Today should have been a good day. I slept in (making up for the “spring forward” loss of an hour to daylight savings time). I exercised after breakfast, slogging (slow jogging) and walking four miles. I got a load of laundry done! And I had a wonderful lunch with a friend I haven’t seen for quite some time - which brought the added bonus of a beautiful springtime drive through the foothills. As I write this, I’m sitting on my deck watching the sheep I purchased yesterday graze on my hillside. And yet…. Unexpectedly, today was a hard day.
For some reason, on the drive to Placerville, my mind kept going back to the trauma of Sami’s illness. To the seizures. To holding Sami’s hand after both craniotomies, while she came out of anesthesia. To holding her hand while she passed away six months later. To watching her slip away during two weeks of hospice. To realizing that the three weeks we spent in San Francisco didn’t really help, after all. Tonight, after a day in which I really didn’t do all that much physically, I’m exhausted. Trauma and grief, even now, have the power to wear me out.
I’ve been traveling quite a bit since mid January, which is also part of the reason I’m tired. I wonder if exhaustion opens the door to grief at this point in the process? Or if grief intensifies exhaustion. I expect grief and exhaustion work in both directions; regardless, I am incredibly tired tonight.
Part of my sadness, I think, stems from wishing I could tell Sami about my week - my trip to San Diego and the people I met. The talks I gave on livestock guardian dogs, and the positive feedback I received after the talks. Emma’s new job. Lara and Micah’s wedding preparations. Even the little aggravations that piss me off during a normal work week. I have some wonderful friends who are always willing to listen, but today, I wished Sami was here to talk.
Three years ago this week, we went to UCSF for a second opinion about Sami’s brain tumor, and to learn about the possibility of a clinical trial. We came hope hopeful, but that hope ebbed through the course of radiation and chemotherapy treatments in March and April of 2023. As I’ve written before, I know my grief began on that evening in January 2023 when we learned there was a mass on Sami’s brain. That was the rubicon for us - the before and after point of inflection. Today, my mind also went back to those last normal days before we knew anything was wrong. The last normal experiences we had as a couple. As a family. Days that we’ll never experience again.
Again, my grief feels like being on the ocean. At this point, three years in, the ocean of my grief is mostly a gentle rocking motion that doesn’t interrupt my life, but reminds me of its presence. But occasionally (and today was one of those occasions), a big wave swamps my boat. On days like this, grief rolls me over. I know the ocean will be gentle again, but I’ve also learned to expect the occasional storm.
