I can feel my mom’s presence as I read these words. I don’t often ‘feel’ her here in my new life in KCity. I imagine her tenderly saying these words to me as we sit together. I feel comfort and sorrow.
Tag Archives: life
Be Reflective About the Last Year
Last Saturday as I was folding laundry, yet again, I cried out in anguish as the waves continued to pound me down. I cried out to Jesus, “I need a friend and I need someone now! Please Jesus save me!”
As I finished my last sentence, a car pulled up in front of my house. It was a very good friend from my first days in Vtown and paddling. She was driving past and had to stop in. She threw me a life preserver as I grabbed her and bawled my eyes out. She saved me from drowning. Her small action helped me tremendously. It brought me back to my life and got me thinking about the last year.
Last night, I went for a hike around my favourite mountain with an old volleyball friend and now new neighbour. We got a good sweat on and my mind worked a few things out. Throughout my life, I have found moving my body quite often moves my mind into new thoughts and patterns. I have the tendency to get on ‘the hamster wheel’ in my mind when I am worried about a relationship and situation. Exercise helps me to spin those thoughts right out of my hamster wheel.
After my hike up Knox last night, I spent time hanging out in my holy laundry room folding laundry. I love this disorganized, warm place where I can let my thoughts ‘hangout’. Since the day I laid on my laundry room floor this space has become a safe place for me. I find that as I grieve there is nothing I can ‘do’ to help this process along. Each day, I go through my day and I never know when the next wave of grief will hit. This last week has been pure torture for me. It started off seeing my son’s birthday card with only ‘Papa’ signed at the bottom. The first card without Nana’s name on it. This started the pounding waves of grief as things kept coming up day after day. I couldn’t catch a breathe. The waves in this storm kept pounding away.
I couldn’t get over how things have changed since April 2013.
One year ago:
🔹living in Vtown, not KCity
🔹seeing my mom every day.
🔹mom was getting ready to go on her cycling trip to Spain
🔹my dad was still working and living in PG part time.
🔹 our close friends had just moved to the Island
🔹 our dear family friend O’Wen was just talking about moving back to PG but still living in Vtown and a huge part of our life.
🔹Our family had an incredible group of people that we would eat with, play with… PP, PB, DD, our church family…
🔹our neighbour, Lizzie, was just across the street encouraging via window phone calls and ‘street talk’.
Introducing Liz, who came to hike up Knox with me a few weeks ago before the latest wave.
🔹every day we would have one or two people drop by our house as they walked by or dropped something off.
🔹Sexy Neck was in the first year of his new job.
🔹I was going to the gym with my mom
🔹my mom and I took turns volunteering at CC’s preschool and JC’s kindergarten class.
🔹 I was involved with an incredible group of women who met in a book club once a month.
🔹A neighbourhood friend and I would prayerwalk together once a week.
🔹I attended an awesome Tuesday night bible study.
🔹I could walk downtown and ‘know’ at least three or four people.
🔹I loved visiting my ‘school’ friends at work.
🔹My mom would often pop into our backyard on her bike as she rode around town.
🔹We ate at least one meal per week with mom, and dad, if he was in town.
Now, I sit.
Alone.
A lot.
We have infrequent visitors.
A new city, school, house, neighbours, community.
Creating friendships.
Finding where to buy bread.
Yearning a life past.
Trying to find a future.
Painting.
Digging.
Talking.
Growing roots.
One day at a time.
The waves will come.
But I have learned that God will throw me a life preserver.
Through new and old friends.
Through sweat.
Through nature.
Through His Holy Spirit all around me.
Be Really Real (no juice here!)
I am finding it difficult to write. I deeply desire to be positive, uplifting, encouraging, but I feel none of these things.

(Me and my journal!)
I really want to string some pretty words together but my heart is swearing! My mind is screaming. My body is weary with grief.
I feel hurt.
I feel despair.
I feel anger.
I feel frustration.
I have become aware that my words on this blog evoke emotions. My photos, especially the one of my lying on my laundry room floor in January, are difficult for some readers.
I have to admit that this blogging thing started off anonymously with twenty people I didn’t know reading my blog daily. One year after starting and during the height of my mom’s cancer journey, there were over eight hundred people checking my blog daily!. This is a strange sensation knowing that the audience I now have before me knows me and uses this blog to ‘see how I am doing’!
Now the second thing I will admit as I sit in my red chair, the rain pounding down, as I reflect on this blogging journey is that I have been serving you juice.
Good old apple juice.
Showing you a side of me that I think you want and need to see.
Keeping the information rated G for the general audience.
Tonight, I am giving you a good old gulp of red wine on the eve of the remembrance of Jesus’ crucifixion.
The night before Jesus died he washed his disciples feet, served them bread and wine, symbolizing his body and blood.
On this night I feel like I want to die. I am listening to the rain pound down hoping it will clean me up. I want to curl up. I don’t eat nor drink. I burst into tears during a children’s storybook, at the lack of communication, through this pouring rain. I HATE RAIN!
I cry out about the missed moments. Why didn’t I stand closer and notice how mom made her jam, lasagna, apple pie crust…
I am overwhelmed by the differences between men and women as I sit surrounded by males including Sexy Neck, my boys and my father. Oh mama, where are you?
I have so many questions rattling around in my head that I want to ask my mom. I can’t breathe as tears streak my face.
My mom, my first teacher and the teacher I modelled my love of my students after. The women who showed me how to spend weekends preparing for the week, lunch hours to meet the needs of the students less socially inclined and going above and beyond in many ways. To be watching my son’s teacher with her systems, testing and explanations that end in ‘I could show you the research!’ ,my legs want to run straight to my mom for a chat in her garden. My mom had such insight about schooling. But I am alone to figure this one out. Utterly alone.
I feel sick to my stomach when I see the sad faces of my friends when I talk about my mom. I see what an impact her life and death had on them I want to talk about her but their faces make me stop.
I have never felt so lonely in my life.

Deeply missing the times I took for granted.
Tearfully desiring all the times my mom was so beautifully present, unassuming, supportive and there.
Mom cannot be replaced. Absolutely nothing in the world can fill this gaping hole. I will continue to sit in my grief as this is my season. There is nothing another human being can do to erase my pain. Don’t feel sad for me. I am not drinking my feelings away nor shopping or eating them away.
I am sitting.
I am noticing.
I am hoping.
I am waiting.
For the rain to go away.
For a glimmer of sun.
To create a new way.
A new life.
Without my mom.
Damn this hurt.
So, if you don’t hear from me for awhile it has nothing to do with you. If I don’t know the answers nor want to organize things remember I am building new neuron brain pathways. Many of my pathways led to my mom!
I am exhausted.
Overwhelmed by waves.
I am doing my work.
Rowing my boat.
Staying afloat.
On the ocean of grief.
Waiting for Jesus to walk on water.
Be Living Quotes
I have always been drawn to quotes.
In high school, I started a black journal where I wrote down every interesting quote I read in a book or heard. This was the days before the Internet so finding quotes was not as easy as a click of a mouse.

This love of quotes has continued but often now these quotes come in the form of silly things my boys or I say or the inspiring quotes my friends put on Facebook.

These are a few quotes that I have saved on my phone in the last few days.

In my daily life, I don’t want to just read quotes. I want to live them. Breathe them. Soak them in and then pour them out.

A new physical and spiritual season is beginning for me with its new growth, beautiful flowers and grass beginning to grow. Rain showers will come, I know, but I will continue to read my quotes, take them in and pour them out.
Words without action are meaningless.
Words are cruel like a sword.
Words can soothe a baby’s cries. Words are power.
Words can create change.
Dishonest and action-less words are a mere cloud floating by on this beautiful spring day.
Do what you say. Say what you do!
In God.
In the goodness of people.
In myself.
In words.
In being.
Be Auntie Gail
My mom’s sister arrived yesterday to come stay with us. Every since our oldest was born, a sure sign of spring is Auntie Gail arriving at my parents for a visit. We always looking forward to seeing her.
I have especially been grateful for her immediate willingness to come jump in with our brood of boys, her contagious laughter and depth of stories. She reminds me of my mom in so many ways – her love of her children, her thought for my children, working side-by-side with Sexy Neck drying the dishes and really just being willing to come along on our wild ride.
Auntie Gail.
Deep strength.
Huge heart.
Beautiful children.
Contagious laughter.
Here is Auntie Gail enjoying her first ever Japanese food dinner.
Auntie Gail getting settled in her room. The boys ‘helped’!
Beautiful butterfly cups she passed on to me.
Auntie Gail had us all laughing our heads off as she attempted to use the walkie talkie.
Auntie Gail brought beautiful drawing pencils and paper for the boys. They all spent many hours drawing together.
Auntie Gail read Happy Pig Day to OC while we watched CC’s gymnastics.
Auntie Gail watching our youngest at gymnastics. OC loved having her to wave up to. She watched with a big smile on her face. What a gift!
She helped us have a painting play date with friends.
We enjoyed an after dinner walk to the duck pond.
Side note:
I haven’t been back to CC’s gymnastics centre since my mom died. Five days before my mom went into the hospital in December and just over two weeks before my mom died, mom insisted that dad drive her 60 kilometres down the road so that she could watch CC and OC do gymnastics.
I knew my mom was in pain. She still insisted on getting her own blue folding chair, placing it right beside the window so that she could watch her grandsons participate in class.
She was in pain. She smiled and clapped for her grandsons.
She was stooped over but she sat up straighter every time her grandsons looked over.
Resiliency.
Love beyond comprehension.
Support.
Thank you mom. Thank you for being the most selfless Nana.
Thank you dad for supporting mom’s ideas.
Thank you Gail for passing on this loving support to my boys these days.
Be Seven
Be a Butterfly
“How does one become a butterfly?
You must want to fly so much
that you are willing to give up being a caterpillar.”
 (Trina Paulus, Hope for the Flowers)
I am free.
Flying.
Nothing holds me back nor down.
My greatest fears are gone.
I am open.
Soaring.
Nothing can dissuade me nor discourage me.Â
My expectations have floated away.Â
I am a butterfly.Â
Gliding.Â
Nothing can change my beauty.Â
My imperfections are perfection.Â
No longer am I crawling along the ground as a caterpillar.
I am out of the mud.
I am not longer just observing.Â
I am free.Â
—————————————————————————————————–
I am not sure why butterflies have become the symbols of my mom’s journey into heaven. Â They were everywhere in Hospice and now on our trip to Hawaii they were hovering all around us. Â I have never felt closer to my mom since she has passed. Â I feel that in my new life here in a new town, these wings have now been fastened onto me. Â I float between people, having no one friend to anchor me nor move me in any one direction. Â I feel opportunities around every tree.
I feel inspired.
Creative.
Excited.
Anticipating.
I feel free.
Thank you mom for this great gift in your death. Â Thank you for taking my fears with me. Â Thank you for guiding us from this world into heaven. Â You are a true trailblazer. Â I love you mama.
Past blogs about butterflies:Â https://beenough.wordpress.com/2013/12/23/be-having-something-about-butterflies/
https://beenough.wordpress.com/2013/12/26/falling-snow-and-fluttering-butterflies/
https://beenough.wordpress.com/2014/03/20/be-surfing-under-rainbows-with-a-butterfly/
Be Going to a Retreat by a Lake
Today, I left my brood of boys after our life shifting trip to Hawaii and spent eight hours at a healing prayer retreat for women.
Each woman had a beautiful opportunity to enjoy time with God while taking care of their soul through painting, massage, prayer or counselling.
I chose prayer counselling and watercolour painting as my soul care times as well I enjoyed time on my own walking and writing in my journal.
As I walk through my life, I continue to be amazed that when I stop or pause to notice God, He is ever-present in my life. I don’t think I shall ever cease to be amazed at the wondrous coincidences of God!
This morning, I started off with a cup of tea in this mug from Hawaii:
(That’s my new journal in the background from Sexy Neck, isn’t it cute?)
Next, a woman lead us in song with a UKELELE! How often do you see that here? But in Hawaii, I saw them in every store and heard one being played almost every day.

Lastly, during my watercolour painting soul care session, I learned how to paint for the first time. I was playing with paint and created this:

Which reminded me of my very favourite bridge in Haliewa on the North Shore. I paddle boarded under this bridge, saw turtles here, ate shaved iced beside it, walked over it multiple times and just stared at it. Is it possible to have a crush on a bridge?
Here is my lovely bridge:

Which brings me to my first watercolour painting that I am not even afraid to share publicly.
Over my bridge towers a strong banyan tree representing Sexy Neck and on the sides you will see three growing palm trees for my boys.
Thankful for my painting teacher.
Thankful for God that I had this opportunity to try new things.
Every day is new.
His mercy and grace is real.
He weaves everything together for His good!
Healing.
Painting.
Wholeness.
Newness.
Noticing.
Peace.














