of the smoker decided to join the party and provide us with a bonfire.  Of course, then you realize you still need to put the pig on so you have someone… hopefully without a ton of body hair… slam the lid shut.  Luckliy, our volunteer had all of the hair on their face, head, and body afterwards. We scrounged and found windows to attach to wooden stakes so that we could make our “church”, meeting a wonderful cast of characters and seeing some cool places during the search.  Our friends picked flowers from the farm up the road… the one with the beautiful big white barn. Kateri and friends brewed our “Wedding Beer”… I bought a shit load of A&W.  We were able to buy wine from a friend… and neighbor.  We made steamed buns… mmmmm, steamed buns. There were cabins and porches for friends and family to stay and hang in… and for us to write our vows on… three hours before the ceremony (yes, both of us). There was a pond for people to naked swim in under the faint light of the stars.  There were people.  Nothing but wonderful people.  We wanted to have nothing but friends and families that we loved and cared about at our wedding.  Even the people helping serve the food, pour drinks, play music, and wash dishes… everyone was someone we wanted there, someone in our life.  We wanted to know that whoever we came into contact with on the day of our wedding… they would put a smile on our face… and they did. Kateri always said our wedding was the type of wedding that she would enjoy going to… I agree.

      wedding photo

      Still my favorite… I love her hand holding my Carhartts.

      Now, I have to say that a hundred and fifty days seems a little soon to have your first wedding anniversary as a widow. It’s just far enough away from the day I lost Kateri to sorta destroy me, but too soon to really spend much time reminiscing about it.  Even though it seems like such a significant date, it’s really the hundred and fifty-five days before it that beat you up and wear you down.  This is the first time September 28 is passing me by as a widow… it’s the second time around that I think will be rather interesting.  I mean, yes I’m sad and it’s rough and it reminds me of what I lost… but that’s everything right now.  I have pictures from our wedding hanging on walls and on dressers.  I also have art, knick knacks, furniture, beds, yard games, wooden boxes, rocking chairs, random pieces of metal and old rusty gears, jackets, boots, old t-shirts, old birthday presents, plants, and little notes from the other twenty years of adventures with Kateri. All of that is a little harder to deal with at this point than remembering just one of the wonderful days I got to spend with her… even if it was the best one.

      I work with an amazing group of people in the kitchen who have supported me through this and have dealt with me and my moods for the past… well, ten months since this whole experience started.  The last few weeks have been a lot for me and I decided to take advantage of the fact that my upstairs bathroom is comfortable enough for me to take a bath in… so I’ve taken 4 in the last 6 days.  On my way out of work (because I still have to go to work) a friend asked if I was gonna take a bath tonight.  At the time I had no idea, but the chickens are in, there’s a pizza on the counter (I know, perfect way to remember romance), and it’s getting dark. So I think I’ll put on some Heart of Saturday Night… even though it’s Friday… and make it 5 out of 7.

      Kateri Putting My Ring On

       

       

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    • Widower Day 146… $271.40

      Posted at 10:01 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on September 19, 2018

      IMG_0452On Widower Day 137 I closed Kateri’s personal bank account.  I had tried to close it months ago, but going through an experience like this you learn about things like wills, probate, estates, and administrators… and it takes time when all of that is new to you.  I never really freaked out about not knowing how much money was in there or how many accounts she may have been taking care of directly from it because I knew there probably wasn’t much. I figured if she ran out of money… well, people wouldn’t get theirs. I knew I had all the regular stuff taken care of so I didn’t put much weight on the matter… or the additional stress on myself… most the time. We always had our own checking accounts, for no particular reason except that it wasn’t a thing to us.

      $271.40 is not a lot of money, but that number holds so much more value than 13 twenties, one ten, a single, three dimes, and two nickles. Two hundred seventy-one dollars and 40 cents is the last physical type thing I will receive from my wife… along with the dinner that that small amount of cash will provide a couple of friends and myself. For me, it also represents Kateri’s approach to life and what she thought was important.  She (we) never had much in the way of means, but if she could give ten dollars to some firefighters or fifteen dollars to the Arbor Day Foundation… she would.  When the… let’s just say “jerk”… became president, I think she even gave some cash to The Park Service to help with the crippling cuts! She used money to live… to make other people’s lives better whether it be a friend’s, a stranger’s, a family member’s, or our’s.  It never mattered how much was in her bank account, if she could help a family member, a friend, a firefighter… she would. If she could provide a little bit of fun or a good memory or experience… she would. Christmas… everyone got something because she enjoyed giving it (She thought every kid deserves a present on Christmas). I guess it doesn’t really matter if we are talking about money, bank accounts, firefighters, friends, or family… Kateri genuinely cared for other people in the world more so than most people out there. She knew what was important. As in life, it’s not the twenty-dollar bill that’s important, it’s what you do with it. $271.40 wasn’t a lot, but it was enough… and much, much more.

      Sooo, ummm, I had to take a break since it took me about an hour and a half to write this much and realized I should probably fill my mouth with food and swallow… ChickenIMG_2344 Tacos tonight.  It’s really only the tenthish time I’ve cooked something for myself (like, actual cooking) and it’s nice to fill the house with that chicken grease and chili scented mist once again… while being on edge the entire time that the smoke detector will go off.

      Ya, closing Kateri’s bank account was kind of a weird, emotional, reflective, and relieving thing.  And yes… she is awesome and giving and loving, but I hope you feel the same about the people in your life.  If you don’t have people in your life… these are the types of humans you should fill your world with. You need them when life sucker punches you in the chest. This has been the most fucked up thing I have ever gone through. Everything “means” something. There are soooo many “Firsts”.  It’s overwhelming to the point you just have to stop once in a while, put your hands on the wall… and wait.  Wait for the brain to make a decision on what to do next.  Sometimes, it’s as simple as take a step to the left… or to the right. Of course, other times the types of things that pop into your head are of the nature “I wonder what it takes to work on a container ship?” or “how long have I been standing here?” and “why is my wall sticky?” I’ve been okay with whatever the brain comes up with… I know I’m not gonna work on a container ship any time soon.  Rolling with life is still my plan of action and I’m thankful that Kateri and I have filled our life with some pretty amazingly loving people that make this experience a little less fucked up.

      Widower Thoughts n Stuff: I just want to point out that although this is a fucked upIMG_0276 experience, my life is good or, at the least, pretty decent.

      • I have only a couple more pounds of Smarties… “Pills”… to get through.
      • I did the dishes… do the dishes.
      • I’m still afraid to watch a scary movie by myself.
      • Patience… it’s a valuable thing.
      • Once home from work, I have been doing a whole lot of nothing for the last few weeks. Literally… a lot… of nothing.
      • I was in bed at 10:30 for the first time in I can’t remember.  It’s still usually a midnight… midnight thirty kind of night most the time.  I just can’t seem to put myself to bed for one reason or another. Which is stupid, because I’m out for the count once the noggin hits the pillow.
      • There’s ups and downs, but mostly just a blurry view of the world as I go through it. This experience brings with it a numbing of life sensation… probably to help with the onslaught of… everything.
      • Still not eating as well as I should, but it’s getting better… really.
      • Still have four chickens. I don’t know if I pissed them off… but they seem to be taking a break from the whole egg production gig.
      • The future. It’s always coming so I figure I should probably have a bit of excitement for it.  Well, for the good parts. Not so excited for the shit piles. They’re gonna come anyways… so we’ll all just have to roll through those as well… but I’m gonna focus on the good stuff.

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    • One Three Four… now it’s probably 135… or 6

      Posted at 6:53 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on September 9, 2018

      IMG_3236I was home from Idaho for about three days before I noticed the eggs in the flower pot… they’re still there… I think they look kinda nice. I have found myself being a little oblivious from time to time and not being overly concerned about why I’m not paying attention to certain things or putting undue weight on them. I’m assuming all that stuff will still be there when I’m ready to pay attention to it. It’s actually been quite the educating, busy, somewhat hectic, somewhat nerve wracking, positive, and empowering couple of weeks. As it pertains to this thing… Thirty Days of Mo(u)rning… there’s a plethora of reasons I’m fiddling around with this site and I’ve realized one of them is that just by having it provides me with questions on how I want to live my life as I go through this experience. I’ve recently been reminded that it also gives me strength as vulnerability is scotch taped to the posts I publish.

      I went home for a couple of days to be there with my family as my parents celebrated their 50th Wedding Anniversary… and learned that “warming up” is probably a good thing before you start doing hand stands and cart wheels with your niece on padded 8K9A3671_4x6astro turf at some new shopping/eating/huge movie theater type place… at the age of 42. It was nice to see my family again so shortly after our last visit.  We’ve been together more in the last year than in the last 5 or so… which has been nice, even if the circumstances have leaned more towards the heavy real life hard shit than the celebratory, but I’ll take what I can get. We haven’t spoken much since I’ve gotten home, a couple of times, but not nearly as much as I would like to.  Of course, I believe most people are in that boat.

      A Piece of Idaho

      A Piece of Idaho in the Morning

      It was one of those smooth travel experiences… no running full speed to any gates, no turbulence, no absurd delays because a pilot called out sick or anything. In Dallas, I even got to enjoy some breaded and fried rubber that came very close to tasting like chicken. Luckily, they gave me a salt lick biscuit and some coleslaw milk in a convenient lidded Styrofoam cup to wash it down! On the way to Phoenix I sat next to a kid from Canada who flew out of Boston because it was cheaper than flying international… from Canada. He and his buddy were gonna drive from Phoenix to California and up the coast for one last holiday before starting school back up… I was jealous… and I can’t believe I called it “holiday” and not “vacation” or “road trip”. We only chatted for a bit, he needed to get some sleep before the drive through the desert to Cali… and I needed to write a toast for my P’s at their Anniversary Party!… which was happening in 4 hours!  Now, it’s not because I’m a procrastinator that I was trying to find the right words to honor two people who have shared half a century of life together, as husband and wife, on a plane wedged between a polite, slightly disheveled Canadian kid and a quiet lady in her 70’s(?) who had an iron grip on her worn, just heavier than cloth, purse for five and a half hours… who didn’t speak a lick of English.  She was awesome. I got to show her how to buckle the seat belt… I think she was thankful.

      8K9A3690_5x7I was writing it on the plane because that was the first chance I had to sit and put thought into it. My sister had asked me if I would be willing to do it only 2ish days before! I was honored… I was also delirious on an hour and twenty minutes of sleep as I wrote it. It was a great experience putting thought into what it was that I wanted to say to two people who have been with each other longer than I have been alive… what it was that I wanted to say to my parents? As the same for these blogs, it was nice to sit and focus on what I wanted to share and why.  I have found that writing allows me to take all those things swirling around in the noggin and kinda line them up in a row.  Everything is still there… I just plug away at one thought at a time… while all the others are smashing up against that one thought up front like a pack of crazed shoppers waiting for the doors to open at Walmart… two hours after eating Thanksgiving Dinner.

      As a widower, it was hard to think about a life shared by two people who somehow found each other at a school dance as teenagers and then shared fifty years of life together. Those are the types of stories that I generally haven’t been paying attention to. As a son… I am thankful I was given the opportunity to stand in front of my family and some old  friends to share my appreciation and love for my mom and dad as we all celebrated them being Husband & Wife.

      This is what I wrote for them. (Yes, I asked them if I could throw this on here… for a couple of reasons.  First, this is their’s… I wrote it for them.  Second, just because I’m sharing what I am going through in a public format it doesn’t mean that they want their life shared.  It’s a love and respect thing… because I love and respect them)8K9A3654_4x6

      Two days ago, Dina sent a text asking if I would be willing to give the toast at our parents 50th Anniversary celebration. Now, she didn’t give a reason why they thought it was I who should give the toast, I’m the one who moved twenty-three hundred miles away and I’m kind of out of the loop on the day to day life of our family, but I accepted it anyways and got a little excited about being able to share my thoughts on what marriage means to me, what type of impact my parent’s marriage has had on my life, and how their relationship has taught me to what depths the bond of marriage goes. At first, I thought it was a bit strange that the guy who just lost his wife is giving a toast celebrating the longevity of commitment between two people, but then I realized it’s not really the length of the marriage that is the important part, but the content. It’s what we fill the years with… the good, the bad, the challenging, the exciting, the frustrating, and fun.
      8K9A3663_5X750 years together… however you wish to cut it… is filled with all sorts of things. I’m not one of those people who likes to sugar coat life, which might not make me the best person to give speeches and toasts for celebrations, but this is about the bond between a husband and wife that have made it through 5 decades of life together. They have not only built their lives together, but have created, nurtured, loved, and supported children…. something that should also be acknowledged because committing to live life with one person can be quite the challenge… add in dirty, snotty, bratty children and I’m sure it can be ruthless at times. Not ever having children of my own, I’m only speaking to what I have seen as friends try to corral their “littles” into SUV’s, deal with their children being sick, or ornery, or going off to school, or first loves… and first heartaches. You know, a mother puts a band aid on her child’s scraped knee, cheers for them at gymnastic meets or ballet recitals (less “cheering” at a ballet recital), drives them to swim lessons, and sends them cards in the mail telling them she loves them as they go through rough times when they are older and out of the house. A father teaches you how to throw a baseball, ride a bike without training wheels, what work ethic is, and how to maneuver the transition of being a boy to becoming a man. That’s what mom’s and dad’s do… they raise their children. A husband and wife, who stick with each other through thick and thin, through the good times and the challenging times, through disagreements, through experiences that spouses just shouldn’t have to go through in a perfect world… that creates a family. Of course, come to think of it, mom and dad got lucky… they had perfect children that were always well behaved and as we grew up… we made all the right choices!
      I’ve realized I’ve been speaking a lot to the point of the challenges of marriage. I’ll get to some of the good stuff in a minute, but those aren’t the things that I find as impressive when we speak about mom and dad… or anyone… sharing a life together for fifty years. Marriage would be a cake walk if all we ever did was have wonderful meals filled with wonderful food, amazing conversations, and boisterous laughter… or sit on the beach every weekend… or bounce from one vacation spot to another, but that’s not life… at least not our life. Life is hard and takes work. It takes work to see the other person’s side of the story. It’s hard to fundamentally disagree with the person you love about this or that, but sometimes we do. It’s not an easy thing to go to bed at night and lay next to someone you are angry with or disappointed in. It’s hard to do things that you don’t want to do, but they are done because it’s not about YOU… it’s about US. And sometimes it’s hard to forgive… but we do… because sometimes the love, the bond, the life we share has a power over us that we are unable to put into words or quantify by any measurable means. Love… it’s the most powerful thing in our world that no one can really define except for the people involved in it.
      IMG_3181Mom and Dad… Donald Martin Lidstrom and Denise Ann Lyeburger got hitched. Dina posted a picture of you guys… I think from your wedding… and it was awesome! I’ve been given quite the education on time as of recently and as I prepared to travel to Boise to celebrate and recognize the 50 years you guys have been together it caught me off guard to see a pic of two hip youngsters that would one day be Mom and Dad…. You guys had style! Fifty years… that’s a long time filled with a lot of experiences. From my vantage point… the forty-two years I have been a part of your life have been filled with the type of love that you hope for from a parent. But again, this isn’t about me… or Dina… or anyone else. This is about the 50 years of life you two have committed to each other, through thick and thin, through the hard times… the good times… and all that jive. I know there have been difficult times, but the good memories, the good times, the sense of family that you two have provided the Lidstroms overshadows all the other bullshit that sometimes comes with life. You have definitely tested all sorts of waters within this marriage… but you are here today… together… as husband and wife. So, here is my toast:

      To my Mother and Father on Fifty Years of Marriage
      Love as though you were still a Lyeburger and a Lidstrom
      Fifty years adds a richness and a grown-up view of a life started by two young people who’s love for each other was the center of the universe… remember that young love.
      Fifty years are filled with life… the good, the bad, and the ugly. All of which is needed… and sometimes you just need to watch a spaghetti western.
      Fifty years is filled with hopes and dreams, success and failure, ups and downs… for fifty years you dealt with the ebb and flow of life together… because that’s what we do when we love someone and commit ourselves to the person that completes us.
      After fifty years of marriage… talk about fifty years of marriage and what it means for you.
      This is just one day at the end of the 18,250 other ones… and there are more to come!
      Congratualtions, Good Job, Thank-You, and we all love you… I love you both so deeply I wish it could all be conveyed in this little toast… but you get the gist.
      I love you… Let’s Party!

      Widower Notes:

      • You can survive pretty well on take-out Chinese food, pizza, and grilled steaks.
      • The house is still clean and laundry is usually done… folded is another story.  It usually hangs out in the dryer or laundry basket for a few days so that the wrinkles will show up better.
      • I’ve kinda been keeping to myself… for no particular reason. Sitting on the front porch, having a few fires, hanging with Lil’ Bitch, Chicken, Chicken, and Chicken. Thinking about my life, what I want to do with it, and how/where am I gonna do it.
      • Music and noise from the guitar fill the air quite a bit.
      • I’ve gotten past some points in my timeline that feels good to get past.
      • Still on top of all the normal bills and regular life shit… hospital bills are in collection… but I’m not worried about that.  Sometimes you have to prioritize.
      • I haven’t watched a movie in I don’t know how long.
      • There hasn’t been much crying… I think my brain and eyeballs are taking a break.
      • I feel good… decent. Still just rolling with life… wishing I was on a boat with Maria and Nina in Miami. (Well, maybe not Miami… but somewhere on a boat… where I can see land. Kateri would want a pony on that boat because of Lyle Lovett… so would I)
      • Although the phone calls and texts have slowed down (we all have lives), there are sooo many wonderful people in my life who are helping shovel some of this shit away… and I’m grateful.
      • Today marks 12 years of not drinking… and boy am I thirsty! (For a Black Cherry Pop. It’s empowering when you take control of certain things in your life… people should try it)

       

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 3 Comments | Tagged 50th anniversary, anniversary, cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, melanoma, mourning, widower, widower thoughts
    • Widower Day 122… four months.

      Posted at 11:03 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on August 22, 2018

      IMG_3070I remember the three month point of all this widower shit and it being quite the emotional day.  As I realized I was coming up on four months… well, I felt prepared.  Of course, then a co-worker at the job tried to compare them needing to take a break after being gone for two and a half hours to the time when the crew covered for me as I was watching my wife die from cancer in palliative care and the two weeks I took off afterwards.  They actually said, “You should remember when we all…”, I cut them off right there.  If you don’t know me I can become very “animated” if something doesn’t jive with me… and that definitely didn’t jive with me.  The fact that I had such a traumatic event in my life being used by an individual to try and justify THEIR actions, to move the actions of a collective group (covering for me)… of a team from an act of kindness and empathy to something that is required to be paid back is just wrong in my eyes… especially when there is no connection to the two events except for how we should treat each other in the grand scheme of things.  Ya, I flipped my lid… and I don’t really apologize for it.  I have also moved on from it… besides writing about it now I guess… because we all say stupid things and life has taught me that there are levels to what is really important… and what is not.  Now all I have to do is figure out how to not let good people saying stupid or inconsiderate things get under my skin.  The next time I say something stupid might be when I start that process… which could be later tonight.  That all being said, I’m actually holding up ok with life on my own… kinda… I think.

      Four months.  I’m in the beginning stages of what they call “The Pits”.  At least that’s what the piece of paper I got in the mail tells me.  I feel like that stage started a couple of weeks ago, but I was also spending any free time working on the bathroom Kateri and I started remodeling last year. I just never wanted to stop and chat with people… or hang out at the beach… or visit friends at their places… or sleep… or eat. It was a lot for two weeks.  Not just the hours at work and then at home… and then work… then home tiling and installing shower systems to an almost usable state, but also the emotions that came up while staring at a wall as the rows of subway tile creeped north three and a quarter inches at a time while Powerglide or some Willie Nelson song played out of the little JBL speaker I had gotten for Kateri during her first hospital stay in February.  At points, I found myself just sitting in the tub, fully clothed (no water), and not knowing exactly how long I had been sitting there. I wanted to get excited to take a bath once the weather turns a bit cooler, but I couldn’t.  I just thought about Kateri… and hoped that she would be happy with the work I had done so far… (and now I’m crying on my front porch).  Although I say I’m ok, I’m good, I’m hanging in there… it’s been rough.  Just like anything else where people say good job, I still really only care about what Kateri would think… and I’m trying to get past that thought a little because I know she isn’t here and that she will never be able to sit in the bathtub on a cold Vermont winter evening and rest her head against the subway tile as Etta James fills the air (She would still complain that the tub is too shallow to allow her boobs to really float).

      IMG_E3177

      Brooks Lake Lodge… 1999

      One hundred twenty-two days in and I really haven’t done anything with the house… decorating, rearranging rooms, packing stuff away, etc.  When Kateri first passed, I freaked out and was trying to figure out what I should do with everything…  what was hers, what was mine, what do I leave out, what do I get rid of? Early on I realized that it’s all OUR stuff and this is still MY home that WE were lucky enough to get… and we filled it with all of our crap.  I learned that I don’t need to do anything except take care of myself, and that kind of stuff will take care of itself in due time.  Although it is hard when everything you look at is a memory of a life that is no more, it’s all still a part of life… of my life… and those are the things that keep Kateri present in my world.  It’s hard… and emotional… but I’m very thankful to be surrounded by the life Kateri and I made with each other starting from the back country ranch in Wyoming when we were in our twenties all the way to our little red schoolhouse in the woods of Vermont… in ourIMG_2925 forties. Time keeps moving.

      Some side notes about the last four months.

      • I’ve been making my bed less, but the house is clean, my one carpet (from a shed in Nederland) is vacuumed, wood floors mopped with vinegar/water, dishes are done… most the time, shower is currently clean… I usually give it a scrub after I realize I’m grossing myself out as I’m trying to wash the day off of me.
      • I try to stay on top of the lawn… ummm, mowing that is… not like “any day above ground is a good day!” type thing.  Literally trying to keep it from looking like shag carpet.  Luckily, I think I live on one giant ant hill so the grass doesn’t grow THAT quickly.
      • I’m still not eating much… just enough, but the paper in the mail said loss of appetite is normal… so I figure I’m ok.
      • Not paying attention to the news too much.  I hit the headlines, read a little of this or that, but for the most part I get the gist that fires are raging (because it’s summer and other science type stuff), there’s some horrible people and events out there, there’s some people doing some amazing and positive things, the douche bag is still making our country worse… and the lost lemmings are following him, Cardi B had a baby, and I hear Denmark is one of the world’s happiest countries.
      • I’ve still got four chickens… I mean… after starting this new life with five… but LIL’ BITCH IS STILL AROUND! She’s my favorite (shh, don’t tell the others).
      • Kateri’s cell phone hasn’t been in service for 122 days.  I kinda wanna drive it twelve minutes down the road and hear all the noises it’s gonna make.
      • Although I haven’t been in touch with many people, I’ve got some pretty amazing friends in my life that I’m excited to catch up with.
      • I don’t really like looking at older couples.  Even though I have no idea what their story is… they could’ve just met… but the movie in my head has more of a Hallmark feel and it kinda depresses me.  I’m flying to Boise this weekend to be with my parents as they celebrate 50 years and though I’m so happy for them (they’ve definitely put the work in!),  I know I will never have that.  The fact that I waited so long to ask for Kateri’s hand in marriage means it would’ve been quite the feat to make it to 50 anyways… we would be in our mid/late 80’s…  but it’s kinda poopy to take those “growing old together” type thoughts off the table.
      • All… ALL! of Kateri’s plants are still alive.  Usually, it’s when I notice the dirt is so dry that it’s pulling away from the pot that I figure I should add some water.
      • I’ve hung out on the green in Fairlee and listened to some live music with some pretty cool people.  I’ve met more neighbors in the last four months than the last two and a half years. I still wave to everyone that drives past my house.  I’ve even had multiple people stop… back up… and pull into my driveway to inquire about someone, something, or just because they thought introductions were in order.
      • It’s still hard for me to put myself to bed. I average probably five… five and a half hours a school night…. and not because I’m doing anything important or exciting.  It’s just hard for me to call it a day, but I’m going to now.

      Widower Day 122… Yes, there have been many a tear in those 122 days, but there has also been good conversations, smiles, and laughter.  Those are the things that help add a smidge of excitement when I look to the time that is ahead of me… to my future. (I’m pretty sure smiles help break down big piles of shit)

       

       

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 8 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, melanoma, mourning, thepits, widower, widower thoughts
    • The 101.

      Posted at 11:11 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on August 15, 2018

      (Uummm….. sooo, I started these thoughts… and then worked on a bathroom for a week and a half or some crap.)

      Ya… it’s a road.  Might be a couple of them out there, but I’m actually referencing what “Widower Day” it is and I thought it sounded a helluva lot cooler and heckuva lot less sad and dramatic. I read through my last bloggery post and… well… it just didn’t jive with me tonight. It didn’t sound like me… to me… which is weird… because I wrote it, but I guess that is part of the whole experience.

      As I am “rolling with it”, there have been more than a few new things in my life. It comes with the territory.  There’s a whole lot of doing the same things you have always done… except they’re different and new.  Thirtydaysofmo(r)ning is something new for me, everything about it. Yes, I’m on my phone more than I would like to admit, but we/I haven’t had a computer for years.  I’m one of those people who is absolutely amazed by the power of the interweb, but when it’s in front of me… I’m basically a monkey staring at bright lights hitting the button that gives me craigslist because I understand pictures, basic writing, and numbers… without letters attached to them. So, as I figure out how websites, blogsites, sharing, publishing, editing, widgets, tags, post format (whatever the fuck that means)… I’m also learning about how I want to use it. I know I don’t want it to be all melancholy stuff, because I ain’t all melancholy all the time.  I’m fine with sharing whatever with the world, but doing that through writing is quite the exercise.  So then you start thinking about talking into a phone or computer screen and posting a video here and there to see if that is something you want to be a part of the site… have a little video corner… and then figure out how to make a little video corner.

      I guess there’s always a little excitement at the start of things no matter what those things are. From the start on… whatever it is… it changes. Sometimes you write about death and cancer and sadness and stuff… other times, it’s just a bit about your day like the fact that you woke up at 6:00am to the first of four alarms set on your iPod touch from 2011.  Yes, four alarms… with snooze… because I need to hear four harps, two ducks, and an old car horn before I can get up and out of bed.  I don’t even plan to get up at six in the morning.  I get out of bed at 6:30… I have just been digging the slow, laze in bed, half awake, half asleep with moments of body spasms and flips to turn off 97 decibles of harps, ducks, and old car horns.

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    • Vibrations Filling the Silence

      Posted at 8:16 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on August 1, 2018

      IMG_0339Music has always been a prevelant thing in our life.  Whether it be Kateri putting on the B-52’s for cleaning music, some Steely Dan on a rainy day (who I never cared for up till the last 5 years, I would say), or some classic 90’s gangster rap in the kitchen as we were using tilt skillets for fryers or getting out stations ready for service.  I will forever associate Warren G’s “Regulate” remix featuring Michael McDonald with our time at The Barn Door.  If you haven’t come home to a message on the machine from Luke and Will after they held their phones up to the speakers that were perched on top of the ice machine, so as to capture that classic tune off of Pandora, because that was their top priority at the moment and not the pounds of lima beans that needed to get shucked or the natural disaster that just happened in the dish pit… well, you don’t know friendship.

      I haven’t been able to sit, walk, drive, exist in silence for any length of time since the passing of Kateri.  The mind starts to wander and when you can’t get past the cancer times, when you can’t get past that crushing feeling of “unfairness” for that person you held above everyone else… silence isn’t always the best thing for ya.  My thoughts always take me back to specific moments within this experience.  First to our last words to each other while Kateri was in Palliative Care where she told me, “I love you.” in that hoarse, weak voice, eyes struggling to open but fixed on me and I responded with the only thing I could… “I love you too, so much.” The second memory that has been somewhat consuming is when we had to go back to the ER in February two days after being discharged from when her colon gave out.  We were in one of the ER rooms, Kateri wrapped in hospital blankets, the lights dim because they hurt her head, and as the Doc was trying to get her some relief she looked at him and said, “I don’t want to die”… and started crying. Living a life where those two thoughts pop in your head over and over again, hours and days on end, makes it hard to focus on other things like cleaning the house, work, mowing the lawn, feeding yourself, feeding your chickens, watering plants… your future… or the past 20 years. So for me, I  need vibrations to hit my head with the hope of drowning out some of the pain… or at least to push it off to another time when I can deal with it, to spread out the discomfort as much as possible, to try and “regulate” it.  (I’m so sorry for the “regulate”  bit… cheesy, but gives me a chance to also mention that Nate Dogg’s sexy slide into verses just adds dimensions to the song.  Nate Dogg AND Michael McDonald… well, that’s what I think silk sounds like in heaven)

      I’ve been picking up the guitar much more lately.  Although I have had one in my life for the last couple of decades, I really haven’t played it much.  One of those start fooling around with it because you thought it was cool… and because you had friends that you found simply amazing on the instrument you thought anyone could just pick it up and make sounds that would entertain the ear.  Ya… it doesn’t happen that way.  It takes work.  And I’m one of those people who got to a certain point with the guitar and then became interested in so many other things that would take up time… some not so noble as making music, but still fun. Basically, I could play a couple (literally) of songs, wrote a few because it was easier than learning someone else’s, and I could slightly impress friends for about 12 minutes… 15 years ago.  Once in a while I would pull it off the wall and play a few things, Kateri would ask me to play “that one song that sounds middle eastern”, and it would go back up.  As of recently I have found myself turning to it almost every day for an escape from all the bullshit.  For hours I play the same six to eight songs that I have been playing for years. Songs that I never really tried to do anything with, never “worked” on my skills, never fully listened to the relationship my head and hands had with the guitar, the pick (I mainly use picks, sorry Brad), the strings, or the vibrations that would fill the air with sounds that kinda went together.

      Nowadays, I get lost in the experience. There are points I find myself almost hunched over the guitar trying to get my ear as close to the sound as possible… to have it be the one thing filling my space. It’s the closest I have come to what I believe would be meditating.  (People ask if I have tried meditating during this process, but I don’t have any real desire to “Om” it out right now so I’m gonna stick with the strings).  Sometimes I find myself playing the same two or three chords over and over again, slight changes to strum patterns, or beat, or intensity.  I try to be deliberate in my actions to make the sound that I want to hear, to make this or that a little different, or maybe even subjectively better.  I think the main reason I am trying to improve my playing is that I am tired of the stagnation, of the same old songs, of the same old tune.  Right now… I need more.  And whether I want it or not, I have the time and space to see what more I can do… even at 1:38a.m… because there isn’t anyone else around except chickens… and they don’t seem very interested in my music.

      Ya, so… music… it helps and you should have it in your life.  It could be studying an instrument at some fancy pants music school… or in your bedroom.  It could be seeing Gillian Welch in Hanover with your wife’s dermatologist or reggae on Coney Island with people who understand what “One Love” is all about.  Sometimes it’s blaring Today’s Hits with the windows down and sunroof open while driving through the green hills and valleys of Vermont. Other times it could be Lady Gaga being funneled out of your garage door while you wonder if your neighbors over yonder can hear it… but you don’t care if they do. And when you can be pleasantly surprised by revisiting a song or an album from another time and place in your life… it can be nostalgic, therapeutic, and beautiful.  For me currently,  that would be Uncle Tupelo.  Moonshiner is still one of my favorite songs ever… fucking depressing, but fantastic. (FYI-I’m on the Jay Farrar/Son Volt side… not the Tweedy/Wilco side).

      I feel fortunate that I am one of those people who enjoys it all… well, most of it. Just like in life, there is a fair amount of crap out there, too. Hopefully, we just find the right song at the right time to give us what we need.

      Widower Day 100.

       

       

       

       

       

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    • Widower Day 92… this and some other stuff.

      Posted at 12:07 am by Darren Lidstrom, on July 24, 2018

      I thought I would be churning these things out one after the other, getting shit off my chest, really working through some stuff while learning something new in the technology world. I wanted to write some thoughts on Widower Day 89… and then on 90… and yet here I am on 92.  I had it in my mind that once I had an outlet, once I had a place to focus that kind of stuff, well, then it would just flow out of me… and I would feel better. I was a little ahead of myself.  I didn’t take into account that while I’m doing all this releasing and reflecting and healing, I am also remembering… and I can’t get past the cancer days except for a blip of a fun memory here and there.  That makes it kinda tough to just chill in bed with a pint of ice cream, Cindy Lauper on the radio, and click away story after story of good times, fun memories, and a good life… with some really bad luck.  It’s been a little more like in the garage, sitting in a camping chair, Uncle Tupelo’s Moonshiner on the radio, and crying… a lot… as I remember what I… what we just went through.  My world was just turned upside down.  Words have different meanings attached to them these days; home, quality of life, sadness, beauty, love,… agony. Some I have an amended view or clearer picture of what they mean, others just feel different. Of course… everything feels different.

      92 days after the passing of my wife, my love, my sweet Kateri… this is where I am at… short version. I have been feeling what I am guessing is… lost.  I have also learned that one of the fun things that comes along with feeling lost… is loneliness. Yup, the loneliness is starting to creep it’s way into my world.  It’s strange not having someone else at the beginning of my day, when it ends, and at points in between. “Alone” is weird… which is different from lonely. Being alone now has changed certain things in my life that I never thought I would have to deal with… like scary movies. I love scary movies, but I haven’t watched one since Kateri passed. I’ve started one or two thrillers way too late in the day to have any real chance of finishing, but definitely no supernatural or psycho hillbilly in the woods type shit. Before, it didn’t really matter if I watched a scary movie by myself late night, I still had Kateri… to protect me… right upstairs or in the other room.  Without having the option of crawling into bed and having her hold me through the irrational fear… and the trembling… I have decided not to risk the paranoid freak out that may ensue if I view certain images or if I get lost in a convincing story line which I deem… “That Could Happen!”.

      So how am I coping 92 days after the loss of Kateri?… I’m not watching scary movies… because I’m alone. I figure the “lost” feeling and loneliness are part of the gig so I’m just gonna roll with it and see how it plays out for now. I’m doing ok… not great, but ok.  This is a Big-Life thing. A complicated thing.  An emotional thing. Friends, family, and strangers remind me every day that there is still a ton of beauty in the world and that we’ll get through this muckity muck at some point… together.

      Oh, I also went to the dentist today (my mom is so proud), brought some pastries to The Jack Byrne Center (Palliative care to say thank-you and to check in), talked to Dartmouth Hitchcock (about stuff), and made myself an actual dinner for the first time in a while (Kateri would’ve said it needed salt).

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 5 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, melanoma, mourning, widower
    • The Hard Reality of April 9th, 2018

      Posted at 6:48 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on July 16, 2018

      Happiest day of my life.

      cropped-wedding-photo

      (photo Alejandro Garcia)

      That was my first post on social media once Kateri went into Palliative Care on Wednesday, April 11th, 2018.  It’s a picture of us within the first 10 minutes of being husband and wife. Kateri and I were walking into the trees on an old road that led to another field. Not really a road, more of just a path created and maintained by tractors. We wanted to be by ourselves for the first little bit of marriage, to be with each other without distractions, to take a breath… just us. September 28, 2011. After 10 years together, it was the first time she had a husband… and I had a wife.

      Our doctor’s appointment on Monday, April 9th was the one where it became known that we had run out of options for treatment.  Although it was some brutal news… I thought there was gonna be SOME time. There was still a little bit of hope filling the cracks of the harsh reality of cancer.  Hope for her to see the ocean one last time, to get lost in the rhythm of the waves… we had planned to go the week before. Hope to go see The Black Panther. Hope to get a little appetite back and eat Leo’s raviolis. There was still hope for this and hope for that.  Really, all I was hoping for was time… time I thought we had. I knew it would be short… but it was still there… time.

      It was also the appointment I found out that her feet had been numb for a couple of days.  Looking back, I think she tried to protect a lot of us from what she was going through… from the severity… from the pain and the worry. Anyone who knew her knows just how strong of a person she is and cancer didn’t change that.  She told me she had started scooting down the stairs on her butt because her legs were too weak, but that was days after she had started doing it. She was overcoming challenges, she was still taking care of herself… and I can’t imagine what was going through her brain as she inched her way downstairs one step at a time.

      Up until that doctor’s appointment Kateri didn’t take anything for the pain besides weed (a lot of it yes, but just weed).  That was the first time she had asked for something… a prescription for a child’s dose of fentanyl… which we found out the insurance company put a pre-authorization thing on it (why does she need this drug now? type stuff) so we couldn’t get it that night… douchebags. It wasn’t until the next day, Tuesday, after dicking around with the pharmacy, doctor’s office, and insurance companies that I just bought the drugs without insurance. Now, I’m a cook and Kateri is/was a flower farmer (we ain’t rich), but when your wife has shit growing in her brain and body, when you witness her legs, her body deteriorating, when you hear her cry, cough, and moan because of the pain caused by Metastatic Malignant Melanoma in the brain and body… with rare mutations… you don’t give a fuck about money, about insurance companies, about whatever. All you can focus on is what you need to do, what you need to get to try and provide some sort of relief… to try and take away any of the pain you can for the person you love more than yourself, more than anything else. Unfortunately, the fentanyl didn’t do anything and a trip to the ER that Tuesday evening was the beginning of the hard reality that we were closer to the end of something that never should have started… but it did.

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      Posted in cancer, inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 0 Comments | Tagged cancer, grief, grieving, loss, marriage, melanoma, mourning, widower
    • Where does this go?

      Posted at 7:16 pm by Darren Lidstrom, on July 15, 2018

      Just seeing where this will end up?!… literally these words… from one screen to another!… and figured I should know how to slap a picture up.

      cropped-img_1674.jpg

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      Posted in inspirational, loss, Uncategorized, widower | 1 Comment | Tagged loss, widower
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