Gay Lives Matter

I consider myself to be open minded. I love my gay friends and family and I respect and admire the courage it must take to live openly as gay when society condemns a gay lifestyle and some consider it sinful. As a Christian, the God I know loves all of us regardless of who we love.

I have often thought it would be sad if either of my children turned out to be gay. It could never change my love for them; however, I would selfishly mourn not having biological grandchildren and I would worry about the obstacles they would face in gaining acceptance from others. So when a friend of mine with 3 boys said she had always hoped one of her boys would be gay, I wasn’t just surprised – I was shocked. She explained that it would be so fun to have another son or son in law in her life that she could swap recipes with and get fashion and decorating ideas from. Of course this makes it sound like all gay men have a keen sense of design. (Maybe they do). I really admire my girlfriend’s open heart and really love that about her.

Yesterday morning after enjoying a visit from my college friend Gina and husband Wes, Erik helped me with a number of tasks at home. We (actually “he”) changed lightbulbs, hung pictures, moved furniture to the storage room and fixed a door knob. When we were ready to sit down and relax for a while we decided to watch the Nexflix version of Queer Eye. Now is where I switch to my Siskel and Ebert mode.

First of all, this show is about helping others with their fashion, grooming, food, culture and design.  They had me at Hello. (While I have heard of the original Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, I have never watched it.)

Let’s talk about Jonathon. His is my FAV of the FAB 5. Not only is he funny af; he is expressive, cute, joyful, and so full of life. Some would describe him as flamboyant. I wonder if I could figure out a way for him to style my hair? If he would simply touch my hair my life would be complete. I imagine growing my hair long like his and we go out dancing, flipping our hair back and laughing and impressing others with our sexy dance moves. He could totally be my BFF. In a word, I am OBSESSED. But I digress.

Beyond the fun clothing, hairstyles, recipes (including Sangria!), culture and home makeovers is the life changing experiences of the men that are impacted by the work of the FAB 5, five gay men who each have an area of expertise that they lend to a straight man. As I spent my afternoon glued to the TV I alternated between tears and laughter so many times I was an emotional hot mess. I poured some wine and proceeded to watch every episode.

As the FAB 5 interact with strangers who become friends, I am overcome with emotion watching the connections they are making and how it has broken down barriers between religious zealots and gay men, and cops and black men. I see the courage it took for a man to tell his mom he is gay and I can relate to the heartache of families that have lost a dad and husband, struggling with how much they miss their loved one. I have seen the renewed love between a husband and wife that are so overwhelmed raising their children that they do not take time for themselves or each other. In a word, I see LOVE.

As I watch incredible stories of love and acceptance,  I can’t help but think about the brokenness and political divide in our country.  I feel like the FAB 5 are highlighting our differences in a way that is healing and loving, and liberating, one contestant and one viewer at a time.

So while I am open minded, this show has opened my heart in a way that feels so right.  While I know that neither of my kids are gay, I can always hope for a gay grandchild.

 

 

Look for a message on Monday

Monday’s are not a favorite of mine and today was no exception.  After a lonely 3 day weekend, I was in full depression mode when I woke up.  I cancelled my 9 am and went back to bed.  After an hour of tossing and turning and feeling guilty about the other meetings on my calendar I finally got up and dragged myself to work.  As I was getting on the elevator at the office I noticed a yellow slip of paper on the ground.  It said “Look for a message on Monday”.

Hmmm.  I’m always looking for signs and since I went to such a great effort to go to work, I immediately thought that message was meant just for me.

It was a pretty busy day filled with meetings and catching up with staff that I had not connected with in weeks.  Still, my mind kept wandering back to the note.  I thought about my home and the five showings on Sunday.  Maybe my realtor was working up an offer!  I texted her and she said she was in training all day but planned to follow up on all the showings.

So that got me stressing about my renovation project and wondering how I will pay for it without the equity from my home.  And then I started stressing about the color of the cuddle chair for my living room.  Do I really want sage?  I wish it came in navy blue.  And will the benches in my dining room be the same height as a chair?  I frantically texted my decorator who probably thinks I’m crazy.

Get back to work Julie.  You have a million messages to tend to.  One from LinkedIn is intriguing.  McDonalds is looking for a Government Relations Manager.  I read the qualifications and it sounds perfect.  And my brother can put in a good word for me.  Is this the message?  With two years to go till I get my government pension and health benefits for life, this can’t be it.  The timing is off.

So while I’m on LinkedIn I see a page full of suggested contacts and I take a few minutes to review suggested connections.  I see several several colleagues and associates that I am familiar with.  Then I see him.  LInkedIn thinks I should connect with an ex boyfriend from college.  It is tempting – He is still handsome and I understand from Facebook that he is single.  Nope.  Not gonna do it.  If he wants to contact me he can find me.

At 5:15 I call it quits for the day and head to Target for some dish soap and groceries.  Rick would be appalled to know there is a sink full of dirty dishes.  I pass a lady carrying a rolled up carpet that looks just like the pattern I picked out with my designer.   I make a mental note to share this information with my designer and then head to the grocery section looking for a rotisserie chicken and then it hits me.  WTF!  You are in Target, not a full service grocery store.

So I head home and pick up the mail.  Included is an envelope from my attorney.  This is it, I think.  I am finally getting the workman’s comp settlement and I can rest easy about the house selling.  Nope.  Just a request to fill out paperwork authorizing the workman’s comp attorneys to access Rick’s health records. Really?  It took you 23 weeks to ask?

Off to the grocery store I go because I really want chicken noodle soup and I need that rotisserie chicken.  The trip is uneventful – no “messages”.   While eating I watch the Bachelor.  That was a waste of an hour of my life.  After I eat I get a Facebook message from a dear friend  I met in Europe.  At first I think she has been hacked since I got a strange message earlier from another friend.  Turns out the message is legitimate and I learn that my friend is dealing with some serious stress in her life.

Maybe that is the message.  Maybe I need to get over myself.  Stop feeling sorry for myself.  Everyone is dealing with shit.  Lost jobs, unfair treatment, health problems.  Not that losing my husband isn’t way up there on the list of top stressors  – but it happened and there is absolutely nothing I can do about it.  My reality now is that I am a single empty nester.  I hate that.  I absolutely hate it.

So all day I have been searching for a message.  Something to make me feel as though I’m not losing my mind.  Something that will bring me hope.  The kind of hope that will help me spring out of bed at the sound of the alarm, ready to face my day regardless of what day it is.  If might take me a while.  After all, after Monday and Tuesday, even the calendar says “WTF”!

 

I made a new friend!

Growing up, my family moved every few years.  I always dreaded that first day in a new school.  I was terribly shy and worried about who I would sit with at lunch.  It always worked out and when it did, I can clearly remember that glorious feeling of making a new friend.  I’ve made many friends since those grade school days but it wasn’t until recently that I experienced that joyous feeling — the feeling of relief on the first day in a new place, knowing that it’s going to be okay.

I am blessed to have so many wonderful friends in my life.  Friends all over the United States that I met through school and work.  College friends, sorority sisters, neighbors, church friends, girl scout friends, parents of my children’s friends, even friends I made on the internet by being a Skimmbassador.  http://theskimm.com/?r=05119132   (Shameless plug!)

I lost my best friend and that has rocked my world in unimaginable ways.   Coupled with my recent move, I’ve been lonelier than ever.  While I no longer worry about who to eat lunch with, I am on my own in a new place.  My friends are only a phone call or text away but I miss having my best friend to have dinner with and to talk about our days, among other things. Facebook, FaceTime, and lunch dates are great but it’s not the same.  It will never be the same.

Yet my friendships are stronger than ever and I could not be more grateful.. While my besties (pictured here) are my lifelong friends that know me better than anyone, my neighbor friends are in a special class of their own.  These are the friends that jump into action at the first moment of need.  We cook for each other; we run errands for each other; we have coffee together; we drink wine together on our decks; we play Bunco religiously every month; we work out together; we have dinner parties; we attend funerals and weddings and graduations together; we travel together.  A few of them are going to bartend for me at my upcoming black tie anniversary party.  I love them so.  We are a community.

Why in the world did I move away from such a wonderful neighborhood where I have such an incredible support network of friends?  Whoever buys my home in Oswego is in for a treat and I’m not even charging extra for the amazing friends they are going to meet.

So when I met a new friend earlier this week, a friend just one floor below me, I felt that same excitement as I did after my first day of fourth grade in Fayetteville, Arkansas.  Mind you, I have not met this new neighbor in person but as soon as I read her bio we briefly chatted over Facebook messenger.   Now I cannot wait for her to move in.  Like me, she is a single, empty nester career woman with college kids.  And according to her Instagram she is a foodie and wine lover.  Sounds like a match made in heaven, right?

While I love my new building, I would guess the average owner is around 75 and retired.  OK – I’m exaggerating and I have nothing against older friends – in fact, I really enjoyed meeting many neighbors at the holiday party and one older gentleman planted the idea of a progressive dinner party for everyone in the “C/D Tier” and I’m all over that!   However, when I think of my closest friends I think about girlfriends that I can call in a pinch – ones that will drink wine with me while I cry about how unfair it is to be a widow at age 53; friends that will never tire of me sharing stories of Rick.   So you can imagine my excitement to be able to find a new friend my age in my new neighborhood with some common interests.

If she reads this I hope she won’t be creeped out by my instant womance (that is the female version of bromance by the way) and I hope she doesn’t feel pressured to live up to the high standards that my Gates Creek gals have set.  Who knows… when we meet, one of us may decide there is just no chemistry for a womance but for now, I am excited by the possibility.  And if things work out,  I can call my mom and say, “Guess what mom!  I made a new friend!”

 

I miss you

Dear Rick,

After a week of sleeping in, it’s the night before I go back to work and I am laying awake willing myself to get some sleep before the alarm goes off at 5.  I will hit the snooze as you know.  I’m still not a morning person.  I know how much that annoyed you and I would give anything to see your face in the morning even if it’s an irritated plea for me to get up at the sound of the first alarm.

I worked on our taxes today and had to change my status to widowed.  Turbotax sends their condolences.

I also worked on setting up more repairs for the sale of our Oswego home.  With the help of our friend Tim, the place looks brand new.  With the help of our friend Rebecca it is under contract and she is getting me a fair price for it.  And our neighbors are clearing the snow for us until it is officially sold.  I am so thankful for everyone’s help as I navigate this stuff on my own.

Last night I was at your sisters for bunco.  It was good to see all of our friends but it was hard for me thinking that you should be there also.  I retreated upstairs briefly when I felt the tears coming on.  I texted Erik and he came and picked me up.  He got me safely home in the snowstorm while I had a good drunk cry.  He is such a caring and helpful young man – just like you.  I want you to know how much he has grown up so much since your death.   He is taking good care of me and also being a responsible student.  This morning, he cleared two feet of snow off my car and took me to the store.  We talked about financial security and he assured me that you and I have taught him how important it is for him to live within his means.  He has expensive taste but he plans on getting a good job when he graduates.  Next week he is getting a mental toughness award from the National Football Federation and I just need to believe that you will be with us at Halas Hall as he gives his acceptance speech.

Your “Pumpkin” is doing awesome also.  She got a job and she is coming to visit me this weekend.  Can you believe she will soon be 23 years old!?  She is making me go to the gym with her – I need that push as I’ve gotten out of my fitness routine.  To thank her I will offer to take her out for ice cream but I imagine she will be giving that up for Lent.  She is working so hard to manage her grief and I am so amazed at her strength.  I know you are so proud of her and I want you to know I am trying to be here for her in the way you were.  You were the person she could count on when she just needed to talk and needed someone to listen and not try to fix things for her.

And I am doing the best I know how.

Last night I dreamt (again) that you were really alive.  It was all a big mistake and you assured me that you had corrected the death certificate paperwork.  Probably because I dreamt another time that you could not get your drivers license renewed because I had filed a death certificate with the Secretary of State.   While these dreams bring me moments of joy the reality that sets in when I wake up leaves me depressed all day.  As each day goes by I am plagued by a deeper sadness and I am afraid.   I fear that I will forget your smile and your touch.  I fear that I won’t find joy again or if I do, I fear it will erase the joyous memories I had with you.

I pray every day that the kids and I  can find peace in the wonderful memories we have.  Thank you for being such a wonderful husband and father.

I miss you so much.

Love,

Julie

Vacation

Dearest Rick,

Back home it is snowing and everyone is growing weary of the cold.  I’m not sure if the groundhog saw his shadow last week but I am sure that spring will not be here fast enough.

Here in Florida I am enjoying time away catching up with my parents.  We had lunch and sangria with   Uncle Lee and Aunt Linda yesterday.  Today I visited with Aunt Bev and Uncle Bob and we had dinner with my cousin Stephanie who is town on business.   It is perfect pool weather and I have taken nice long walks and had time to start reading a book.  I only checked my work email once so far – I can’t help it you know.  It will make it easier to jump back in when I return to work on Monday.

Life has been moving so fast.  I’ve been looking forward to this break to read, rest and relax.  I was looking forward to a change of scenery to help take my mind off of life without you.  But there are reminders of you everywhere.  I see you in the pool lifting the kids on your shoulders and launching them and smiling as they land with a big splash and lots of laughter.  I see you knocking on the bathroom window while I shower, trying to prank me.  I see us playing pinochle with mom and dad as the kids watch TV on the air mattress in the front room.  I see you walking around Westwind in your shorts while all the snowbirds have jackets on because it dropped below 70 degrees.  You are proudly telling them you are from up north.  It isn’t obvious with your year round tan, a benefit of working outside each day.

When I went to sleep last night, I longed for you to surprise me in the middle of the night, like you did on Fathers day so many years ago when the kids and I were here for two weeks.  At the time I thought I was dreaming and when I realized you were really standing there, it was one of the sweetest surprises of my life.  It was the perfect example of how you made tym for me and the kids.

Life is so much harder without you.  Selling the house, buying property, inspections, home repairs, remodeling contracts, doing the taxes, and yes, even the laundry.

Vacationing without you shouldn’t be hard too.  But it is.  I’m grateful for the many wonderful vacations we took to Hawaii , Mexico and Florida.  I have lots of sweet memories from those wonderful trips.        There will be no new memories to make with you having fun in the sun so I will cling to the old memories as I work on my tan.

Love,

Julie

 

Just Looking

Last night I spent some time with my new neighbors Ann and Michael.  They are a lovely couple, also new to the building having relocated from California.  They have have a beautiful art collection, love the Cubs, lean left politically and have excellent taste in wine.  I see many great times ahead as this friendship continues to grow.

We shared an amazing bottle of Cabernet as we discussed a decorating plan for our shared foyer and we ordered nameplates for our doors.  Ann referred me to a fabulous hairdresser that knows just how to make women over 50 look fabulous and as I left she agreed to look out for packages by my back door while I’m away on business.

Back in my apartment, I settled in with one more glass of wine and feeling on a roll with making new connections, I started scoping out some dating web sites.  WHAT?  Oh Boy.  I blame it on my colleague who lost her husband a month after Rick passed.  She planted the idea earlier in the day when we were stair climbing on a work break.

I didn’t post any pictures or create a profile.  I was just looking.  Like I respond to the sales clerks offering their assistance in a fancy store where I cannot afford the merchandise… “No thank you…I’m just looking”

I checked out a few profiles and while a few were interesting, none resonated with me even a little.  I started to imagine meeting someone for coffee, going to a show, starting anew in establishing a relationship and it scared the hell out of me.  If I decide I’m not interested how do I bow out gracefully?  If I am interested and he is not, how do I deal with the rejection?   Is there someone out there that can come close to the man I loved for 27 years?

I panicked.  Undo!  Unsubscribe!   That didn’t work.  This isn’t an online retailer Julie!

Of course the internet has a way of sending you down a rabbit hole and I soon got emails with  “More Matches are ready for your review” and referrals to articles like “Top Ten Dating Mistakes to Avoid”.    I feel like I started down a path that I can’t undo.  There is no rewind button when it comes to death.

But I can press pause.  I need to Maketym for so many things as I settle in to my new home.  I’m in the midst of a remodel and redecorating project and I’m planning a black tie affair for my wedding anniversary.   Then I can pick up on the many quilting and scrapbook and stamping projects that I’ve put on hold.  I have web design and writing classes to take, concerts and sporting events to attend, reunions to plan.  And lots of new wine to try.  Meanwhile, I’m just looking.

Share Don’t Compare

The other night I had dinner with a good friend (Jill) who is also a widow.

Our families have been friends since we met at church about 15 years ago.  We spent many Friday nights at bible studies (with adult beverages) while our children played in the basement or yard.  We spent a fun weekend in the Dells with another church family; we attended our kids sporting events together; we had a lot in common.  We still do.  Our husbands, the dads to our adult children are gone.

As we both grieve, we are both writing.  Jill is studying scripture and journaling her thoughts as she studies God’s word for peace and direction.  While her writings are private and mine are published for the world to see, both of us are finding comfort in expressing our thoughts and feelings.  Our writings do not result in answers to why death came so early for our husbands but our writing is an outlet – it helps us organize our thoughts and express our feelings during the all to frequent times of loneliness and despair.  Writing helps bring clarity and organization to the millions of thoughts circulating in our head on a daily basis.

Yet we are very different in how we are processing our new normal.  Neither one of is right and neither one of is wrong.  We are just different.

As I showed Jill my new home she teared up when she saw a wedding picture and a teddy bear made from one of Rick’s hawaiian shirts.  Later she told me that she cannot look at pictures of her husbands smiling face.  She also shared the nightmares she was having – nightmares where her husband was not the loving and devoted husband he was when he was alive.  She told me – I’m at a different place in my grief than you are.

I on the other hand have pictures of Rick everywhere.  I listen to the funeral playlist at least weekly.  Last night I watched “This is Us” knowing it was the episode where  Jack’s death would be revealed and knowing it would lead to another ugly cry.  Rick’s photo is on my watch, my phone, and my computer monitor.  I have dreamt of him whispering his love for me in my ear as he covers me with a blanket to keep me warm.  I’m planning to spend our anniversary with friends and family because I cannot bear to mark the day alone.

We are definitely in different places with our grief, however,  there is comfort in being able to talk about our loss and how it has impacted our families.  We can cry together without fear of making the other person uncomfortable.  A few days earlier I spent the evening with another good friend and every time I got emotional I found myself changing the subject to something more light hearted.  She was probably not uncomfortable but I was.

The truth is, no matter what we do – whether we have cleaned out his closet or not, whether we have buried him or keep his ashes on our window sill – nothing we do will bring him back.  And while looking at a picture can ease one widow’s grief, it can stir up anger in another.  We have to do what is right for us to help us cope and as we cope, it is so comforting to talk with a friend who gets it.

On my bus ride home tonight I read a devotion sent to me from the pastor who officiated at Rick’s funeral.  It talked about sharing but not comparing.  I had not yet finished this post and thought – wow – that is the perfect title.  Whether we are grieving a death, or struggling with any of life’s challenges we can find such peace in being able to share with someone who can empathize.    But to truly benefit from the gift of a listening friend, we must remember to share, not compare.

While Jill and I are both facing our future as single, 50-something, empty nesters without our soul mates, our stories are different; our grief journeys are different;  God’s plan for each of us is different.

It’s easy to fall into the trap of comparing.  I just did so in this post.   But I’m working on it.  Meanwhile, I thank God for Jill and for several other young widow friends.  They are key to my survival.

 

It could be worse…

One of the books that I have read since Rick’s passing is “Option B” by Sheryl Sandburg.  One thing from her book that really resonated with me was her story about someone telling her “It could be worse.”    In her situation, “worse” would have been if her husband had been driving with the children when he had his heart attack.

When I reflect on my situation I think about several worst case scenarios.  Rick could have died when the kids were young and they would have missed out on getting to know what a great dad he was;  I could have been left destitute without life insurance or savings.  If I let my imagination run wild I can think of plenty of horrific examples, however, one scenario keeps popping up.  Divorce.

I had dinner with a friend shortly after Rick’s death.  This friend is going through a divorce and I could feel that we were both experiencing our own pain from relationships that have ended.  Trying to console him, I said something to the effect of “I think your situation is worse than mine; I didn’t have a choice in losing my husband, but in divorce, the other person is gone, but they are still around, having rejected you.”   Ouch!!!  That’s exactly what he said to me.  “Ouch Julie.  That hurt”.

If I had chosen my words more carefully, I would have obviously been more eloquent and caring.

A high school friend of mine said it better.  Her husband left her just before their 25th anniversary.  She recently texted me to let me know she had read my posts here on maketym.com and she shared how reading my blog brought back memories of her divorce.  Except, she wasn’t allowed or able to grieve in the same way.  She was discarded, left behind to deal with lawyers and insults.  These are her words.  Reading this broke my heart and I thought about another friend of mine that divorced a few years ago.  I didn’t know what to say to her, just as many don’t know what to say to me.  We talked about the rubber tree plant that a couple of us had given her at her wedding shower and when she said she still had it, I cracked a joke about it lasting longer than the marriage.  Yeah.  I know.  “Ouch Julie, That hurt.”

Thankfully, both of these friends know me and my sarcasm well enough to know that I did not intend to be hurtful.  Sometimes my words don’t match my intent and every once in a while my jokes are not funny.  At least that is what my kids say.

But what about divorce vs death?  Is one worse than the other?  I think it depends.  I’ve read stories from other widows who were relieved that their spouse was gone; for them, it was an escape from abuse or an unhealthy relationship.  I also know that some divorces are truly amicable and the best outcome for the particular situation at hand.  While other divorces are riddled with such hatred and resentment that the resulting heartache can lead to dreadful, hurtful  behavior.  One of my wise friends says, hurting people hurt others.  This is so true and we have all seen this.

This is what I do know.  When a relationship ends, we experience a myriad of emotions.  Grief, sorrow, anger, fear, and even relief and joy.  I imagine the control or lack there of in ending the relationship plays a part in these emotions as well.  Did I want this?  Could I have done something to prevent it?  Whatever the cause, we grieve.  The end of a life.  The end of a marriage.  The end of a dream.  Grief is grief and while it can always be worse, we can help those that are grieving with a simple caring message.

To my divorced and widowed friends, I am sorry for your loss.   Even though it could be worse – it is bad enough and I am sorry you are in pain.

 

*** the picture is purely for attention.  Go Vikings!!

6 Months

 

It’s been 6 months since you took your last breath.

We spent your birthday, Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years day without you.  In the next 6 months we will spend Valentines Day, Easter, Memorial Day, Mother’s day and Father’s day, the 4th of July, Erik’s 21st birthday, Annika’s 23rd birthday and my 54th birthday without you.  I will spend the 26th Anniversary of our wedding day without you.

You were not here to see Erik start in a Division 1 collegiate football game.  (He did great!)  You were not here to see Annika’s new home.  (It is SO cute!) You were not here to meet our precious grandpup Pumpkin.  (I call her Calabaza.)  You were not here to toast the Craig’s in their new home with the Besties.  (We toasted you.) In the next 6 months you will not be here for Cubs opening day.  (And we can walk!)  You will not be here for my first cocktail party in Chicago.  (Actually, you would not be thrilled that it is black tie optional.)

In another 6 months we will hit the one year mark and we will start over again.  Another holiday, another birthday, another big event without you.  I doubt it will get any easier.  We will celebrate marriages and babies without you.  (No pressure Annika and Erik).  We will vacation in Hawaii…and take your ashes.  It’s about time you get to fly free after so many vacations there.  I will retire, without you.

Yet, you are here.  You are ingrained on our hearts and your wonderful spirit is alive, leaving signs to let us know you are not far.   Like speaking to us through a medium, and the hawks in our yard, and the receipt in my laundry basket.  Like playing this song when we celebrated Erik’s game and when he and Alice went to the Bristol Tap on your birthday and when Annika and I were returning from Spain.

Of course we want you to be physically here with us and that is what we grieve.  Your physical absence is a reality we don’t want to accept.  We want to see the joy on your face and we want to hear your incredible laugh.  I want you to hold me in your arms and tell me I’m going to be happy again.

Like the day we married and the day our children were born and the Christmas mornings when the kids opened their gifts from Santa with such delight.  Like the day Annika graduated from college and the day Erik signed to play college football.  Like the time we spent in San Francisco with our Besties.  Like the times we vacationed in Hawaii.  (Except the trip where Erik bailed on us.)  These are just a few of the memories we hold dear.  And although we do not need pictures to remind us of these good times, we cherish the pictures we have and find comfort in looking at them over and over and over again.

It’s been 6 months since you were here.

 

You got this!

 

Tonight I’m doing laundry.  Its my least favorite chore and one I have had to do EVERY SINGLE WEEK since Rick passed away.  Yeah, it really sucks.  At his visitation friends and family frequently offered their help with anything I might need.  In the last and 7th hour of the wake I was feeling snarky and when one of Erik’s friends said, “if there is anything you need…” I quickly asked, “Would you do my laundry?”  The poor kid was so shocked I thought he was going to faint.

As I emptied my laundry basket tonight, laying in the bottom was a dinner receipt from a 2016 trip Rick and I took to Cabo Mexico.  Hmmm…I have no idea how it landed there but I would like to think it’s a sign from heaven. Is this Rick’s way of telling me “you got this babe!”?

I consider myself a pretty confident person but we all have our insecurities.  Two days before Rick’s accident, I finished an amazing book called “She Liked Her Life”.  The story was told from the perspective of the mom who had died, the daughter and the widower.  I was fascinated with the story and after Rick passed I contacted the author asking her if she would tell Ricks story.  She politely declined and gave me some suggestions on how I might proceed.

Fast forward to a month ago when I had the idea to write a book about the history of 3750 Lake Shore Drive.  As I excitedly shared the idea with a colleague who has published two fictional novels I suggested that we collaborate on the project – I would do the research and write the facts and he could do a companion piece:  A fictional story to go with the setting.  He politely declined.

That night it dawned on me.  I wanted to write but I didn’t have the confidence in myself to do it on my own.  Even after starting this blog and getting such positive feedback, I still didn’t think I was cut out to be a “real” author.  I admit I’m still a bit unsure but I plan to take some classes that will surely help me sharpen my skills.

Rick was pretty confident also.  He was so darn smart.  I remember one of our mutual friends saying how   frustrating it was that he knew something about everything.  I have to admit, he really did know something about everything-  and it got annoying as he always seemed to be the one who was “right”.

The first time I truly saw insecurity in Rick was just a month before his accident.  After being unemployed for a couple of years and with sporadic job opportunities after that, he had talked about going back to school.    There was always an excuse – we were waiting to see if we would move to Denver; we couldn’t afford it; a new concrete job was opening up that would keep him busy.  I didn’t want to nag but I finally asked him one day why he wasn’t pursuing some of the options we had discussed.  I asked him point blank if he was afraid.  I think he was taken aback and he went to the garage to have a smoke.  When he came back inside he said, “Julie, you hit the nail on the head.  I don’t have the confidence in myself to start something new.”

Rick was such an expert in the concrete industry it was hard for him to imagine himself doing anything different.

I can certainly relate.