Brushstrokes

Brushstrokes

What is grief?

This is a question one could ask anyone who has lost a loved one and would receive varied responses from different people.  Everybody responds to and experiences grief in different ways.   There are, however, the standard similarities.  Most of us are aware of the different stages of grief and are well versed in that journey.

So now, I write about my grief.  The reason for writing about my grief is not entirely clear to me.  I am not sure of what I expect to gain from the act of writing.  I don’t know how I am going to explain my grief, but I also know that once I start writing, I usually just keep going.  Writing is a creative outlet, which I hope will bring me some understanding or peace or maybe even an epiphany.  But what do I write about?  How do I express my pain?

I put some music on.  Music, for me, awakens a milliard of emotions.  I need to listen to the type of music that inspires me.  Coldplay tends to have that effect on me.  I now have some Coldplay playing in the background, serenading the flow of my creative juices and unlocking my emotions which have been stored away for years.

This January I embarked on a house reset and began the daunting task of decluttering.  It is a mammoth task as I live with some hoarders.  I am not entirely innocent of hoarding either.  I have had some considerable success so far.  I have decluttered cupboards, drawers and shelves that haven’t been touched for years.  I have also gone on an organisational rampage, which I have also met with some success.  After decluttering, everything was organised and accessible with spaces created to add anything new I might acquire.

The physical act of decluttering has been liberating.  It alleviated my stress and diminished my anxiety and depression.  What if I try to declutter my emotions?  That’s a scary thought.  Why?  Because it is.  So, I shall “be strong, and be brave”, and write my emotions away.

How do I declutter my grief?  If I don’t declutter my emotional state, those emotions will very well overflow and explode like all those cupboards, drawers and shelves, with absolutely no space to spare.  I need to declutter, so that I can be less stressed, alleviate my anxiety, think clearly and create some space for the new experiences.

We are too often afraid to bare our souls.  We are intensely protective of ourselves as self-preservation kicks in.  It does take a certain type of courage to put your broken heart on display.  Think of what could be possible by doing so.  Right now, I am hoping that my words will help alleviate someone else’s pain.  My focus is to give by sharing what is intimate to me.

I have never spoken about my pain.  I have kept it wrapped up in a brown paper package, tied up with string, with a red wax seal and stamp that says, “Do not open”.  There would be too much danger in opening that package.  Imagine the atomic bomb.  The carnage. But what if time heals and I open that package?  It has been six years, after all.

What if I open that package and find that there are several cannisters of paint in it?  There’s a painter’s pallet with paint brushes and an empty canvas.  Shall I dare paint?  One can paint their pain with different brush strokes and colours.  Everyone’s painting will be different because grief is unique to each person.  There is no wrong or right way to grieve.  Whether you paint a pretty picture or an ugly one, is up to you.  I would like to paint a pretty picture.  If my experience of grief can be used to alleviate someone else’s, then that’s a pretty picture.  How do I paint this picture?  Start with one colour, one brush, one stroke.  I choose the colour blue, a medium sized brush about the thickness of my thumb and draw a semi curved stroke from the bottom left of the canvas, trailing upwards towards the top right.  There!  That’s a start. 

My father, the first man to love me, hold me, protect me, nurture me, the perfect man who loved me wholly and unconditionally and taught me what love really is, passed away six years ago from an aggressive form of cancer.  The journey from diagnosis, prognosis and demise was sudden, short, horrific and beyond traumatic for him and all those who loved him.  Just writing this last paragraph felt like reaching into my chest, wrenching my heart out, tearing it into a million pieces and scattering it all over.  That’s ok.  Deep breath.  Sigh.  No fear.  I tread through this piece of writing, gradually, forcefully, placing one foot in front of the other.  Be strong, be brave.

I have never expressed my pain or my experience.  I kept it bottled up, tightly wrapped up in that brown paper package.  I have kept it hidden under lock and key for so long, I don’t know how to let it out, the key is stuck in the lock and won’t budge.  I need a locksmith to fix that lock so that I can open it.  Where is this locksmith?  I am that locksmith.

Grief never really goes away.  It stays with you for life.  However, it changes.  Grief is dynamic and so we journey through the many different stages of grief.  I have been through it all, denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance.  I have wafted in and through all these stages at different times and in no particular order.  I might claim to be in a specific stage on any given day.  Of all the stages, the one that I am averse to is bargaining.  I think that is a precarious stage.  Once you indulge into the “what ifs”, and the “could haves and should haves”, you could spiral into the bottomless and relentless hole of survivor’s guilt. I have been submerged in this pool before, after the death of a friend.  I needed a session with a psychologist to delineate the not so pretty picture of myself wallowing in self-doubt and self-berating that so deviously sneaked into my psyche as a result of swimming in survivor’s guilt.  So, every time I find myself drifting towards the bargaining phase, I stop dead in my tracks and pivot.  I have, however, dipped a toe or two into the bargaining pool since my father’s passing, and it was exactly what I feared it would be.  It was excruciating and merciless.

Every experience in life is a journey.  Many journeys that come our way just can’t be avoided, no matter what.  If you try to run away from them, life has a funny way of bringing you right back to it.  It usually is an arduous journey this time around, as opposed to, if you had allowed yourself to journey it the first time instead running away.  So, don’t run away.  Easier said than done.  I have done plenty of running away, knowing full well that if I did run away the consequences would be a lot worse.  But I kept running.  That is what fear does.  Remarkably, we have a choice.  We always have a choice.  Be strong, be brave!

None of these journeys have to be done alone.  That’s what friends are for.  If you can be a source of support, that shoulder to cry on for someone else, do it!  Never be afraid of asking someone to be that shoulder for you, should you need it.  Asking for help is what being brave is.   It is a courageous person who asks for help. I have received immeasurable solace from friends and acquaintances who have been in my shoes.  I didn’t need their words because there are no words that can fix grief.  I just needed their presence, that shoulder, just knowing that they get it too.  However, it is essential to also find that support from someone who is a professional, someone who is not emotionally connected to you or your situation.  Someone who can be objective.  Grief counselling gives you answers that friends, family and familiarity can’t.  It gives you advice, techniques and an insight into your feelings and headspace.  It liberates you from the cruxes of grief and enables you to move forward in hope at your pace.  Paint your picture with your brushstrokes and be strong, be brave, be free.

The Grinch That Stole Christmas

The Grinch That Stole Christmas

As we all tread carefully and fearfully towards a new time, a new Christmas, we entered this time of hope with hope.  We booked holiday plans, we made plans to celebrate with family and friends.  Making these plans was not an experience like any other before.  It took courage to embark on these plans, knowing that at any given time our plans could cease, at the drop of a hat.  We soldiered on, still fearful, still hopeful.

Then it happened. It happened the same way it has all year. The grinch was poised, ready to steal Christmas. This was a relentless grinch because he somehow stole the whole year and decided that he was going to continue stealing all the way through till Christmas. He stole our holiday plans. He stole our liberty. He stole our joy. We cancelled holidays. We downsized our invitation list. Our hearts broke as we realised that we would not be spending Christmas with all our loved ones. There are those who spent Christmas day in complete isolation.

There are those who worked round the clock on Christmas day to keep the grinch at bay with this amazing new technique of contact tracing.  It is an efficient weapon that has been successfully utilised in combating that sneaky grinch.  There are those who decided that the grinch does not exist because to acknowledge its existence would mean that one would have to face it and deal with it.  So, they partied in large numbers, exposing themselves to the grinch.  The grinch was happy because these parties were an open invitation to him.  Denial has worked for some but only until the grinch slithered into their lives and caused havoc.  He attacks those who chose to fight him, and he attacks those who don’t.  He shows no preference.  He is unyielding.  He crippled the world this year and will stop at nothing.

We are all human and in our human capacity we find our own way to deal with this monster who stole so much from us.  There is no right or wrong way to deal with it.  The grinch brought out the worst in some and the best in some.  If at all, the grinch showed us how human we are.  He showed us our strengths and weaknesses.

On the cusp of a brand-new year, we sit back and think of what we have lost so far.  We ponder on what more we are going to lose in the new year.  Life in its entirety is a journey of losses and gains.  The grinch has placed a magnifying glass on those losses and gains.  We have lost loved ones before the grinch appeared.  We have lost jobs, lives, loves, liberties, rights, health, friends, family, etc.  In retrospect, we have gained the same.  Before the grinch appeared, we lost and gained over and over again.  We are used to this.  We’ve dealt with this before.  The grinch thinks that he has won; that he has stolen our happiness and freedom.  Little does he know that we are more relentless that he is.  We’ve got this. 

When This is All Over

When This is All Over

It is hard to put into words what has happened to our world.  If you were here today, I think that you would be in as much disbelief as I am.  The whole world has shut down.  There is this rather deadly virus that has rapidly spread over the world.  It started out in the East and has now made its way across the globe.  The contagion is silent, deadly and easily transmitted. 

We are learning to wash our hands all over again.  My hands are dry and red raw. We are forced to maintain a new level of hygiene because our lives depend on it.  Countries have shut their borders.  Countries have gone into lock down.  Our children are now home schooling. We are working from home. We are not allowed outside our homes except for attaining essentials like groceries or gaining medical care.  We can’t socialise in person anymore.   We can’t go to church or to weddings or to parties.  We can’t eat out at restaurants and cafes.  Millions of people are now unemployed because businesses have been forced to shut down in order to comply with the strict new social distancing measures that are being enforced.  We are basically house bound.  The list of restrictions is a lot longer than is mentioned here and that list is only going to get longer. 

I am sad.  I am sad for our world.  I am mostly sad for our children.  My tears are for them.  I am heartbroken that their lives have drastically changed.  They cannot live their normal lives and do the normal things that they do daily.  Our children are fighting a battle we ourselves have not fought before.  I worry for our children.  I wonder what this experience is going to do to them. 

Then I realise, that I can see the silver lining.  Our children will grow up to be stronger and wiser adults than we are.  They will be far more resilient than us.  They will tell their children and grandchildren about the great virus.  They will tell them how we came together for the first time in history and fought the almighty fight.  They will tell them how it made us all stronger and wiser.  They will talk about how this mighty fight changed our perspective and priorities forever.  They will say how never again did we take anything for granted and how we found a new appreciation for the simple things in life, like a handshake, a hug, a kiss.

Today, we band together as one planet to fight this attack by an invisible enemy on our world.  Yes, we are fighting it.  As bleak as it looks now, we will conquer this enemy.  That is because good always triumphs over evil.  Nobody is perfect but there is goodness in each of us.  It is through this goodness in humanity that we get our courage and the strength to fight.  We love our world.  We love the people in it.  We love us.  We are fighting and will continue to fight. 

We will come out the other side of this battle.  We will never be the same.  We will all bear our battle scars.  We will age a thousand years in a matter of months, but we will be stronger.  We will be stronger than we could possibly imagine.

When this is over, we will smile again; but I am smiling now because I am with my family, the ones I love the most.  When this is over, we will be safe again; but I am safe now because I have love.  When this is over, we will not be afraid again; I will always be afraid because I have love.  We fear losing something because we love it.  We love our friends, families, our world, we love us.  It is okay to be afraid.  Without love we wouldn’t be afraid.  Without fear, we would not fight for us. 

Right now, it feels like wading through concrete, but there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and it is bright.  It is so bright that it is blinding.  This bright light is there waiting to illuminate our world again.  We will shine again, oh so brightly!

What is the colour of love?

What is The Colour of Love?

As I walked through the park, I randomly analysed different fallen autumn leaves in my path. They were different shades of yellow to red to brown.  Each leaf appeared to be in a seemingly different stage of life.  They endured the same elements of nature during the past year at the same time. Yet, they individually grew, thrived and withered at different rates and to different extents.  Were the yellow leaves older than the red ones or were the brown leaves the oldest?  Maybe their respective colours were indicative of their internal makeup.  How could one tell when each leaf had fallen? The basic science behind these different hues is chemistry.  As chlorophyll decreases, other chemical compounds within the leaf become more visible. Different types of trees and plants bear different levels of these chemical compounds.  However, as long as there is chlorophyll there is life, and where there is life, all the leaves are green.

Is love like chlorophyll?  Are we alive and vibrant as long as there is love within us?  What happens when the love begins to leave?  Is that when we expose our true colours?  Will we display a variety of different colours based on our inner maquillage?  And, just like the leaves, when the love is completely gone, do we cease to exist?

Is giving love more beneficial than receiving it?  One may suggest that it is not possible to give love without having received it and vice versa.  We continue to exist as we give love and receive it.  So, love is basically presented as cyclic.  It has no beginning and no end as it innately exists inside of us.  We are stuck with love.  It lives and breathes within us, in all that we do and in all that we do not do.  It dictates our choices.  It fans our emotions. It forms our destiny.

What happens when we lose our chlorophyll of love?   What colours would we turn into?  We have seen and experienced the vibrant colour of love as well as its divergent.  The leaves have no choice.  Spring gives them life, summer gives them chlorophyll, autumn takes it away and exposes them for what they really are and winter eliminates them.  We can and have been leaves.  We have lost our colour of love, showed our true colours, withered and died.  One begs the question of how did the love leave us.  Did we have a choice?

If love is inherent, with no beginning and no end, then do we have control over it?  Is love a choice? Could we choose to be filled with the colour of love 365 days of the year, come spring, summer, autumn or winter?  Are you the colour of love?