Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Good Things Don't Die

It's been 841 days since my brother passed away. 841 days. It's been 2 years, 3 months and 20 days of living without my brother. Think about that. 841 days. Most of us can't remember what we did last week let alone what we're doing two weeks from now. Can you imagine 841 days without someone you deeply love and never being with them again? 
I've been writing for this blog as therapy and with the solitary hope of finding the newness adversity can sometimes inspire and for the hope of making sense of raw emotion for you. I hope, I really hope, that my emotions have moved you to tears, if not relief, because I can relate to so many forms of sadness. 

If you are reading me for the first time, I encourage you to take a few laps through the different phases of my grief; the dark that lead to light, the light that lead to anger, the anger that comes from left field, my paranoia, fear of abandonment, losing the will to live, my brother's love that has catapulted me into loving myself, the qualms of spiritual restoration, the quakes that broke my foundation, the people who help me love, and the honesty of life.  
If you've sometimes checked in on me to discover a new place within my journey or to find a milestone for yourself, I thank you for doing so. Your readership has given me purpose, has inspired me and has helped me to openly express without the fear of judgement. My blog is a safe place; one that offers a heart to hug, life learnings, a laser focus on empathy and the belief that tomorrow can happen


"Calm down, Mommy, calm down", my daughter soothingly whispered as she stroked my face and kissed my sobbing eyes. Her small hands held me, her young eyes locked into mine, her breath steady and patient spoke tender to me in such a way that I surrendered to my reality and gave way to what is now.
This was last night.

I've felt so many feelings since losing my brother. Many are "standard" while others have swelled in force almost immediately and with time.
I feel abandoned because my brother has always been the man in my life who has always assumed the role of mental thought. He was the person who aided me in all things trivial and yet all things simple as a "yes, that's right," or "no, you're wrong and this is why". He was my fellow foot soldier in the trenches of youth and a carpenter during the construction of adulthood where we frequently referenced our childhood to justify our thirst for love and affection. He was my confidante who held the darkest of secrets- ones which were never spoken of beyond one another.
As you now understand, my brother was my everything. He was everything to me until long after he passed away and I realized that my daughter is also part of my everything pie, as am I. I struggle to slice any of "my life pie" for anyone else- I suppose it's because I'm protective now and guarded. I won't let anyone in for fear that I'll be abandoned, and while this is no way to live, this is how I process and this is how I maintain. And yet I'm self-aware to the point of destruction; I know what I'm doing and who I'm distancing myself from because I want to leave before I am left. It' a sad way to live [in fear] but it's the only way I can protect myself from feeling deep pain…as I heal...

Healing can be a lifelong journey as a friend suggested last week, "Most of your friends have no idea how much you manage and the intensity of your emotional responsibility". I nodded in agreement to this observant notion and loved him for paying such close attention to me while we conversed. I rarely spend time focused on a peer, let alone have the time to be social. My mind is often clouded and it takes conscious effort to pay attention.
Take my mom for instance; she and I spend a lot of time with one another. We listen to words without much effort, we laugh at minutia and I hold her quite frequently; she is broken in ways that I'm not, for she is a mother who has lost her child, her firstborn, her only son. I cannot fathom her pain nor the guilt she solely carries, but I can only relate. If I were to lose my daughter, I would die. I would either die of a broken heart or take my own life. Fact. I wouldn't want to endure another loss. Losing my father and brother have been more than enough. I live in fear that I will lose her, too. My mom however, my mom is a pillar of survival not of strength. A woman who has pushed forward despite her desire to stop living. A woman whose spirit stretches beyond her human being. A woman who has been healing for over 30 years with no relief in sight. I worry about dying and how much more she will break. I worry that I will die before her and she will die soon after. I worry about the life I cannot control. This is yet another consequence of loss.


Losing someone, losing someone you love, and losing your mind is a lot like an earthquake. When tragedy occurs [in any form] our foundation breaks and the very beliefs within our structures are crumbled to pieces from the magnitude of impact. We are shaken quite literally and we must rebuild from the ground up and with the scraps that remain. The more we are shaken, the more we are thrust into surviving and letting go of who we once were. Losing and finding yourself can be excruciating, exhausting and quite painful. It's an incredibly challenging process; one that requires stamina, forgiveness, punishment, objectivity, understanding, and release. Having to let go and be somewhere else opens doors to new possibilities- possibilities which weren't there before tragedy. These earthquakes can shake you up in a good way. People who experience heart-breaking tragedy are also broken to their core. It's almost like gaining a new pair of eyes and a much broader soul. I know from experience that my soul has expanded into thoughts and feelings I've never known. When I thought I was lonely before, I'm lonelier. And when I thought I had loved and lost before, everything now pales in comparison to losing my brother.

A trauma survivor such as myself, will see herself as a warrior of sorts. She will regain her confidence, she will see her way through the impossibilities, form new opinions, awareness, perceptions and a new sense-of-self. This is all very beautiful and simultaneously magical. I've never been more true to myself than I am now. I've never loved and appreciated life as I do now. And I hope to feel this way until I die and join my big brother Charley in a heaven that reunites us for always.


Wednesday, December 2, 2015

The Hollow in The Holidays

I read a statistic this week that 96% of our population believe suicide is preventable. I read another insight that services are available but inaccessible to most people who need it; thus preventable services is a theory not a fact.
But do statistics make a difference and do post-mortem facts matter? Do my monthly contributions to non-profits make a difference? I beg to differ. I argue otherwise. I don't believe that suicide can be prevented but I do believe there are measures that can be taken to curb the ideations. I say curb, not stop.
Now, don't scorn me for saying so, but deadly health issues such as Cancer, Heart Disease, AIDS, Diabetes...are all conditions that can be treated but treatment isn't a guarantee for survival. And each person living with a deadly condition is suffering. Period.

Should we shame, ridicule, punish, slander, question someone who wants their pain to end? Should we turn our backs on someone who has been fighting chemo for years, has exhausted every option to feel better, who has ventured holistic alternatives, has resourced ways to survive, has sought the proper medical support, who has lost the energy to live their lives, is tired, depressed and has fought the honorable fight? Never.
In the same way I wouldn't want to see someone I care about- or even someone I have heard about- continue to suffer, I didn't want my brother to suffer anymore than he was. It hurt to see him hurting so, punching hard, exasperate himself to sleeplessness and to ultimately not have a sure cure to end his pain.
He found a way; my brother ended his life to end his pain. For his action and his desperation and for the man that he is, I do not fault him, I am not angry with him and I only honor his life by way of channeling his pain into the wondrous life he is.

Off-setting is easier said than done, however.

The holidays are here and I am sad. All the time. More than "usual". I suppose I didn't know what to expect this holiday season and put the "holidays are hard" out of my mind. But as November leaves blew in and December cold veered through, I shut down. Hand-holding over apple cider mimosas and caramelized baby carrots spread across the table like butter and I looked around for an indication that life is still yet a dream.

I cry nearly everyday- especially when I'm driving. I want my brother here to buy the Christmas tree and decorate it. I want him here so we can hang the falling icicles lights around the house. I want him here so we can sing cheesy holiday songs together. And I want him here so I can smile over at him while Mia glees in the delight of wrapping paper and prayer. I want my brother back and I'm easily affected by nothingness because he can't come back.

The holidays signify that another year is ending and yet another is beginning- and both collide with the hope of "I hope this year brings me some peace and happiness" with "Another entire year without Charley". Constant struggles to balance grief with hope, to pin them against one another and strive for just one good day. Someone told me the second year would be more manageable...and while it's somewhat true, I wake up everyday with an intention to try my best with optimism- even if it's momental.

Monday, November 2, 2015

Anything Worth A Damn Involves People

One of the most important gestures in life is one's ability to show up.
I am blown away by people in my life who show up time and time again. I often wonder when they'll stop calling, or wanting to spend time with me, or stop sending me random messages of or even wonder when they'll generally stop caring about me. But they don't stop and they show up just because or show up for the moments in my life that are important to me.

My brother was really good about showing up. He showed up for all my life's stepping stones, for the times a boy broke my heart and made me cry, for the friends who weren't friends at all, for casual conversations and spiritual sidebars, and he never really had to "show up" because he was always there. As present as he was in my life, I never expected him to "be there" because I always knew he'd be right where he felt he wanted to be and never needed to be. My brother, as most thicker-than-blood relationships are, is my soul mate. I even noted in his eulogy that he is the guy whom you could always count on. Ask, and he'd say yes. Ever in awe, I also wondered when he'd stop being so wonderful to me and feared that I never reciprocated to the extent he did for me. I always felt sheepishly ashamed that I didn't openly declare my love for him as hard as I should or felt spoiled by the depth of his admiration for me.
I recall a rainy day when he called me to tell me that he'd taken an old weight lifting set to a metal scrap yard because it'd been sitting in his garage for quite some time. He had the flu, was feverish and coughing on the other end of the phone. When I thanked him for the intense labor he invested and doing so while sick, he replied, "I did it because it's important to you". I immediately felt guilty for not having done it myself and fortunate that I have someone who loves me so. This paradox is a blessing I carry in my mind everyday; I'm fearful of never exchanging this love in this lifetime and I'm fearful of having to wait the rest of my life to reunite with my brother.


For him, and for so many countless reasons, people matter as do relationships. Yes, your character should be impactful, yes the energy you instill into this world should be embraced, yes, meaningful purpose should be what drives everyone, and yes, without people, nothing would matter. The 9 to 5 working hours, the products you spend money on, the sips of alcohol you take, the car you drive, etc. are all meaningless without someones to share with. We need people more than we need anything else. We are designed and created to exchange and engage. To live and prosper our lives with. To experience the good and bad, the sickness and health with one another. And let me tell you, it's not time that heals, but it's people and moments; moments that define what matters and people who encourage life. Without people, we are solitary. And in solitude is when we discover the deepest parts of importance by self definition and nothing else. People are capable of everything and anything. All people may heal even if healing takes a lifetime.
I asked my daughter this morning who loves her. She answered very innocent-like, "Mommy and Daddy!' Yes, this is true but "the person who loves you the most is YOU".  I don't expect her to completely understand, but she does love herself and doesn't entirely know it. A three-year-old loves herself....I believe we can channel her exuberance and love ourselves as purely as she exemplifies.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Love Keeps Me Sober

"Beauty rises from ashes," is what I was told time and time again. I didn't then understand how beauty would rise from the tragedy of losing my brother and only understood the encouraging words as confusion. I was told, "It's okay to be angry" to which I promptly replied , "But I'm not" to which she said "Oh, but you will be and when you do, it's okay". I was told I'd find blessings within his loss and with time I'd learn lessons, to which I vehemently denied and instead carried on to teach my brother's lessons and pleaded God to bless me and take me to my brother.

It's been two years since my brother passed away...I fight with the reality that he's gone, I'm angry still; not at him but at the loss of control. And finally, I have been blessed with varietal love; love that I never knew existed and love that never felt so good. These touches of love make me feel guilty sometimes, as do the treasures my brother has given me. His home, his friends, our extended friends, the new connections I make because of common devastation and loss...all make me angry because they've all come at the cost of losing my brother. If he were still here, the world would obviously be vastly different. I'm here still, capturing the experiences I do and examining life from a very clear set of spectacles. If only I had known what lay on the other side, if only he and I were blessed with my new found love, then I'm sure we would've basked in love together and he wouldn't have punished himself so direly. If only.

Without tragedy, loss, difficult circumstances and broken episodes, we wouldn't know glory, we wouldn't know joy and we surely wouldn't know how to value and be grateful for the extremities.
When we are broken, we are suddenly open and easily affected. We are vulnerable and desperate for reassurance that only our inner most selves can provide. But we are open, which in turn, makes us feel like anything is possible and the impossible has ceased to exist. After all, the worst has happened and we are surviving. At this point, any other pain pales in comparison.

The unspoken language of tragedy is very much like the unspoken language of parents; we "get" each other, we are the most empathetic beings, we "just know" and can truly say "I can imagine" and not feel patronized, but feel so deeply loved. Deep-seeded sadness is the language of the broken and the broken are the ones who closely connect those who are fortunately ignorant to loss.

I am blessed to have a love with my brother that goes beyond any tangible depth, a love that exists on both this earthly level and the dimension beyond. In parallel, I am blessed to have been adorned with the love of countless souls who love my brother because of how deeply I love him, who love the broken me more than they loved the pre-broken me, who have gravitated towards my devastation without question and without judgement only to support, comfort and water me with love.
Love truly does keep me sober and it's a thirst I pray I always have.

We all learn from one another and I pray that my own experiences with loss and love inspire you to love at no cost.




Monday, August 31, 2015

You're Scared? That's Great! Now Jump.

I'm not an authority of loss but I may confidently state that grief is not a form of weakness or a lack of faith; grief is the price of love.

One man's decision does not define him. I know this sentiment well, as I have made countless mistakes that I believed in no matter how the sway of others nor the facts.  Try as I may to circumvent the inevitable or pad the tread I lightly walk, I may also say that I know pain, I know struggle, I know desperation. I know a life that has been emotionally difficult and trying since my father's passing and through the sadness of losing my brother which I combat daily. I've lost two great loves and two magnificent men. My trio is down to one.

When my brother passed away almost two years ago, someone offered a consolation that was intended to comfort my heart like a tender kiss to a forehead, but it instead came off as absurd and senseless when he said, "Maybe your brother sacrificed himself to show you to live. Maybe he's gone so that you are gifted with the life he always wanted for you". Charley took his life so that I may have one? No, he didn't die for me. 
And no, my brother didn't die for me and I'm not experiencing the pain of his passing because his soul signed on a dotted line to die at the age of 36 by the hand of crushing emotion and and self-destructive thoughts. No, he died for himself and only himself. No, there's no one worth taking his life for.
Even in his last Earth-bound moments, my brother is a wondrous force that is solid and stealth, gentle and kind, and a loving legacy which swells even larger in his death.

I walk through the seconds surrounding what my brother may have gone through and what I in turn experienced when I discovered my brother in a lifeless form; there's no lucid way that he knew he was going to die, in fact, anyone who takes their life doesn't want to die and only wants the agony to dissipate. If only compassion were a word that were effective enough to steady Charley's thoughts and soothe his soul. If only I could hug his soul so tightly that his pain became manageable and his desperate intent dissolved.

I'm even more scared now to make life-decisions without him, hoping he may intercept the indifferent mistakes and inject some "common sense, Yolie" into my thoughts. Sometimes I hear him, in his voice and in his words, caution me to make a right instead of a left. I listen to his knee-jerk direction and abide my both him and my gut. But mostly, I make the decisions that frighten me to near-anxiety because if I continue to live life afraid of losing someone else I deeply love, then I won't live. If I continue to believe that men who love me will abandon me, then I have closed myself off to a magic only this life provides. And if I play it safe, sitting on the sidelines waiting for a rigorous coach to call my name and throw me into a game that changes my life, then I'll never be proud of myself. For without scary, you can't do brave. And life is scary, so jump, damnit. Jump.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Good. I'm Glad You're Sad

"Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted" (Matthew 5:4)

Almost two years ago, my brother Charley passed away and into the Heavens of peace, tranquility and not far from where we exist now. I can't tell you how many people in his life-both close in relationship and distant in geography- shut down and only wanted to keep me from feeling sadness. Most didn't want to cause anymore pain than I was feeling, most would apologize for "making" me cry, and the majority of people were uncomfortable with my candor and openess to feel. 

I describe the people surrounding his loss in the past tense because those people aren't around anyhow. I speak in past tense because my brother doesn't come up in conversation with anyone outside my immediately family; it is us who inserts him into sentences with nonchalance and normalcy. I accept that most people have moved forward and are no longer coping or grieving his passing, but I am and my Mom most certainly is. 

We live in a sadness avoidance culture that doesn't allow mourning nor the process of it. Without mourning, we can't work through our sadness so why should we bottle up, immediately accept and act as if all is alright? There is no process in grief, there is no sequence. There is no, "what's next and how do I find it and move past it?" as much as people want to believe. Grief is not a phase nor is sadness; they're both humanly emotion that are caused by being human. And without surrendering to our strong agendas, we don't invest in hope, we plan our future without allowing God's plan to unfold. Sadness is part of our spiritual life and we should honor the process that God designed for our human soul. I disagree with "cheer up, it'll be okay" because RIGHT NOW is not okay and sure someday I will feel "okay" but it's not now. I instead encourage you to adjust your personal feelings to your comfort level and accept the reality that loss does happen and it's okay to experience the pain of grieving. 

Just last week I had to have a tough-love conversation with my Mom regarding her obsession to loop my brother's passing in her mind and through conversation with others; she has pushed people away because she's always so angry and because (I think) that they don't want to hear about her grief and her Charley anymore. But because they don't know her pain, they misunderstand her need for support for misery. That's unfair. I encouraged her to channel her anger and guilt by identifying a healthy outlet and occupying her time with a hobby that she enjoys. Very few are still "here" for us and those very few want to see us happy and living again. But I'm not living to make them feel better, I'm living to help myself. 

Rejoice with those who rejoice and mourn with those who mourn. If we don't allow mourning, we will miss the transformative power of sadness. 


Friday, July 3, 2015

It's the Same As It Ever Was

Anyone I've spoken to who has compassionate in their heart and kindness in their words has told me, "Your brother didn't want to die; he wanted to take away his pain". This, I believe without a doubt in my mind. Had he even strategically thought about the impact his suicide would have on us, he wouldn't have taken his life. Sure he may have thought, "With time they'll be okay", still, as well as I know my brother, I KNOW death wasn't the intention.
However, no matter the times I repeat his last weeks and his last hours and the experience of discovering him...nothing will bring him back. The past has passed. He has passed away and time is passing.
I've resigned to knowing I can't change what has already occurred but it doesn't mean I have fully accepted. You may wonder why I haven't and what's holding me back if the truth is what it is...I haven't accepted that my brother is dead because he lives with me and among my family still, in spirit and in memory.
I look at my hands and I see his, I wiggle my long toes and I see his bony toes, I run my hand across the hairs on my arms and I feel the strength in his forearms as I do the breath in his soul. I believe, without a doubt that my brother is with me when I call on him, when I cry for him and when I rejoice. He's here- I just can't see him with my human eye. My faith sees him instead.

I don't want to feel deeply sad as I do everyday. It's a painful feeling that agonizes me when my mind searches for him or when my reflex looks for him. Oh yeah, he's gone. He reminds me of what's important and how to live a life I enjoy, to reject opposing forces that hold me down rather than empower my inner beauty and to uplift others with no agenda of my own. Sometimes I simply picture Charley in the next room watching TV or in the backyard weeding the garden- these notions soothe me and comfort my state of mood knowing very well that the continuity of my life has purpose.






Friday, June 5, 2015

Life Is What I've Learned, Grief Has Been My Teacher

My favorite person passed away 636 days ago. I will say that I've learned something different everyday, whether it was minimal or grand- like. And I'm learning still, how to live without my brother and how to live with him in my heart.

At the first year someone asked me what I've learned to which I answered "I'm making mistakes and I'm happy to make them". Yet there are so many more emotions I feel within every crevice in my body- I hurt in places I can't describe and cry within nooks of my soul I didn't know existed. Devastation and sadness ache as though a foreign person has taken hold of your being and will not release you; even if you cry "uncle" this stranger has taken the air you breathe and polluted it with such emotional poison that you fear you will never breathe again. But you will as much as you don't believe it.

People who love you make room for your presence and your grief. They silently move with you and embrace you for hugs, for quiet, for joy and for prayer.
My mom came over one morning as I sobbed into the phone that I don't want to live, I don't want to get out of bed and I just want to be with Charley. She quickly drove over, violently opened the front door and rushed to my bed where I my face wept into a drenched pillow and my sight was black in color. She made space for me to cry and held me while I did so, she said nothing and allowed me to unload all my fear, all my love and all my pissed off anger. On many, many, MANY days I wanted nothing more than to lose myself and just disappear only to re-appear in the arms of my brother and with his smile reflected in mine.

My mind is a roller coaster as are my words and my outlook on life- it's realistic to have great days where I'm thanking God for "a wonderful day" and other's I'm thanking Him for giving me the strength to manage my strength and nurture my sadness.

I have learned that life is much more valuable than I once thought it is. I wake up everyday with a different mindset wanting to LIVE and live forthright, live with the intention of living and swatting away anything and anyone who prevents me from reverting back to how I once lived and loved.
Although I thought I loved hard in the past, I am now open to loving most everyone, I'm mom-ish in my ways and hold my daughter with such intent that I know she feels the depth of my present and her future with me. I bask in her face and her delight. Her words are invoking and affect me so deeply that I can't fathom leaving this life and leaving her behind, nor can I imagine her life without me in it. I'm grateful for her existence and thank God for the blessing of her life as I thank my brother for experiencing every moment I have with her from behind the curtain. My brother is backstage with us at every waking moment and is seeded so deeply in everything we do.

My void is everlasting and will never be filled- this I know. I know that my soul won't be at peace until I reunite with my brother and we smile at one another, and embrace and are entwined once again. I know that I get lost in my void and insist that I can't climb out of it----but I do and when I do, I choose to make the most out of the smallest moments and try not to be deterred by life's inconveniences.

I have learned that there is no permanency is this human world except for love. True love never dies nor does it's extension called connection. I have learned that we never know the inner-workings of a job, or a friend, or a family member, or God's plan so I live as though I may die within hours. Call me jaded, call me pessimistic or call me life-induced---if it's not love, then it just is.
I beg my brother to come back but I know that he won't. So you know what I do in his place?
I live.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Death is Apologetic. Life Isn't.

It doesn't matter how you move forward or progress, as long as you move.
Backwards, a leap, walk in circles...as long as my heart is pumping life and my soul feels emotion, I should move. And I suppose that I am, unwillingly so for the most part, but I am.

You're familiar with the centuries-old Christopher Columbus story which states that people were afraid that the world was flat-edged and they'd fall off if the end were discovered? When my brother passed away, I felt that way for at least the first year and change; afraid of the end of the day in fear that life around me would fall off and I'd stay in place. Or I'd get to the end of a night as I watched the sun fold into the sky and the moon glow against the dark and wonder if this day was my end and I'd fall away just like my brother did. One day he was here and the next he wasn't. A year and eight months have passed and his belongings are here, all tangible, and yet he's still intangible. As much as I know no one can come back from death and no one can negotiate a return, my soul years for a miracle that will never happen.

I've begun to meet new people who don't know my past or my inner-present. Who look at me and speak to me with fresh words and newness inquiries. They are meeting the new me, the "she seems normal" me, the woman with a thousand truths and average-sized thoughts, the child who is vulnerable, do-eyed, green with loss and colored two shades of mystery.

"Do you have any siblings?"
Yes. "A big brother and a younger sister".
"Are you and your brother close?"
Yes. "Very". I fight the urge to tear up and my lip trembles and my breath gets short and I change the subject. I fear the fall of falling fast, divulging too much, entrusting my emotions to a stranger and being pitied. If you aren't a part of my when-Charley-was-here life, then you get no access to it. Period.

When I do speak about my brother to new people I share him as though he's alive; my brother does this or that, he and I are each other's backbones, he is a runner, he loves life, etc. etc. until all my etcetera's feel tangible and I pretend to believe myself. My omission is sacred as it is tragic and recognizing the inevitability of reality only makes my sadness worse. I instead lose myself in all of my to-do's so I don't have to think but when I do stop thinking, my brother's face surfaces, blankets my eyes and I clearly see that as much as I refuse to live without him, I am living without him, dragging feet and all.


Saturday, April 11, 2015

Something of Nothing is Still Nothing

If what you are experiencing, involved in, receiving doesn't make you happy, then why would more of it make you happy? This is the bain of my emotional existence as I explore a life without my brother.
I kid you not, very often I am lost in my own thoughts people watching or just watching my world as it moves about me and I think Wow, this is life without Charley, which looks and feels quite the opposite of when he was alive and chucking cheesy jokes at me. I continuously wonder how my pain is going to end and when I'll hit a valley that is green in experience and blue with peace. A place I am meant to be with the people for me and the life with me. Partnership- it's what I seek in every relationship I have. Reciprocation-it's what I blindly have faith in. Respect- it's an expectation with a high standard. Sincere love- it's an Aha! sentiment that never ceases to surprise me.

New Orleans Cemetery, April 2015
My now-standards are flight-high and rigorous~ though I find myself making the same conscious mistakes in hopes that this life will stick and I don't have to go any further to find my brother in all the days without him. I believe that we are meant to meet the people we have and are meant to come across very specific people who will supply us with guidance for our next deep breath. We exchange notions, support, mistakes and learnings to take with us as we motion through, mud-deep in life and in love. I suppose my hope (and I use this word loosely because it's yet to solidify much for me) guides me like a blind person with a walking stick...looking for safety and keeping me from severe danger. So, I believe that moments that feel good to me is a last stop. As I interact with someone I keep my eyes alert in search of my brother's nod in approval or throwing me a sign that Yes, Yolie, this is good or No, Yolie, keep moving. I'm looking for inspiration to stay. Work, love, family, my refection, my life, or just one more day. While it isn't my brother's word whose I should live by, I do know what his word and voice sound like, so I listen nonetheless. Mostly, I hear myself berating myself time and time again. I'm not very kind to myself, I admit, and have a difficult time convincing myself that I'm a good person who deserves good thoughts. Yes, I should be careful with my words when I'm alone and my words with other people, and I try, but I fail most times. Suppose this is part of my process-I don't accept because if my brother didn't receive as I have (and am) and wasn't blanketed as I am, why should I. Instead, I filter what feels right and what sounds sincere in true belief that they'll come together in unity and provide me with just one moment of quiet solace.


Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Human Emotion is Very Off-Putting

Most people would rather deal with logic than with emotion, wouldn't you say?
Up until my brother's passing, I was always a bit rough around the edges-focused on a tough exterior that hardly allowed for much show of emotion-never wanting to show my cards but wanting to show the sincerity I so often fight for. My childhood also didn't allow for unnecessary tears as Dad would discourage, "crying doesn't help" and Mom would be easily aggravated if my brother or I cried in fear of her consequential lash, "I'll give you something to cry for". Sadness, as it was, had no room in our growing lives so we instead closely reached for each other; serving as a backbone for our lives together.

Losing my brother was a fear I always lived with and losing him to death was an intangible thought that would bring me to tears when I'd think about being alone without him. But I would never lose him to himself-he was much "too" of anything to lose.
There's something to be said about death and how quickly it robs our human space of allowance and control; life is a choice we have until we're left with one of two and then there's clearly no choice at all. My brother had a choice when he felt he had none and I am left with a choice to live or to die. Same choice, similar elements of grief and sorrow, different circumstances but same textbook versions of what control signifies.
Simply put, Charley crashed into himself and what he was feeling was clearly so tumultuous that he fought himself until he saw an end to his sight. I envision him in my mind, swinging and swinging and swinging, trying with all that he could muster to make contact with his inner beast, his inner sensitivity. Bashing with such force that he was sure he'd beaten all the fury, all the hopelessness, all the deception out of himself so that his exasperation was well worth the fight and he'd win. But maybe he did win and maybe his inner demon lost. Maybe his suicide was a feat he conquered.

Just as emotion fuels the bodies we house, closure is also natural motivation to have an answer. With an unexpected loss, closure is a therapeutic need that satisfies the spirit and the mind. My brother's suicide offers lack of closure and ensures the absolution of uncertainty. The only person who is certain of the emotional cause is him. If only preventing it were so simple. Tell me why and I'll dispel you of all reason. If only...

As a society we misunderstand emotion and misinterpret the forgiving need to feel...to feel loved, to reciprocate love, a desire to feel wanted and to be sincerely wanted, to feel important and to feel significant, to be understood and very seldom feared and finally to be loved unconditionally by some one person.
We are thrust into this world as naked and raw as God created but it should be our spiritual responsibility to live beyond the constraints of our human existences. Forget logic sometimes and feel.
I love you just the way you are.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

The Pursuit to Live A Life I've Always Wanted

One month after my brother's tragic passing, the notion of newness was planted into the broken pockets of my heart. "This is your opportunity to be anyone you want and everyone you've always wanted to be. You're in a fortunate position to start over", she whispered into my crying eyes and across my sleeping daughter's angelic face.
I had no idea what she meant when all I wanted was to lose myself in someone I never was. Maybe I could take up excessive intoxication and drink myself to death or maybe I could explore the lows of being high and binge on street drugs that would numb me medicated. Or even have meaningless sex in an effort to be close to someone without the strings of being emotionally attached. I didn't want to feel anything but feel him alive.

Yes, I could be someone I'm not. Yes, I could do anything because nothing matters anymore.
I wanted to lose myself and escape the pain and devastation of losing my only brother, except losing myself also meant losing him because he is me and I am him~ one person separated by years. When Charley passed away, I can say that I lost my life. There is no one else in my life that loves so deeply, thinks so deeply and lives at his depth as he. I always felt as though life was bearable because I had someone just like me in this life, and that alone was comforting. I could wrap my brother around my soul and spirit...the thought of him felt like I was wrapped in blanket fresh out of the dryer. It's the feeling of all is right in this world. And when he died, nothing kept me tethered to this life, not even my daughter. I wanted to lash out at something tangible, something I could punch my hand into, shake until it broke, beat until there was nothing left...and do it all over again. But life isn't a person and I had no one to hold responsible but myself. Guilt and remorse was instantaneous and occurred in the same moment that I found my defeated brother, lifeless and beyond a sadness I can never adequately explain. Charley may be gone and took his pain with him, but I'm left here to struggle and deal and manage and hate an anger in my gut that I can't shake.

I'm angry everyday. And man, am I hot and cold. I'm easily agitated, my attention span is shorter than that of a toddler's and I cannot find a happy place.

To be honest, I don't want to define happiness.We live with morsels of happiness- doses if you will. Sip by sip, sometimes large gulps. Sometimes we're gluttonous and and take in all we can only to hibernate like bears do because who's to tell when happiness will feel this good again.  So we take what we can get but no matter how much I try to find life in my life, I don't feel the same anymore because I'm not the person I was when Charley was alive and we'd laugh together at his corny jokes. I loved watching him laugh at himself- his laughter and his smile was soothing.
The weight of my brother's death is heavy and drains me of joy. Yes, it's been a year and a half and I cannot function as I'd like. Yes, he's gone and why am I living against his divine wishes for me? Yes, I agree he wouldn't want me to be in so much pain but I am. All of this is a consequence of losing a life that meant life to me, and all of me is changing because of him.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Infect Me With Life

I collect pieces of people like I collect books-hoping to be inspired with a new wealth of knowledge or fill myself with the magic I know others have to offer. Their lives reflect much more motion and routine; absent-mindlessly going through their lives untouched and unscathed by deep sadness. I take as much as I can listening to the way they speak their words and the watch the speed of their eyes in quiet wish to be like them someday...or maybe never be like them- living life in robot fashion. 
There's a large, vacant hole in my family and in my heart that refuses to be refilled or repaired, for the hole belongs to my brother in all his existence both alive and un-alive. I've made room for this sadness that moves around my other emotions like vinegar with water; they don't mix but they maintain their own space. And it's okay that I'm not okay because I don't have to be. It took a lifetime for my brother and I to build the bond we actively nurtured, so it makes sense (to me) that it would take the second part of my life to work through his loss. There is no time limit for grief nor acceptance but what I have accepted is that I don't need to accept to make others feel better about me or to help myself feel better. 
The pain of my brother's death is long-lasting and very prominent- maybe I should accept the confusion...as my friend suggested last week. This tip, I absorbed and thought through, Accept the confusion of losing him and not the acceptance of losing him. 
Another person offered up, "Maybe if you do you, you'll feel better" in an attempt to offer up an alternative to embracing life again. Hmmm, I think I'll try the former. 

Keeping busy is something I've become a master at- occupying my time with life's errands and to do's, hoping that I lose myself in so many things that I have no energy or time left for love...because love hurts. Whether it's exercising, dance class, my daughter Mia, work or grad school, I leave myself in those places each time I touch them and walk away so that I can come back around and pick them up like the bread crumbs of Hansel and Gretel. In short, I know that I am lost and I have no idea how to get back home, a home that includes Charley very present and alive. So instead I wander with aim knocking on the doors of new experience, new lives, and opportunities in an effort to find something or someone's to help me feel semi-alive again. 


People compliment me with words of strengthening encouragement, "You're one of the strongest people I know" or "How do you do it all" and even, "From the outside you look like you have it all together. You make it look easy". 
But what's IT? Life? The emotional turmoil I'm managing? Raising a child on my own AND all the other stuff typical life has chucked at me? Just when I think I can't handle anything more, the stars smile down at me and add another load of heavy dust...and as I think God won't give me more than I can bear, he gives me more and I shrug my shoulders and resign. This is life. This is life. This is life. 

I seem to think that Charley's passing is mine and only mine and I'm affected in this way because he's Charley. And there's never been a Charley without a Yolie or a Yolie without a Charley. I'm participating in my own loss without agreeing to do so, and learning to navigate this solo self with my brother's spirit riding close to my heart. Lost is an okay place for me and it feels safe because you see, being lost means that love will find me again while I'm searching for a way to live. 


Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Living Parallel to Time

I took more than a hiatus from writing here, knowing very well that my readership severely dropped as has my desire to accept reality. In fact, I make conscious efforts to deny time and the encouraging words, "it's almost been a year and a half since he passed..."  and instead cradle my brother's loss as though it's been a week and a half. 

My brother, young in age and also in spirit, passed into tranquility during the early morning hours of September 17, 2013 while I simultaneously slept in peace. He closed his eyes hours before my Mom called to invite him over for his favorite Mexican breakfast of chilaquiles. His last breaths of human air were desperate and emotional, as they are forgiving and empathetic, and resigned at the devil's hour of heartache and darkness. The world around him unknowingly slumbered at a level he couldn't achieve for weeks, and as a consequence of insomnia, his brain and body also severely suffered from lack of rest and thus, production of healthy chemicals.


The suppressed and judgmental refuse to face the realities of severe suicidal depression, turning their memories off and their eyes away in conscious attempt to forget that their friend Carlos, an honorable and intelligent Firefighter Paramedic, took his own life. He is gone. Just as quickly as my brother surfaces into a happy memory, a sad and awful reminder shoves in and the thought of Carlos is quickly shooed away. 

I know this because I sometimes do this. I think of him, I smile, and I almost simultaneously "remember" he's dead as though I "forgot". I don't forget, I don't suppress, I don't put off or distract myself and I surely don't convince myself "I'll always remember him" as though I won't. C'mon, he's my most favorite person and my only brother. 

My brother was robbed of a lifetime of love and opportunity and happiness and life. He was disregarded and emotionally abandoned time and time again, like a misunderstood foster child who is used and dumped when convenience has worn off. His pain ran deeper than anyone could feel or even attempt to feel. Obviously. 
There is no medication or guaranteed amount of time that would soften his wound as though it were artificial. His love for love ran hard and was far from being juvenile love. His love, my brother's love for anyone and everyone he loves, was unconditional and selfless, like that of the Ancient Greek. 
Love was my brother's grace and also his downfall. He attracted people that needed saving or needed to be rescued, and maybe, if he felt needed he mistook that need for love. I can't speak for him but I suppose I try to think as though I'm him so that I can make sense of his suicide and ultimately, find closure for him. 
Every situation is different but the end result is the same; no matter how much I go over his last few weeks like a movie reel- pause, rewind, play, pause-he still dies and I can't change it. 

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

A Village of One

I miss my brother. And even now, when I think it or say it or write it, the character count and the space between the sentiment...doesn't suffice. When I tell him I miss you so much, Charley it falls heavy into nothing air and I plead that he is listening. I pray that I'm not talking to myself and I hope that he misses me too. His face or laughter would make my insides settle and smile. I don't feel smiley inside anymore. 

It's been my intention for quite some time to share my love for the village lovingly created by my brother's loss. There've been countless new experiences, new friends, pleasant surprises, rekindled relationships, unexpected encounters and in-my-face realities that are all consequences of his passing. In short, SO much is occurring because he took his life and left us all to fend for him, for one another and for each other.

Still, I miss him because he's gone. And if he weren't gone, I wouldn't have a village whom I love and loves me in return. It's amazing what a people can accomplish when their genuine intent generates love and support. Real support. Not the empty promises of  "I'll come by" or "call me if you need anything" only for these individuals not to follow through. Because if you're like me, I have faith in word and I have faith in people. I trust and am open. If someone disappoints me when I'm truly looking to them during a moment of grief, it hurts. I suppose I hurt myself for having expectations but what sort of friend or family would I be if I didn't meet others' expectations? Reciprocation.

Receiving love and support has surprised me. In so much that my faith in people is strengthened. I never knew I could be so loved and nurtured. I never knew people, my friends, some family and distant friends cared so much about my pain. It's as though the pain of losing my brother created/s a pain for them, too, even though they either didn't know him or didn't know him as well. But they feel it. And they feel my pain. This is wondrous for me, it really is.

When Charley passed away, I naturally looked for him for comfort, and to be told by only him that he would never leave my side and get me through the darkest phase of my life. My soul reflexed for him and he so obviously couldn't take my hands and assure me that he would hold me up. But before I could corner myself into solace and isolation, a village of his friends and my loving web of friends came in and held hands so I could turn in any direction and see an empathetic, sympathetic, I love you face holding tough and holding me. Now my web of love consists of his friends who deeply love him, friends of mine who have bonded even more closely with me regardless of the frequency of my pain and their own fear of loss, and family who hug me with their eyes and sweetly kiss me. Who knows how long this emotional support will last, but I am grateful. I feel secure and padded into space reserved only for me with absolutely no judgment placed on me or Charley.Even if it were one person, a handful of people or someone I barely know, I'd be thankful just the same.
Blessed. There's no secret to getting through grief and loss and tragedy. But there is someone who cares for you and wants to be the person you call in the middle of the night. Choose someone, choose a web and get tangled in it. You'll be glad you did.



Friday, October 17, 2014

What Goes Up, Sometimes Comes Down

Can you imagine how difficult it would be to always be up, high as the clouds, hanging on so you don't fall? Sounds terrific, huh?
Do you know anyone whom when you ask how they're doing, they're "great" ALL the time?

This is where I am currently in managing the loss of my brother: I'm okay most days but I caution myself (and others) that I'm not permanently okay. Some honestly think, "Phew. she's OKAY", in which I see the expression on their faces elated with relief and happy for me. This is not the case. Charley just passed away. Charley just called me last night. I just saw Charley this morning. I smell his beautiful scent, still.
I'm expected to have bad days. In fact, I allow myself to have bad days just as I did a couple days agowhen I made a significant move in my personal life which rattled my spirit and yearned for my big brother to soothingly speak to me and hold me tightly. Instead, I washed his truck and for the first time since he passed, I slowly explored the insides of his car. Receipts, random papers, a first aid kit, photos, old school Hip Hop CD's littered the pockets of his car. But the most difficult and sentimental find was in his glove compartment where birthday cards I'd given him lay neatly and quietly. I opened each one with a delicate touch and sobbed until my vision blurred and my entire insides ached. Lifeless like a doll on a shelf, my thoughts scoured my memory for stability in the reality that is now mine. Holding the loving words I'd written to him, I felt defeated. It was clear to me that no matter how much I love him, support him, live for us, I couldn't prevent him from taking his life. In this card alone, I expressed my unconditional love, the joy of growing together and growing old together. I counted on growing old together. I counted on having my best friend my whole life. We're both healthy, we both take care of ourselves, we're both driven. NEVER would've thought that mental health would take one of us, and almost both of us. I sat and cried over all the birthdays we wouldn't have together anymore. No more cards from him expressing his love for me. No more smiles over the glow of dozens of candles. No more.


I spent the rest of the day crying uncontrollably as I balled up his dirty workout clothes from his truck and held them to my face and chest in an effort to hold him. I. could. not. stop. crying. I watered the front yard and my neighbor walked up and opened his arms to me. I dove in and exhaled all the pain I could in that moment. I miss him so much. He rubbed my back and encouraged me to cry. I so obviously needed to be embraced.

We have triggers which evoke happy thoughts and happy feelings and we have bad, bad, hurtful feelings. Truth is, we don't need to lose someone to have triggers, but most often triggers are a consequence of loss- many types of loss. And I've always encouraged such relief and dispel of emotion. It doesn't matter if it's been months or even years because grief never goes away nor does the pain of loss. My brother and I shared 32 years together- it's the longest, most consistent, incredibly loving relationship I've ever had. No one will trump him or us, but I have faith in love. Love lasts.

Friday, October 10, 2014

Life Isn't A Rat Race

We wake up and move pretty quickly with our mental to-do lists and our feet hitting the cold floor. Our moves are in-motion as is our hearts as they keep us alive for further life and encouragement. And we spend so much of our time with a desire to be better, get better, live longer, live better.
I've slowed down dramatically while keeping my thoughts hungry and open. My mind feels weightless sometimes, especially when I block myself of all things hurt and make my way to my cove of self. Could it be selfish that I've made a decision to put my mind and heart before that of my daughter's? Sure. My Dad has gotten on my case for not acting more aware, although I can argue that I've never been more awake as I am now. I'm aware that the behavior I exemplify and the actions I gesture both in front of and away from her make me a more influential mother for her childhood experiences. She is first. Her life is first although my mind crosses finish before she does. I'm lunges ahead of her so that I am strong enough to have adult conversations about my grief and why her Nino is dead. Dead. A term she doesn't yet fully understand though she asked me just yesterday as we placed fresh flowers on his grave site,
"Why are we giving Nino flowers?".
Hmmmm. What to say, what to say. The truth. 
"We bring Nino flowers because we honor him with the beauty of life. We miss him, we love him, and when you care about someone, you extend a gesture to communicate so. It's like when Mommy gives you tight hugs for no reason. I squeeze you with all my love so that you feel it. We squeeze Nino with flowers sometimes".
No "why?" followed but she understood, I think. I hope.

This is an example of slowing down to ensure that what I'm speaking into this life is true and intentional. So that someday everything I extend, both verbally and physically, is almost effortless, second nature.
I'm thriving on a conscious level I've never experienced, and existing so in ways I can't fully comprehend just yet. I'm cognizant of other people's circumstances and realities, providing reactions and replies that only feed our spirits. This doesn't mean I'm walking on eggshells or treading water all the time, instead it means that while I naturally get angry or hurt or wish to express myself, I'm doing it with firm tenderness and honesty; honesty in my intentions with the present in mind and not the far-fetched future. Hey, I'm no preacher and full of myself, but I can say that losing my brother is teaching me to be my best everyday without trying to please everyone. I MUST try not rescue myself so much and maybe, just maybe, I can inspire myself via my own mouthful of words and wisdom. Hopefully, and I pray to the Lord for such, that my life will happen, and when it does as slowly as it does, I'll have the courage to walk out of the doors thrown open for me.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

The Magic Healing Wand

And so healing begins for me. I wish I could tell you there's a day when I woke up and thought, Alright, Yolie, time to heal. Loss and grief may take years-there's no set time and certainly no expiration date to stop crying, feeling thrashed, low on yourself and just tired. In all candid honesty, my sweetest advice is to embrace the sadness and depression. Squeeze it dry until all you're left with is pulp. The sweet juice quenches your soul and the meaty rinds will serve a higher purpose for you as you continue to heal.

I'm managing my sadness now- I see it coming like a big wave and I brace myself for the ones that hit hard and knock me wet. The smaller, daily ripples wash over my bare skin and lull my spirit into brief tears or a sad smile. And sometimes, sometimes I brave myself and dive right in so that I'm completely drenched and come out so the cold air hits me and wakes me to the reality of beach life without Charley life.

This life, my new life, I admit, is somewhat liberating. Tight shackles around my arms have been unlocked and are freeing my spirit to surrender and just live- it's my mantra. But what does that mean or look like for me? It means I'm centering myself and being present in my moments and in the relationships I attentively nurture. Losing my brother very swiftly showed me what's important versus what I can live without. How often do you listen to someone when they're speaking to you? Are you processing and digesting or thinking of your own thoughts or what you're going to say next when it's your turn?
The majority of our cultures are uncomfortable with raw emotion or being present. We have what Buddhists refer to as "monkey minds" which is a psychological term that means whimsical, restless and uncontrollable. We all do it-even when we try to be still and keep calm, our minds are constantly moving and continue to move as we're telling ourselves to stop.

Santorini, Greece * September 2014

Try meditation. It's a method I have failed to conquer because even when I try to silence myself, I busy myself with silencing myself. The goal is to align with your inner voice and develop an indestructible sense of well-being while engaging in any life activity. One of my goals is to practice this on a weekly basis first, before I commit to anything more than I can promise myself. Following through is important. It's important because you're committing to yourself and someone else and through this gesture, we connect with love and intention- afterall, these are the two spiritual impressions that truly last.

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Time May Heal All Things but Love Does the Trick

My brother told me in his last weeks that when someone asks you, "How are you?" it's so general that he's more comfortable being asked, "How are you feeling, today?" because one day differs from the next.
He was telling me something so I began to ask him everyday how he was feeling. Sometimes he felt okay and other days he admitted a bad day, but what I did was extend compassion. I provided a comfortable, safe place to be open with our feelings. And even on his apparent bad days, he pulled me aside a couple times and offered to be my listener, "You can always come to me, Yolie. Anything you want to say, I won't judge you, I'll just listen. Come to me and cry it out". He looked into my eyes and held my hands. I silently cried while he embraced me. And still, I said nothing. Looking back, even though he was being the natural big brother, he was also reaching for me for himself. I can't tell you how often I dig my hands into themselves wanting nothing more than to hold him and have him cry it out. He needed a good, open, snot everywhere cry with nothing but love.

A year has passed, today on 9/17/13, when he took his last breath and closed his eyes for the final time.
To be perfectly honest, I didn't know how I would feel. My friend worried that I'd fall into a pit of despair looping his loss in my mind and the experience surrounding it. But I didn't fall as hard because the night before he passed away was the tough day...knowing he was in his desperate moments the night before he died- not the entire day of. By the time we woke up that morning, he'd been gone for a few hours and already in a place of love. Of course, I didn't think about that when I found him; it's taken me a year to discover a fraction of peace in that fact.

A year of denial and sorrow and guilt and desperate attempts to bring him back, has been beyond exhausting. Emotionally draining, tired all the time, mentally preoccupied and prone to a nap if given the opportunity. Geez, and so forgetful. Dramatically so. I forget things as I'm remembering them- I've truly become that absent-minded.
Anytime someone told me that I seem to be "doing better" or "managing well", I became defensive for having progress pointed out. Distance from the emotional core of my brother's passing meant losing him and the day he died-- pain makes me feel close to him. The initial shock and pain of "he's dead" is the last time I was with him in the same room. It's the last time present emotion ties back to him while he was physically present was with me. Does that make sense? And "doing better" also meant I was betraying him.
I've consumed myself with his life and his dailies and his activities and his friends and his traditions to keep him alive for me, to feel that he's physically here still. That was unsuccessful so I began to try instead, to do what his close friend says he began almost immediately, "I live my life according to the positivity in his life and not his last few weeks. His darkest life was at the very end and only in the end". I didn't understand this notion but I envied his optimism. How do I shut out the worst and live with the best?

A shift occurred a couple weeks ago when words and messages were communicated to me from him-and everything spoken to me was spot on- his words, his thoughts, my concerns, his love.
The gears shifted as I found my footing and fumbled with, "If you want to forgive yourself, forgive yourself for creating blame". Ahhh...here I was begging for forgiveness, profusely apologizing to the air and in my dreams, only to suddenly realize that he wasn't forgiving me because there's nothing to forgive me for.
How poetically beautiful and resigning this is!
It's taken a year, an entire year of deep-seeded grief to slowly make my way out of, and gravitate into healing. The last year I compare to the prior year with him when memories were tangible and he was physically alive. Now, as i move forward into the second year without him, I will compare my healing to my grief of losing him. It's only been a year, but the needle has moved and so am I.


Sunday, September 14, 2014

I Want to Die Alive

I've never prayed so hard for an afterlife; a space beyond the one we dwell and give our all to.
Death happens. I've lived with the thought that my dad watches over me and all my days. I've spent countless minutes directly speaking to him and feeling embarrassed for mistakes that I committed and sins that he would disprove of. He was the only existence I believed lived beyond me--but I never thought of him as living in Heaven--I simply thought of him as a spirit who checks in on me from time to time, appears when I call him and sends me earthly signs to show me he's listening.
Then my brother Charley passed away and the idea of the source of all life took hold of me and my scarcely pray-prayers. No matter the certainty of my faith that Charley is with God and freely existing in nothing but love, I have a desperate need to know we return to love. That all the days and years spent here aren't in vain and that we are here to live and learn.
My hope is that when Charley's soul passed through this life and left his body behind, he immediately felt love and release. Nothing ached, his heart felt serene and his mind wondered where his pain went; but it didn't matter because Jesus, he is being embraced by a love he never felt here on Earth nor in the words people spoke to him. And then he saw himself, his lifeless body and felt some sense of remorse, some sense of aggravation for leaving us as he did. For dying and causing the immeasurable pain I'm in, for leaving the girl he's known for his forever and the woman he came to know.
When I stepped into the circle of death, I covered my mouth and violently shook my head. I wanted nothing more than to believe that my whole life span was not dead. That the eternal stinging in my soul was a mistake. I turned away and screamed a primal scream- a scream that released a fight I will never win. One that pierced the sky and rang in my ears and one that the love Charley stood in, could feel. I felt him there with me, sorrowful and inaccessible, he watched me drop to my knees and pound the floor with my fist until it throbbed and my eyes bled with inconsolable tears. I screamed into the warm air of that moment knowing that it was done. This was his end and my beginnings of this life without him.
This last year has moved as slowly as possible. I would gladly have labor contractions for eternity than to live life without my brother. Grief, as I've stated before, is my dark passenger. It goes where I go and seldomly takes a backseat. But when it does, man, am I living with smiles in my heart and naked emotion spilling from my gut. I want to live and love and learn and take my lessons with me back to our source of all. I want to show Charley that I will continue to live with him in everything I do. I want to travel to all the places I want damnit, and seed the relationships that are worthy of life and self. I want to invest in the opposites of the ugly hearts Charley invested in (athough I believe everyone needs love), I want to live my life hoping that I can be just as proud of myself as he is, but more than anything, I have decided to live today and again tomorrow, and heck maybe the day after.
It's true..."one day at a time"...eventhough these are empty words that fall upon emptiness, it's the only way to live when you're hurting. And when I cry, it's perfectly acceptable. And when I isolate myself, it's understandable. And when I smile, please let me without expectation that I will smile all day. I can only hope that when I die, I will know that I lived for most of it.