Oh, the things we do in the name of love
Oh, the misguided things we do in the name of love.
Oh, the wicked things we do in the name of love.
* * * *
Welcome to death week, my friends.
May contains too many Death Holidays to list, too many pain points to discuss. I draw small blue hearts in my calendar on each Death Holiday/anniversary/marker to delineate the importance of the day: five blue hearts for May.
One of my siblings has a birthday this month — a glimmer of hope amidst a month marked with endings. It will be his first birthday without his Momma though, and that will be difficult. I marked my birthday with a blue heart this past year. Because, like I inscribed last week, every milestone regardless of how happy is shaded by what isn’t. It’s as if every moment is captured in a black-and-white photograph: you can see the smiles, you can see the joy, but the dissonance chills the ambiance.
* * * *
This week I’ve been struck by the cruelty of imperfect love.
Some say people die by suicide in an attempt to unburden their loved ones, others say anger drives people to violence, and many say shame or depression or overwhelm or a mirad of other things… all things we can’t validate because the only people who know are dead.
Rita Schulte pens it well in her book Surviving Suicide Loss, educating “Suicide doesn’t end the pain. It only lays it on the broken shoulders of survivors.” So, we survivors carry it and oftentimes feel more dead than alive. We feel hallow rather than of substance, opaque rather than solid.
People who knew my mom feel a special connection to us because we were a part of her, even if they did not know us well before she ended her life.
Some people honor that connection with kindness, empathy, and love. These are a balm to our shattered heart and aid in our healing.
Others treat us with contempt and cruelty — I’m not writing about people who couldn’t show up [that is okay], I’m writing about the people and organization who intentionally inflicted wounds. It happens to all suicide survivors in some form. Books tell us to expect it.
But one thought haunts me in the wake of their cruelty…
If you could be so cruel to me and my family, what did you do to my mother?
What did they do to her?
