I traveled to Los Angeles this past weekend for my every-6-month checkup appointment with my cardiologist (it's a long story as to why I see a cardiologist so far from home. By the way, the appointment went well, everything is fine). The weekend was MUCH more difficult than I anticipated because, other than when I went to LA for his funeral (numb the entire trip), this was the first time I've gone to LA (out of countless trips) without Kevin.
So many aspects of the visit triggered loneliness, sadness, and even fear. Waiting at the doctor's office, where Kevin, with the clinical demeanor he normally reserved for his patients (he was a nurse), would always make sure we understood everything the doctor was saying. Visiting our friend who lives in Santa Monica, as we did so many times before. She lives just down the street from Palisades Park, the site of our wedding almost three years ago. Memories, that while very happy, are very painful to relive. That's quite a paradox, which I'm still trying to pick apart and understand.
Spending time with his sister was really hard - not because I don't like spending time with her, she's wonderful and I love her, but again, so many memories. Same thing with his dad.
Hell, for that matter just arriving at LAX...pulling up to the departures terminal...going through security...waiting for my flight. All those things that we did together, so many times, became almost unbearable to face alone.
But face them I did, and while I nearly dissolved into a puddle of tears and sobbing a few times over the course of the weekend, I made it.
Thoughts on grief and loss from a man whose husband died suddenly when he was 50 years old.
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
Bittersweet weekend
I sing with the New Mexico Gay Men's Chorus. This weekend we had our Pride performances, which were the final performances of the season. All three performances went well, and I really enjoyed the whole season!
I have come to really depend on the sense of family I feel with the guys in the chorus; after all, they've been there for me when I needed their love and support these past couple of months. Now there will be no weekly trips to Albuquerque (about an hour from where I live) for rehearsal, not until September. I don't know what I'm gonna do without them this summer.
Sure, I'll probably see a few of the guys at some point during the summer, but it won't be like being in the same space with the whole group at once, singing in harmony. I'm afraid it's going to be a rough summer.
I have come to really depend on the sense of family I feel with the guys in the chorus; after all, they've been there for me when I needed their love and support these past couple of months. Now there will be no weekly trips to Albuquerque (about an hour from where I live) for rehearsal, not until September. I don't know what I'm gonna do without them this summer.
Sure, I'll probably see a few of the guys at some point during the summer, but it won't be like being in the same space with the whole group at once, singing in harmony. I'm afraid it's going to be a rough summer.
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Jealousy & bitterness
I've caught myself several times in the past couple of weeks feeling extreme jealousy and bitterness towards people I see experiencing a very specific form of happiness. It's not like I'm jealous of or bitter towards everyone who's happy, but I am very much so towards "the happy couple".
For example, when I see a wedding on a TV show, while everyone else is shedding tears of joy, I'm shedding hot, angry tears of jealousy and sadness. When I see a couple holding hands, walking down the street, smiling and having an intimate conversation, I feel an almost uncontrollable sense of loneliness as well as bitterness towards them.
It isn't their fault, and I feel ashamed for feeling this way. But I can't help it. I want what they have; I want back what I had before it was taken away from me. It's so unfair!
While our relationship and our marriage wasn't perfect, it was mostly good and mostly happy; and Kevin and I did a lot of work to keep it that way. We worked on communication, we saw our therapists (both our individual therapists and our couples therapist) regularly; in short, we did everything in our power to keep our wedding vows. So to have all that so unceremoniously yanked away feels like a huge cosmic insult on top of injury.
I'm repulsed by these feelings I have; they stain my conscience and defile my sense of well-being. How do I get rid of the jealousy and bitterness and replace them with positive feelings towards these unsuspecting happy couples?
For example, when I see a wedding on a TV show, while everyone else is shedding tears of joy, I'm shedding hot, angry tears of jealousy and sadness. When I see a couple holding hands, walking down the street, smiling and having an intimate conversation, I feel an almost uncontrollable sense of loneliness as well as bitterness towards them.
It isn't their fault, and I feel ashamed for feeling this way. But I can't help it. I want what they have; I want back what I had before it was taken away from me. It's so unfair!
While our relationship and our marriage wasn't perfect, it was mostly good and mostly happy; and Kevin and I did a lot of work to keep it that way. We worked on communication, we saw our therapists (both our individual therapists and our couples therapist) regularly; in short, we did everything in our power to keep our wedding vows. So to have all that so unceremoniously yanked away feels like a huge cosmic insult on top of injury.
I'm repulsed by these feelings I have; they stain my conscience and defile my sense of well-being. How do I get rid of the jealousy and bitterness and replace them with positive feelings towards these unsuspecting happy couples?
Saturday, June 3, 2017
Making a difference
My husband Kevin was a big supporter of Youth Heartline (www.youthheartline.org), a nonprofit based in Taos, NM, which has as its mission "to make life safer and better for vulnerable children and families in the community", which it carries out through outreach & advocacy programs, supervised visitation monitoring, an afterschool enrichment program, and more.
Yesterday, I was told that their board of directors voted unanimously to name their endowment fund the "Kevin Wolff Endowment for Youth Heartline" (name subject to slight change, to make it "flow" better).
I am overwhelmed with emotion at this announcement - it is such an honor to Kevin's memory, and the endowment (which he helped start) will help secure the future of the vital programs and services that Youth Heartline provides. In an uncertain political climate where absolutely nothing is safe from funding cuts on the whims of our current leadership, private funding for these programs and services is needed now more than ever.
Please read more about the essential work that Youth Heartline does at www.youthheartline.org. Then make a donation. You can make a one-time contribution, set up a monthly contribution, or even have Amazon donate each time you make a purchase through their Amazon Smile program! Every donation helps, no matter how large or small.
Yesterday, I was told that their board of directors voted unanimously to name their endowment fund the "Kevin Wolff Endowment for Youth Heartline" (name subject to slight change, to make it "flow" better).
I am overwhelmed with emotion at this announcement - it is such an honor to Kevin's memory, and the endowment (which he helped start) will help secure the future of the vital programs and services that Youth Heartline provides. In an uncertain political climate where absolutely nothing is safe from funding cuts on the whims of our current leadership, private funding for these programs and services is needed now more than ever.
Please read more about the essential work that Youth Heartline does at www.youthheartline.org. Then make a donation. You can make a one-time contribution, set up a monthly contribution, or even have Amazon donate each time you make a purchase through their Amazon Smile program! Every donation helps, no matter how large or small.
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