June 29, 2025

Funeral preparations cease but a few friends and family members from out of town remain close. Reality slowly creeps in as the whispers of finding a “new normal” lingers just around the corner. In a matter of days, most of the world will return to work while we begin to reorganize our lives.

My Daddy, of course, will have the most significant adjustment for his day-to-day life. Already, he sleeps without my Mom, but he has not had to experience a “typical” day without her. They were partners, they were friends, and they were lovers. I always thought they really would be that couple from The Notebook: I never thought this could happen.

Their relationship was an anchor in my life. They endured and overcame agonizing trauma together again and again and again, and they were the best of friends. Growing up, I always wanted a marriage like theirs. Since getting married, I still wanted a relationship like theirs! My marvelous husband and I watched their love for one another with reverence and admiration. They were such an amazing team. They loved being together and they loved each other well. It’s difficult not to be really angry with my mom when I think of their truly inspirational marriage… and then it’s really, really, really sad.

As my brother Luke reminded, my siblings and I had never known a world without Mom until eight days ago.

Rehabilitation — that’s the word that keeps bustling through my mind. Learning to live without Mom feels like rehabilitating back into normal society: walking, driving, talking, biking, writing, smiling, and so much more, feels so foreign and unnatural. I feel as though I can barely hold a thought or concept in my mind.

Denial persists more than anything right now, a dull ache thumps within me at all times, but most of the time I can’t believe my Mom’s gone and I can’t believe my mom left me feels like a distant thought and not an annihilating reality. My Momma, I still mumble in shock. Moments of mayhem pierce me to the core, preparing me for when the shock wears off and when I’ll have to truly face this menacing reality.

My Mom grounded and anchored my life, creating stability and safety. What now?

Daily Tip for Communicating with Someone in Mourning

I have provided many things not to say — all of which from comments multiple people have made, not just one-off comments as to not single anyone out — but there are so many good things people say as well.

“I’m sorry” feels like such a weak thing to say, but it encompasses a tremendous amount of emotion and care. The short phrase empathizes with the mourners and often creates an understanding between two hurting people.

Future Ways to Help

Small tasks are incredibly helpful — doing a load of laundry, wiping down a counter, calling to set up a dental appointment. Sometimes it’s hard for me to even remember to put a pair of shoes on – it’s invaluable to notice those little things that may be neglected and to help one another out.

We’re a grieving community, and we’ve got this 💙

June 29, 2026

What happens when you lose an anchor in your life?

You simply keep living, limping, breaking every day.

My parents had a beautiful marriage, and facing the world without their partnership in it is strange and unnerving.

I’m not sure if “new normal” ever actually arrives. There is nothing normal about my life and there never will be.

Losses like this aren’t normal. They are tragic. They take people’s breath away. No, I don’t believe “new normal” ever arrives. I think I simply keep on living in the liminal spaces, mind and heart forever fixated on what is and what was.

Two things can be true: I had a mother who loved me, and I had a mother who did the most unloving thing imaginable. She murdered. She killed. Not only herself, but her entire family unit.

My dad lost his wife. My siblings lost our mother. Our family, as we knew it, ceased to exist because she murdered it.

A year later, and most of the shock has worn off.

* * * *

It dawns on me how few people truly have compassion.

Everyone pities the griever, until he or she does something they disagree with.

Everyone claims to support, claims to be there, claims to honor, claims to befriend the griever… until the griever does something they cannot understand.

After that, other people’s feelings somehow become the griever’s fault.

It’s the griever who has to consider them.

It’s the griever who should have anticipated someone else else’s thought.

It’s the griever who should have considered everyone else before they choose to live their life.

What survivors have one responsibility: to survive. For suicide survivors, specifically, the risk of survival far outweighs the likelihood of their own suicide. In my family — with double suicides — we are more likely to kill ourselves than we already keep living.

When we choose to keep living, when we begin to find new life and try to start moving on, we are met with an anger. We are met with calloused behaviors if we aren’t moving on fast enough, and simultaneously we are met with silence and judgment when we dare to build a new life.

It’s impossible to be a griever. It’s impossible to be a supporter, too everyone gets it wrong. It’s such a sensitive area that both grievers and their supporters often unintentionally hurt each other and lack the grace and understanding to reach to the other side.

This perpetuates immense pain and creates situations that grievers and supporters would not have seen coming.

My responsibility — and my father’s and my brother’s responsibility — is to live. My responsibility is to survive. My responsibility is defined new joy in life and attempt to create a life that’s worth living, because the life that I was dealt by someone else’s choices simply isn’t the life. My mother handed down to me, full of anguish and pain, isn’t worth living. It’s the life I dare to create and the wake of her decision that makes life worth living.

We are punished for grieving, and then we are punished for living.

Supporting survivors requires more courage, more compassion, and more grace than many are even to provide. I do not fault anyone for their limits, but I do not understand when people choose to judge me or my family members for daring to live.

Life should be celebrated. Newness should be celebrated. Daring to live should be celebrated.


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