Fifty one.
My mom turned fifty one 21 days before she killed herself…. How sick, to murder oneself. Ugh. It’s so… abrasive.
Fifty one — we called it “Fifty Fun.” I coined the term, but Mom thought Scott made it up. Scott & I laughed about that at the time. She just adored Scott; he reminded him a lot of herself, with his optimism and lighthearted demeanor. Now these similarities scare me about Scott sometimes… Isn’t that sad?
“She was supposed to be ‘fifty fun’ not ‘ fifty done,’”I’ve often repeated to myself this year.
Grief rips apart one’s sense of time and space. It’s been almost a year since my mom died, but it feels like it’s been a decade. Others think the year went by fast. It’s seemed like an eternity. Pieces of me feel like I never had a Mom — I feel so far from her, it’s like she was part of someone else’s life. It couldn’t possibly been my life.
The sun and the moon and the tides testify to time’s reality, but it’s simultaneously a construct. A way to measure our days, with seasons to mark the harvests and the plentiful and the droughts.
Time moves quickly when we enjoy our lives, slowly when we’re bored, and halts when we’re suffering.
Suffering refines and illuminates what matters, while healing ensures one concludes with the right perspective.
It seems as though nothing matters when one’s suffering. For example — from my skewed and insecure perspective — nothing I’ve done matters.
It didn’t matter that I loved Patrick.
It didn’t matter that I loved my Momma.
It doesn’t matter that I loved my grandparents.
It doesn’t matter that I loved our church.
My kindness and my love, in the end, didn’t matter to any of them. They’re still gone. They’re still dead, in one way or another.
The letters I wrote them didn’t matter. My forgiveness doesn’t matter. My kindness doesn’t matter.
I can do all the “right” things and remain punished by others’ decisions. In a sense, nothing I do matters.
Nothing I did matters.
They chose this, they did this, and nothing I did deserved that.
So… nothing I do matters.
* * * *
And yet… it all matters. Maybe it didn’t matter to them, maybe it did in some ways, but ultimately it didn’t.
Healing reminds me that it all mattered — it all matters.
I’ve experienced how much kindness matters. Again and again and again, people extend kindness and grace and support, and others’ actions matters. If others’ kindness and cruelty matter, mine does too.
Many have said that my words matter. Sometimes it’s difficult to see how one’s actions matter when he or she experiences so much pain because of another’s actions.
Sorrow rips apart time and space, too. How hard it is, then, to see one’s importance and brilliance in a world clouded with such potent pains.
* * * *
She was beautiful, she was real, she was my Momma.
She loved me, but that didn’t matter either. It did and it didn’t.

