Archive for the ‘Grief’ Category

I awoke this afternoon to news of a terrorist attack during the Boston Marathon, this country’s premier track event and one of the most challenging marathons in the world. Runners from across the globe come to Boston in hope of just finishing the 26-mile race, forget about winning, while the elite of the elite dreamed of taking home the grand prize, usually to another country.

Two explosions rang out at and near the Finish line killing three people, including little 8-year-old Martin Richard of Dorchester, and injuring over 130, causing the sidewalks to run red with blood as disembodied limbs severed by the shrapnel-heavy blast littered the street. Richard attended the race with his mother and sister to cheer his father as he crossed the Finish line. The Boston Globe is reporting his mother and sister as being “grievously injured.”

I went about my daily chores with MSNBC in the background providing audio coverage I could hear in the kitchen and video coverage I could see when I sat down to eat. The attack itself is tragic, but hearing that an 8-year-old little boy lost his life is just devastating. As Rachel Maddow is now reporting, there are several other children with very serious injuries, some of whom may well lose one or two limbs.

Man comforting victim of Boston Marathon bombing

Man comforting bombing victim. Photo by John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images,

I have wanted to have children since I was a child. I got pregnant while in undergrad, but lost the child almost as soon as I found out s/he was inside of me. I knew that I was pregnant even before I went to see a doctor. When the requisite blood work was done, the hormone indicating pregnancy was higher than it would be if I weren’t pregnant, but not high enough to signal a viable pregnancy. Sure enough, within hours, my baby was gone.

I can imagine what the parents of the injured children are going through. It is a pain like no other. There is little to do except sit with your child; hold his/her hand; pray to whatever higher power there may or may not be, and; will the child’s body to heal. In other words, parents are totally helpless. It’s up to the nurses, doctors and the child’s physical and metaphysical strength to determine the outcome. For at least one set of parents, the outcome was as bad as it gets.

I have never had a living, breathing child born after being carried inside of me for nine months. My baby never drew a breath. I never felt the flutter of him or her moving nor having his or her head pressing against my bladder and having to run to the restroom. I didn’t have the privilege of choosing furniture for a nursery that I’d painted, or had painted, in a beautiful sky blue and yellow. Nor could I pick out onesies in preparation for bringing him or her home from the hospital. The only thing I had was the blood of losing my baby. Even then, there were few signs I’d actually miscarried.

My body gave hints of carrying someone else inside of it. Just hints, but pretty significant ones. Nevertheless, I knew. I was so afraid because I was so young. I worried that my parents and other relatives would be disappointed in me. Our family, until relatively recently, didn’t have unwed mothers. Even now, the only unwed mothers come from one branch of the family tree. I was considering in vitro or simply buying the “genetic material” from a clinic in San Francisco I’d scouted some years ago, but had to drop all plans when I learned I needed a second operation on my spine. As afraid as I was when I got pregnant in undergrad I had every intention of keeping my baby even if the father did nothing but pay child support, effectively leaving me to raise our child alone. I am very much in favor of choice, but I wanted that child. If I wanted him/her so badly, why did I feel relieved when I miscarried? I wish I could answer that question, but I can’t because I don’t know.

What I do know is that I can feel the terror of those parents anxiously awaiting good news from doctors in charge of their children’s cases. I feel the longing and the empty space in the lives of the parents and loved ones of the little boy who was killed. I feel the rage caused by some maniac with no regard for life and willing to kill people who’d done nothing but stand on the sidelines of a race to cheer the runners on. How much more basic a scene can there be? But that’s one of the reasons why the bomber chose this particular target. Twenty-six miles is a long route to secure. Inevitably, there will be holes in that security. The bomber found at least two and probably three. One of those holes was near a little eight-year-old boy who will never see the inside of his bedroom again; will never be held in his mother’s arms again; will never learn to drive; never get grounded for staying out too late; never go off to college; never find his first love; never get married, and; never have children of his own. The bomber didn’t just kill one little boy for whatever cause he was protesting. He killed a family’s dreams for their child and halted a branch of their family tree as if with a chainsaw.

It took me about 20 years to grieve the loss of the child I would have had. The father just learned about it last week, not that he particularly gives a damn. However, do I care. I care because that baby was inside of me if even for a little while. I care because I never had a chance to know him or her as they grew up. I care because I didn’t have the honor of sitting next to a hospital bed holding his or her hand when s/he was sick nor worrying nor feeling jubilant when s/he got better. I wanted all of those moments, good, bad and horrible. But for whatever reason, I will probably never get the chance. My branch of the family tree will end with me.

What happened today is horrific. That the bomber killed at least one child makes it more so. For all we know, that kid could have invented a truly clean energy source when he grew up. Maybe he’d be the next Steve Jobs or the next Stephen Hawking or the next Ang Lee. The future was his to grab and hold onto as tightly as possible. Now, the only thing he’ll have is a funeral and, perhaps, a grave. His parents will have holes in their hearts that nothing and no one will ever remotely fill. They will cry for the rest of their lives as something or someone reminds them of the little boy they lost. That’s the part I do know. I don’t know it in the same way, but I know it nonetheless. I can think of nothing more sad than the wailing of a mother for the baby she lost and can never replace. May the spirits of the little boy killed this afternoon and the spirit of the child I lost both find new homes where they can be happy, loved and carefree as long as possible. In other words, a place where they get to live through their childhoods and, like other children, grow into adulthood and families of their own.

Peace be with you little ones. Peace be with you.

It’s hard for me to believe, but Words From A Wicked Woman has been in existence since January, 2007. Little did I know that my side project would become my driving professional focus six years later. With time comes change and change is most definitely coming!

Words From A Wicked Woman blog is moving!

Veteran TWW readers know that there are plans afoot to turn our little blog into a full-fledged women’s magazine like no other in existence. One of the steps needed is a new hosting site. I deeply regret that I have no choice but to leave the WordPress family, but it simply isn’t economically viable for a start-up. Therefore, we are moving as of April 15, 2013. The host we move to doesn’t really matter. What matters is that readers can read and posters can post; there is space for various graphic elements, and; the site has an attractive design that leaves room for advertisers. All of those things are achievable on the new host at a much lower cost. Ideally, no one should notice the difference unless they use the “https://thewickedwoman.wordpress.com” address. If so, they can use the TWW domain from now on. Whatever the case may be, the magazine will have a slightly different domain when it goes live in Q3 2013 even though the blog will remain.

I’d like to take a moment to update you on what’s going on with with my real life and the magazine.

As many of you know, my mother died extremely suddenly in February, 2012. As her only heir and executrix of her estate, there have been many issues to address. There have been times when I’ve looked up at the sky to rant and scream at my mother’s spirit because, frankly, she left a great many challenges for me to overcome–somehow. As frustrated as I get at times, I miss her terribly and have not had more than two weeks over the last year to grieve thanks to the aforementioned challenges. Fortunately, I have an absolutely fabulous attorney who has come up with creative ways to keep me and this household going when the walls started to close in. If anyone in Ohio is in need of a probate or small corporate attorney, write to me and I’d be more than comfortable passing his name along. The other partner handles personal injury and is about as good as they get when it comes to staving off foreclosures. Again, write if you need a referral. I don’t get anything from referring people except the satisfaction of knowing that I’ve brought a potential client together with a potential service provider. See About The Wicked Woman for my e-mail address.

One of my orthopedists (I have four), Dr. Wael Barsoum, dropped a bombshell on me about three weeks ago. At best, I need a revision (doctor-speak for “fix” or “replace” a previous procedure) of the total knee replacement I had in 2010. I took nearly all of 2008-2010 off of TWW because I was ill. It was an extremely difficult time for me because I found myself in the hospital at least once a year and had four operations from 2005-2010. The last was the 2010 left knee replacement and I caught pneumonia while in the hospital. Nevertheless, compared to the two operations I’d had on my spine to remove cysts compressing the nerves and cord, rehabbing my knee was a figurative–and sometimes literal–walk in the park. Not anymore!

Forgetting the current pain for the moment, the operation to revise a total knee is much more complex than the original surgery. Remember, too, that this portion of my body has already been assaulted and continues to be assaulted with every fall I take and each time I must, for various reasons, kneel on that knee. (I fall a lot due to other medical issues that may yet be addressed in the near future.) Therefore, this second operation will likely leave me in pretty miserable shape for a few weeks longer than the initial replacement. The first one kept me in the hospital and rehab for three and one-half weeks. The ortho who diagnosed the need for a revision can’t work me in until August, so I’m going to see the surgeon who performed the original replacement, Dr. Matthew Kraay of University Hospitals of Cleveland, with the hope that he can fit me in sooner. Frankly, I doubt it. According to U.S. News & World Report, he’s in the Top 1% of orthopedists in the country. He is also the director of the Center for Joint Replacement and Preservation at UH and holds a chair named partially after my first orthopedist, Dr. Kingsbury Heiple, a world-reknown specialist in my birth defect. I should point out that the need for revision is in no way Dr. Kraay’s fault. Indeed, he told me the last time I saw him that there would come a point where he couldn’t put Humpty Dumpty back together again. I think that point and I have met and shaken hands.

Doctor Barsoum, the diagnosing doctor, is no slouch. He is chairman of surgical operations and vice chairman of the Department of Orthopedics at Cleveland Clinic. In addition, he holds a simultaneous appointment in the Department of Bioengineering with over 30 patents in his name. I don’t know how one person finds enough time in a 24-hour day to do all of that, but he does. He’s also a very nice fellow. There is blame to be placed, but it is useless to do so and I have better things to do right now.

It is very possible that I will be completely sidelined for over a month due to this upcoming surgery. In addition, I still have a fiduciary duty to my mother’s estate. The two combined make for an extremely serious situation. Without divulging more, it is safe to say that I have already entered that situation and am seeking a temporary respite from the pressure. That is why I have posted nothing here since January 2. However, the more challenges I face, the more I realize that Wicked Woman Magazine has to get off the ground as soon as it can. The problem now is funding. There are venture capital and private equity firms out there that may well be interested, but I haven’t had the time to sit back and put what’s in my head on paper. I doubt that I will have that time until next week at best.

The situation above is very complex, but this blog has above-average readers. Therefore, I’m certain that you will comprehend how challenging the months ahead will be. However, if I have not despaired, no one should. In fact, I’m quite optimistic. I know that TWW and Wicked Woman Magazine are the proverbial Little Publications That Could. And they will!

Should I or shouldn’t I?

Posted: December 18, 2012 in Blogging, Death, Grief, Mom, Personal
Tags: , , ,

Image courtesy of http://www.sxc.hu/ and Kriss Szkurlatowski

Image courtesy of http://www.sxc.hu/ and Kriss Szkurlatowski

There is some very nice news to report regarding the transformation of this blog into a full-fledged online magazine. The question for me now becomes: When should I tell my readers? Hmm . . . Well, I could save it until Christmas, but there are just too many Christian connotations, even though most people don’t realize they’re celebrating a co-opted version of a pagan holiday. No, that won’t do. I’m kind of in favor of saving it until New Year’s Eve or even New Year’s Day. Mind you, I’ve known about this particular tasty treat for well over a month now. I’ve been sitting on it because my life is fairly chaotic and, frankly, pretty darn sad due to my mother’s very sudden death in February.

The other reason I’ve been sitting on this little gem is because I knew there would come a day and time when I would need to present something happy or exciting or just not sad. New Year’s Eve is when we shut the door on one year and open the door to another. We say goodbye to the hardships and travails of one time and look forward to better times to come. If ever there was a year that needed to close, it is this one. I’m sure there are people who are sorry to see 2012 pass, but I am not one of them. This will forever be the year I lost the person who knew me best in some ways and knew me least in others. And with those words, I believe I’ve made a concrete decision. I will wait until New Year’s Day. It is the day that holds the most promise and the perfect time to reveal something else that holds tremendous promise and, I dare say, hope. That, I believe, is how it should be.

About 24 hours ago I taped a message that said I’d post something on TWW this week. I can’t. While no one, including me, expected me to feel better, I expected to be able to handle my mother’s passing a little better than I am. I’m not being too critical of myself. I am only reporting the facts of my feelings.

I didn’t make a video this time because, frankly, I look worse than I did in the first two. *sigh* Yes, I am vain, even under these circumstances. I look like hell because I feel like hell. I did, however, go back to doing what I’ve advised others: I put on clothing that made me look much better than I felt. I must say, I have to love Lane Bryant’s bras. Coupled with a nice, tight sleeveless white top, those people I encountered interested in women’s boobs were very happy to see me. 

Speaking of Lane Bryant, I was in the store today returning the birthday present my mother never saw or got to wear when I noticed that there was a brand new assortment of underwear. As I was having the exchange and return rung up, I stared at the sales person folding and arranging the brand new panties and almost salivated. New underwear for me is like cocaine for an addict. It was all I could do to keep that credit card focused on where it was supposed to be. I will be back, however, very soon and with Real Women’s Dollars and coupons in hand.

It was after the return of the Lane Bryant merchandise that I fell apart very completely in the parking lot. I couldn’t move, no sound could escape my mouth, I couldn’t breathe and I thought my nearly silent sobs would destroy me then and there. I would have been happy to crawl into my mother’s urn with her if I didn’t have one very old cat, an Airedale, Micki, who’s really losing it nearly as badly as I am, an alpha bitch who has unexpectedly made the transition from being primarily my mother’s dog to being mine very easily, even though I know she understood what was happening by the second or third day. Berry, the alpha, knows what death is because she’s seen it. She was there when I had Lola euthanized because I couldn’t allow her to suffer any more with liver cancer. That was nearly four years ago. The young bitch hasn’t been affected as much as I would have thought. Perhaps it’s because she chose me as her person instead of my mother.

I am very worried about Micki, my Airedale. She’s been very dog aggressive, anxious whenever I’m out of her sight and acting out by stealing anything and everything she can reach and get her mouth around. Some of this may be cabin fever, but she has never been like this before. I suspect she’s picking up my own unsettled emotions and doesn’t know what to do about them or with them. I’ve had to step in the middle of two actual fights today. One was with Micki and Snippet and the other was between Micki and Berry. It was the latter that was getting seriously dangerous. Berry is built like a Dachshund who’s gone a little bit wrong around the ears. We believe her father was a black and silver Miniature Schnauzer. Thankfully, Micki respects me as the overall pack leader. A few growls from me thrown her way made her back off, but they both got in some good licks before it was all over. I feel so terrible for her and I don’t know what to do except spend more time with her. I’m considering taking her to the park without the other two so that she can run off some of her anxiety and we can bond even more than we are now. My poor baby just makes me want to cry writing this.

Reporting the activities in my household is my way of saying that I need more time. I and the girls are too unsettled for me to go through my mailboxes, read the appropriate mailings and then write about them.I have to give myself a little more time. Therefore, I won’t be back her until the week of the 26th (I hope). That’s a tricky week because it contains the one month anniversary of my mother’s passing. I will deal with it the best I can, but it’s going to be very difficult. It’s times like this when I wish I weren’t an only child.