November 29, 2016

Shut.the.fuck.up


Here is a tip for anyone who knows someone grieving.  Don’t say ANY of the following:

You now have to get use to your new normal.
God has a different plan for you.
He’s in a better place.
Gordie is at peace in Heaven.

New Normal is an oxymoron.  There is nothing normal about life after you have lost your husband.  Nothing.  Ever.  How about you lose your husband and then tell me how newly normal your life is?

God has a different plan for me?  Well fuck you and fuck God.  I liked the old plan.  And this different plan you are talking about could be for me to marry some super hot, super rich rock star and I still would hate it.

He’s in a better place.  Are you shitting me?  He’s in a place without his sons, wife, and beloved dog.  Does that sound better to you?

Gordie is at peace in heaven?  Are you a fucking moron?  Did you ever meet Gordie?  He’s not at peace.  He’s pissed.  Super pissed.  He can’t see Wyatt’s first baseball game.  He can’t take Wyatt to his first Raiders game.  He can’t play flag football or practice baseball with Nathan anymore.  He won’t see either of his boys graduate from his alma mater, De La Salle.  He won’t see either of his sons get married.  He won’t celebrate a 20-year wedding anniversary with his wife, the only woman he said he ever loved. 

The comments like these were endless.  It seemed everywhere I went, people had these same little gems of wisdom.  I would just stare at people as they said this stupid shit and think shut up.  But I would just sit there in silence and clench my fists. When I was finally able to escape, I would seek refuge in my runs.  My feet seemed to run in continuous four beat counts to the words:  shut the fuck up, shut the fuck up, shut the fuck up.

The 2nd Friday after Gordie died, I was driving in my car on the 680 freeway and thinking about people telling me that Gordie was at peace in Heaven and happy to be there. 

As I drove I said out loud “I don’t buy it Gordie.  I just can’t believe you are happy about being torn from your sons.  I don’t care how great Heaven might be, I think you are pissed.  Give me a sign.  Are you pissed or are you at peace?” I asked. 

There was no sign.  I drove the rest of the way home in silence.

That night I was sitting on my bed, my computer on my lap, staring into space trying to process this new life when there was some kind of flash outside my window. 

I looked toward the window and thought what was that?

A few seconds later there was a clap of thunder. 

What the heck? I thought, do we get thunder and lightning in the Bay Area?

I searched the back of my mind and could not remember thunder and lightning growing up in the Bay Area.  We certainly got thunder and lightning when Gordie and I lived in Colorado and it was the bain of my existence there.  I hate thunder and lightning.  The booming sound of thunder scares the crap out of me.  I cannot count the number of nights in Colorado where we’d be getting a major storm and I would lie in bed next to Gordie clutching his arm. 

As I sat there trying to figure out if we do indeed get thunder and lightning in the Bay Area, there was another lightning flash followed by another clap of thunder, and another, and another and man did it get loud.  In fact, what transpired that night was just like the storms we experienced in Colorado where the thunder literally shakes the house.  Ralphie, our dog, was on my bed, huddled next to me, shaking in fear, just as he had done for years in Colorado.  I sat in my bed a little nervous but then I had a thought. 

“Is this the sign Gordie?” I whispered out loud. 

The thunder continued. 

After a few minutes, I said out loud “OK, I get it.  You are pissed.  I knew it”. 

The next morning I asked my Mom “did you hear the thunder last night?”

“Yep” she said, “that was quite storm”. 

“Do those kind of storms happen out here now?” I asked.

“Hardly ever” she said, “I can’t remember the last time it did that”.

“Oh” I said out loud. 

But inside my head I was thinking, Holy crap!

And it did not surprise me at all that Gordie answered my plea for a sign as to whether or not he was pissed with a house-shaking thunderstorm.

November 27, 2016

Faith and the Afterlife


I had never been a “Good Catholic”.  In college my friend Kitty went to Mass nearly every Sunday.  I went with her about once a quarter but I always admired her commitment to our faith.  As a young adult, I rarely went to Mass except on Christmas and Easter with my family.  Things did not change when I met Gordie.  He grew up in a non-religious family and he did not even belong to a religion.  But despite not going to church, I considered myself a Catholic and believed that there was indeed a higher power, likely God, and that an after life did exist, probably Heaven.

When Gordie and I got engaged, I never considered anything but a Catholic wedding.  We had to attain permission from the Bishop of Denver to get married in a Catholic church since Gordie was not Catholic but permission was granted as long as I was confirmed before the wedding.  I had not been confirmed in highschool, it was just something my parents never enforced.  So, as we were preparing for our wedding, I went to classes on Sundays and was confirmed a few months before we married.  Gordie and I also attended all of the pre-marital classes required by the Colorado Catholic church.  I still remember his horror at some of the material discussed in our Family Planning class.  The material was a bit graphic.  Additionally, in the handouts there was a sentence that said masturbation was considered a sin.  Gordie looked at me, laughed, and said “that seals, it, I am going to hell”.  I laughed and told him to be quiet. 

Before Nathan was born, Gordie and I tried to go to church more regularly.  Gordie and I had agreed to raise our children Catholic so I wanted to get started living a more Catholic lifestyle.  Once Nathan came though we soon realized how difficult it was to take a baby and then a toddler to church.  Once again, we were “bad Catholics” in that we did not attend Church more than a few times a year.  However, we certainly did acknowledge Catholicism in our home through reading the Bible to Nathan and through teaching him about God.  This way of life continued when Wyatt was born.  Although we did not worship the way Catholics are supposed to, we, including Gordie, believed in God, heaven, and the teachings of the Bible. 

After Gordie’s death, my faith crumbled.  Although every night, without exception, the boys and I prayed for Gordie in Heaven, my beliefs were gone.  It started out as simply questioning everything and desperately searching for information.  In the weeks after Gordie died, I would be on my computer until midnight or later googling “Is there a God”, “Proof that Heaven exists”, “Spiritual Afterlife”.  Someone bought me the book “Heaven is For Real” and I read all the parts describing heaven during one late night.  I talked to people I knew, including some Widows I had met. 

“Do you believe?” I would ask them. 

Most of them told me “Without a doubt” and I think they really did but a close friend of mine was more practical and honest.  She had a hard time understanding how people give God credit for all the good things in the world but do not blame him for all of the suffering.  My ultimate question was more selfish and simple.  What kind of God would do this to two little boys who are ages 6 and 2?  What kind of God would take the Father of our family in such a random and unexplained way?

But I kept coming back to something that happened the night after he died.  Something that made me wonder about the after life and also kind of freaked me out. The boys were still sleeping with me in my room at my parents’ house.  I had put them to bed before me and by the time I was ready to go to bed, they were fast asleep.  I got into bed, turned out the light and lay in the dark replaying the same questions I had asked the night before.   

What the hell had just happened?
How could my husband be dead?
How could my sons lose their Daddy at such a young age?
How did Gordie get into the pool and how was he not able to get out?
How was I going to raise these boys on my own?
What was I going to tell Nathan in the morning?
Where are we going to live? I can’t go back to that place.
What if we had stayed in Colorado?  This would not have happened.
How will I ever go back to work?
Who will take care of the boys when I have to go back to work?
Did Gordie suffer?

I was lying in the dark looking at the ceiling swimming in these questions when the night light switched off.  I sat up and looked at it. 

I guess the bulb burnt out I thought. 

A few seconds later, it switched back on.  I sat back up and looked at it. 

What the fuck? I thought.  

I lay back down and a few seconds later, it switched back off.  The strange thing is that it was not a flicker, or the kind of flickering on and off when a bulb is loose or burning out.  The light was decisively turning on and off. 

I lay in the darkness and before I knew it I whispered out loud, “are you here Gordie?” 

The light switched back on. 

Holy shit I thought and then I just started talking to him.  I’m not a person who believes in ghosts and have never, ever felt the spirit of someone, but I truly felt like I was supposed to be talking to Gordie. I told him I did not understand how our life together, how the boys lives, and how my life could possibly turn out this way.  I begged him to tell me how he died.  And then I told Gordie that I loved him and missed him. 

There was a point in the conversation where I wondered if he was still there.  I said, “are you still there Gordie?” and the light turned off. 

“OK…I guess you are still there” I said and just kept talking to him. 

The light switched back on a few minutes later and I got this overwhelming sense that I should unplug the light. 

“Gordie,” I said “I feel like you are telling me to unplug the light for some reason, so that’s what I am going to do”. 

I got out of bed, unplugged the light, and put it on the ground.  I went back to bed, whispered, “I love you Suggs” and tried to go to sleep. 

That night I had one of two dreams I would have about Gordie for the next eight months.  In the dream, Gordie and I were talking about going our separate ways.  There was no other context to the dream but us standing there talking about going separate ways.  But as he turned to go, I reached out to him and grabbed his arm.  He turned to me and said “I loved you from the first minute I saw you”.  And then I woke up.          

The next morning, I checked the light.  Nothing was wrong with it.  I plugged it back in and that night turned it on when I put the boys to bed.  It worked perfectly fine.  In fact, it would still be working, with the same bulb, over a year later. 

The invasion of a new emotion: anger


The first week after Gordie died I toggled between three feelings:  disbelief, sadness, and fear.  The thought that went through my head on an hourly basis was is this really happening?  At other times I was just lost in sadness.  And at times I was paralyzed with fear about the future, specifically about raising my kids alone. 

However, after the funeral, another feeling started to take hold of my mind and body:  anger.  I could feel it at various times starting like a boiling pot of water in my belly.  It would spread up my body through my back, shoulders, and neck and down my arms. Then it would spread down my legs making me restless, causing me to tap my foot.  It was like my entire body was tightening but not the type of tightening caused by stress or anxiety.  Rather, this was the type of feeling that makes you clench your fists and your jaw. 

I was just pissed.

The anger kept me up at night.  I lay in my bed at my parents’ house thinking:
Why the fuck did this happen to my boys?
Why the fuck did this happen to me?
Nobody had worked harder to stay together than Gordie and me and this is how it ends?
Gordie and I were good people with good values and morals.  Our sons are good boys.  We do not deserve this.

And the one thought that drove me into a rage.
I could not stop this.  I could not protect my boys from this.

My anger started taking control of my actions.  I was impatient, and I was not a patient person before this.  I had a short fuse.  I would snap at Nathan over the smallest thing and then hate myself for it.  I was borderline reckless when I was with the boys.  If a car would try to cut me off on the freeway,  I would play a game of chicken with it thinking hey mother fucker, you want to live more than I do right now so don’t fuck with me.  I was never reckless without my sons with me.  My rationale was that if we all went to heaven together as a result of an accident, fine.  But I would not do anything to cause them to lose their only remaining parent.

I knew I needed to do two things:  start seeing a therapist and use my running to get the anger out of my body and mind.  I had always used running to relieve stress and blow off steam.  I loved all sorts of exercise:  swimming, hiking, biking, skiing, etc.  But running was the only exercise that helped me get to a better emotional state.  It was time to kick the running up a notch. 

The Funeral


I did not sleep the night of the Visitation.  At 5am, I gave up trying and got up.  Trish was already up.  We started running through details and checklists for the funeral.  Later we fed the boys breakfast and dressed them for the funeral.  They looked like they were going to a wedding.  

I put on a black dress that I had owned for over a year.  The thought crossed my mind that when I bought it, I certainly did not think I would be wearing it to my husband’s funeral.  I went into the bathroom and stared at my face again.  It looked even older and more ghost-like than it had the night before.  I applied some make up.  I combed my hair.  I was getting up in front of everyone today to eulogize my husband.  I did not want to look like an 80-year old widow. 

Why is not looking old such a big deal to me?

I heard my Dad helping Nathan practice his speech down the hallway.  Nathan had asked to speak at Gordie’s funeral a few days before.  My Dad had worked with him on what he wanted to say and had typed it up.  Luckily Nathan was an excellent reader .

It was time to go.  My parents took one car and Trish, the boys and me took my car.  We drove into the church parking lot.  Even though we were early, people had already started to arrive.  The parking lot was pretty full.  I wondered how many people would be coming.  Never in a million years did I expect the turn out that followed.  Trish, the boys and I walked into the church.  There were big picture collages, that my friends made (that I still have to this day), in the entry way.  There was a big picture of Gordie smiling at me.  Someone handed me a beautiful program that my friends had made, in addition to the one that the church had made.    

We entered the main room of the Church.  I could see everyone trying not to look at us stealing peeks.  I can only imagine how sad we looked as I carried Wyatt and held Nathan's hand walking down the aisle to the front of the church.  We took our seats in front.  The service started.  The Pallbearers brought Gordie’s casket to the front of the Church.  Again, I was hit with the similarity to our wedding.  The pallbearers were the same guys who were Gordie’s Groomsmen at our wedding.  Only unlike our wedding, I was desperately trying not to throw up.  I closed my eyes and tried to breathe through my nose.  The thought hit me what would everyone do if I puked right here and now?  
 I looked in another direction and saw Gordie’s Dad standing at the front of the church.  He broke down in tears.  Gordie’s Mom was near him and reached up to hug him.  Holy shit, I thought.  My in –laws had been divorced for a very long time and that’s not something I thought I would ever see.  If Gordie was there, he was also saying “holy shit”.

I looked back before the ceremony and nearly fell out of my seat.  The place was packed.  It was standing room only.  Later someone told me that there were more than 450 people in attendance.   Gordie would have been shocked.  Absolutely shocked.

I really remember very little about the actual service.  I know the Priest did a great job but I could not tell you anything about it.  I just sat there and looked at the coffin and wondered when I was going to wake up from this nightmare.  It then came time for the eulogies.  Pat, Gordie’s brother, went first.  I don’t remember much of it.  My friends told me months and years later that he said he would help raise Gordie’s sons.  Then it was Nathan’s turn.  I grabbed his hand and walked him up to the alter and helped him get on the stool.  I walked back down the steps and took my seat.  I looked up and my heart stopped.  My 6 year old, 1st grade son, was in front of 450 people about to speak about losing his Dad. 

Tears rolled down my face.  Nathan was so incredible. He read his speech without hesitation and without tears.  He looked up and made eye contact with the audience. He spoke clearly and articulately. 

When he was done, I walked back up to the alter , helped him down, squatted in front of him, gave him a kiss and whispered in his ear “you were so good…Daddy is looking down from heaven so proud”. 

I walked him back to his seat, turned around, and headed back up to the alter.  I turned and faced the audience and took a deep breath. 

“In 2001, Gordie and I sadly attended a funeral for someone who died in the World Trade Center and the eulogy for him was about his Loves.  Gordie and I were so moved by that eulogy so I am borrowing that theme today.  Here are Gordie’s Loves. 

I proceeded to walk everyone through Gordie’s loves including sports, the Raiders, baseball hats, his friends from De La Salle, our dog Ralphie, his family, and his sons.  As I talked, I look around the audience.  I saw people from all parts of my life.  I saw my parents’ friends who had watched me grow up.  I saw our friends from high school.  I was surprised to see two of my closest friends from UCLA who lived in Atherton and San Diego.   I saw a long term business colleague who had become a friend…he drove overnight from Boise to be there. I saw a row of people from Clorox, the company where I worked.  I was touched…I had only worked at Clorox for one year.  I saw parents and administrators from Nathan’s school.  Again, I was touched…we had only been at the school for about 14 months. 

The crazy thing is that I saw all of these people but then I forgot immediately after the funeral.  I think, emotionally, I had to block the funeral from my mind as soon as it was over.  It would be weeks and months later when I would have a flashback of someone’s face in the audience and I would contact them and ask “were you there?  I am so sorry I did not thank you for coming before now”.  Luckily people are very understanding when your world has been pulled out from under you.  

My eulogy ended like this:  "Gordie, thank you being in my life for more than 15 years and for giving me the greatest gifts:  Nathan and Wyatt.  I love you and I will miss you forever. “

I finished my speech and took another big breath. I got through it.  Did I cry during it?  Yes, a little bit but not in a sobbing embarrassing way at which Gordie would have been rolling his eyes.  I gathered my speech and walked back down the steps and sat down.  Behind me, my friends whispered good job.  I don’t remember anything else about the actual service.

When it was over Nathan and I followed the casket outside.  Wyatt was already outside with his Nanny; he had gotten squirrely during the service.  Wyatt’s very part time had been so helpful the past few days and she had asked me if she could take care of Wyatt and Nathan at the funeral and reception so that my parents and I did not have to worry about them.  She would not even let me pay her for those hours.  Soon everyone else poured outside.  I took Wyatt from his Nanny, held Nathan's hand and walked over to the hearse and watched as the funeral home people loaded Gordie’s casket into the hearse.  This was it.  This was the last time that I would see Gordie’s casket.  His body would be burned the following day.  I felt like I was going to throw up right then and there.  I stood there with my sunglasses on staring at that hearse.  The Funeral Director was watching me, waiting for a signal that it was ok for him to drive Gordie away.  I continued to stand there holding my two year old son in one arm and holding my six year old's son with my other hand.  

I needed more time.  I wanted to scream "No!!!  Do not take him!!!". 

I could feel most people at the funeral watching us.  I took a final look at the casket in the back and then nodded at the Funeral Director.  He closed the back and then walked to the driver’s side and climbed in.  He started the car.  I started to feel panicked.  Gordie was leaving.  Forever.  I watched the hearse drive away as huge tears fell from my face, splashing on to the pavement.  I looked down.  My tears were so big, they left wet marks on the pavement, like raindrops.

“Good Bye Suggs”, I whispered.

The ironic similarities between planning a funeral and planning a wedding


Ironically the day before a funeral is not unlike the day before a wedding.  The only difference is that you are overwhelmed with a sense of dread vs a sense of excitement.  Funeral prep the day before is spent doing the same shit that you do before a wedding:  making sure everyone’s outfits are ready, making sure the guest book has been purchased and has a pen to go with it, making sure the music is ready, making sure transportation for the family is set up, making sure the your make up is ready so that you don’t look like crap.  Again, my friends and family got it all done.  Outfits for the boys suddenly appeared.  Liz, my sister-in-Law, showed up with choices for a guestbook.  One of my best friends from Colorado, Trish, had arrived and was staying at my parents’ house to help me.  She helped me pick my outfits for that night’s Visitation and the next day’s Funeral. 

Two days earlier my Brenda, Stacy, and Jane took me to get my roots colored after I told Jane “I don’t want to look like an old Widow”.  I don’t know why but this was so important to me.  I just did not want to look old.  Every time I looked in the mirror I could not believe the old, haggard face starting back at me.  Maybe coloring my hair would help.   

I did not eat the entire day before the funeral.  In fact, it was taking everything I had not to throw up. 

That evening I dressed in the same outfit that I wore to my interview at The Clorox Company:  a black pants-suit with a colorful short sleeve shirt.  My pants hung on me after days of a smoothie diet.  I carefully applied some make up to cover up the dark circles under my eyes.  I studied myself in the mirror.  I looked like I had aged two years in less than a week. 

My Mom and Trish helped me get the boys dressed.  We took two cars:  my parents’ and mine.  Trish helped me pack the items I wanted to put around Gordie’s coffin:  his high school letterman jacket, his cowboy boots, his toolbelt (with tools still in it), and a bunch of pictures. 

Trish and I left a little early so that we could set up the room and so that I could see Gordie one last time.  The coffin would be closed during the visitation but Gordie’s Dad and I wanted to see Gordie one more time before the coffin was closed permanently.  My parents would come later with the boys.  I drove.  As I parked my car right in front of the mortuary and turned it off, I felt a wave of nausea.  I put my head on the steering wheel and told Trish “I am going to throw up”.  And then I started to cry.  She turned the car back on and rolled down the windows and put her hand on my back. 

“Just breathe” she said.  After a few minutes, I pulled it together.  We carried all the stuff into the mortuary.   

The Mortuary Director was waiting for me.  “The room is ready Staci, do you want to go in and see Gordie?” 

Ugh.  I had not seen Gordie since he was rolled out of the Estate that awful night.  He had recently had an autopsy.  What was I getting myself into?  I nodded and followed the Director into the room.

He stopped at the entrance to the room and told me “take as much time as you want and let me know if you need anything.”  I nodded again and whispered “thanks.”

The coffin was in the front of the room, open.  I could not see Gordie from where I was standing in the back.  I slowly crept to the front.  I reached the coffin, looked in, and my heart nearly stopped.

Who the fuck is this? I thought.  Seriously…who the hell is in this coffin?

I peered in closer.  The person in the coffin was wearing the clothes that Gordie’s Mom and I had picked out days before.  He was wearing Gordie’s shoes.  He had a goatee like Gordie but he did not look like Gordie.  I sat there for a few minutes just staring at him.  I put my hand on his chest…it made a sound like when you touch plastic.  What the fuck????

I turned around and walked out of the room and told Trish to find the Director and have him come into the room to talk to me.

The Director entered a minute later and walked up next to me. 

I actually asked him “is that Gordie?  It does not look like him”.  

I’m sure the Director thought I was certifiably nuts.  He looked at Gordie and then looked at me and said, “when an autopsy is done, it leaves a lot of markings that need to be covered up.  We did not do the embalming or the make up here but that’s why he looks so different.  I can tell they used quite a bit of make up”.   

I could only nod in response.  I’m sure I looked even more dazed than I had the past few days.  The Director quietly left the room.

I continued to stare at Gordie.  I then started to touch him…his face, his hands, his chest, his face again.  I bent down and tried to hug him.  He was so stiff and that plastic like sound came again as I touched his chest.  He kind of felt like a mannequin.  I started talking to him. 

“I can’t believe this Gordie.  What the hell happened?  How can you be dead?  How am I supposed to live without you?  How could this happen to the boys?  I miss you so much already.  I can’t do this without you.  I am not going to make it.  Please come back.  Please come back.  Please come back.”

I could not speak anymore.  I just stood there and sobbed next to a coffin with a man in it who really did not look like my husband.  I could not bring myself to leave because I knew it would be the last time that I would ever see my husband.  I touched his hand and his cheek one more time.  I kissed his face more times than I can count.  I choked out the words “Bye Suggs”, my joke pet name for him that had become a habit over the years, and turned and walked out. 

I went out to the hallway.  Gordie’s Dad was there and wanted to see Gordie before the coffin was shut.  He went into the room and when he came out, I found the Director and said, “close the coffin please”.   Gordie’s Mom and brother wanted to have some time with him but with the coffin shut. 

The rest of the night went by like a blur.  I remember so many of the same people who attended our wedding coming into the room and hugging me.  I remember Wyatt running around like a 2 year old at a park…clearly clueless to the fact that he was attending his Dad’s visitation.  I remember Nathan looking stunned and hanging out with my Cousin’s son.  I remember lots of appetizers and desserts brought by friends but not eating anything. I remember my Boss hugging me and looking as stunned as I felt.  I remember hearing the music that Greg and I had so carefully selected. I remember my parents asking me if I thought it was time for them to take the boys home and me nodding in agreement.  And soon thereafter, it was over.  Some of our friends were still there to help me and make sure I got home.  Some of them were probably concerned that I would try to sleep next to the coffin.  I would have if I could.  Trish and some others helped me pack up the Varsity jacket, his cowboy boots, the pictures, and the toolbelt.  They carried out to the car.  I put my hand on his coffin before I walked out. 

My friends told me that people were going to Norm’s to celebrate Gordie and asked if I wanted to go.  I said no.  I was done.  I needed to go home. 

Trish and I got in the car and just sat there for a minute.  Then I whispered, “I’m hungry.”  I had not eaten all day. 

“OK”, Trish said “is there somewhere we can grab something?” 

I looked at the clock in my car; it was nearly 10pm.  “Everything is closed but there is a Burger King across the street”, I said. 

“Great, let’s go”, said Trish.

I don’t even like Burger King but we went through the drive through and then took the food back to my parents.  We sat at the table eating burgers and French fries and it tasted so good.  I was just so hungry.  My kids were already sleeping so I did not have to do anything or take care of anyone.  I was able to just sit there and eat with Trish. 

When we finished, I looked at her and said, “I can’t believe this is happening. I can’t believe I just saw Gordie for the last time”. 

“I know Stace”, she said, “I know”. 

As I climbed into bed that night, I whispered, “please come back” over and over. 

“Please come back” would be the most used words when I talked to Gordie for days, months, and years to come.

November 26, 2016

Planning a Funeral for my 44 year old Husband...are you friggin' kidding me??


It is not a cliché to say that a person is in a complete daze the first week following a shattering loss.  The horrible thing about being in this daze is that you are still forced to make life long, non-reversible decisions such as cremation or burial, open casket or closed, whether or not Nathan should be allowed to see his Dad one last time, Catholic mass or not, reading selections, music selections, pallbearer selection, etc.  On my best day, I would struggle with trying to make these decisions and here I was having to make them in a state of shock and sadness that my husband was gone.   And every time I was asked to make a decision, all I wanted to say was I don’t want to do this!

As I walked into the funeral home for the first time, I thought this has to be someone else’s life.  But there I was around the table discussing all things death with Gordie’s family.  Thank god Jane was there to support me, sometimes literally.

Gordie always had a very cavalier attitude about discussing what he wanted me to do should he die first.  His standard response was “what do I care?  I’ll be dead”.  That was so typical Gordie.  So, I struggled to remember what I was able to pull out of him during those conversations.  I told his family that I was 90% sure he wanted to be cremated but that I was a little unsure about doing that since my children were so young and I felt they needed a place to visit their Dad as they grew up.  The funeral director told me we could bury his ashes in a cemetery if that’s what I wanted.  I liked that idea but also struggled with thinking that Gordie would want his ashes scattered in a place of significance to him.  My first thought in terms of a location was McCall Idaho, where we were married, or on a mountain in Colorado, where we had spent most of our short life together.  Someone at the table, I do not remember who, suggested that we bury half of Gordie’s ashes in a local cemetery and that we scatter the other half.  Pat said that we should scatter the ashes in the hills of the Estate because Gordie loved the Estate and the hills so much.  Pat was right, Gordie loved his family’s estate and loved those hills where he spent so much time even more.  But, I could not avoid the thought “but he died there”.  Still, I agreed with the plan.  I did not realize that it would be months before we scattered his ashes.   

I wanted a Catholic funeral.  Gordie was not Catholic, in fact he was never baptized, but before we married we had agreed to raise a Catholic family.  I was raised Catholic and the high school we attended was a Catholic high school.  We were married in a Catholic church and both of our sons were baptized Catholic.  I preferred to have the funeral at the Catholic Church in the town next to ours:  it was not our Parish but it was my parents’ Parish.  I did not want to have the funeral in the church that we attended because I did not want Nathan to remember his Father’s funeral every time we attended church for the rest of his life.  Jane called my parents’ church to see if they would do the funeral even though Gordie was not Catholic.  They agreed to do it.

Ironically, the church we had selected was the church where Nathan had been baptized. 

The other big decision was whether or not to do a viewing the night before the funeral.  I was against it for two reasons.  First, I am 100% certain that Gordie would have hated people looking at him in a casket.  Second, I was already scared to death how I was going to make it through the funeral.  How on earth would I be able to make it through two events?

Gordie’s family felt strongly about doing something the night before.  We settled for a closed casket visitation at the funeral home.  My only request was “can I bring my own music? “  Gordie would have hated the sad music that was playing at the funeral home that morning.  The answer was yes. 

The hardest moment for me that morning was walking into the room with the caskets.  I walked in, looked at those things, and nearly vomited. 

I told Gordie’s brother Pat “I can’t do this, you pick” and walked out. 

I sat with Jane for a few minutes and then walked back in.  Pat and Gordie’s parents had narrowed it down to two choices:  I made the final choice and then walked out again. 

I remember Pat said, “it looks like something Gordie would have made”.  I actually smiled.  He was right. 

The last detail to be discussed was the reception, which we all agreed should be a Celebration of Life.  Gordie’s Father was a long time member of a very nice country club in the area and the family (including Gordie, the kids, and me) had many memories at the club.  Pat felt strongly that Gordie would have liked his Celebration of Life to be at the country club.  Gordie’s Dad and Step-Mom volunteered to take care of it.  I was so grateful.  I did not have any planning or decision making left in me.  I just wanted to go home. 

Jane drove me home.  My Mom and Dad were watching the boys.  Nathan was very curious about where I had been.  I told him.  At that point I had decided to be as appropriately honest with him as I could.  He had many, many questions about the details that we had just sorted through.  He asked if his Dad was going to be “buried or burned”.  His use of the word “burned” shocked me a little.  I told him it was called cremation and asked him where he had heard about it and his response was “at school.”  I was not that surprised given that he attends a Christian school.  I told him that we had decided to cremate Daddy and bury half of his ashes in the cemetery that was in town and scatter the other half of the ashes in the hills behind the Estate.  I asked Nathan if that plan sounded OK to him and he nodded. 

He then said “I want to see Daddy before we burn him.”  My heart sank.

Looking back three months later, this is the only area where I think I made the wrong decision.  I felt strongly that Nathan should not see Gordie’s body for three reasons.  First, I believed, and still do, that Gordie would not have wanted his son to see him dead and have that as his last vision of him.  Second, Gordie was about to undergo an autopsy and I was very concerned that he would not look the same after, a concern that turned out to be valid.  Third, I just did not think it was appropriate for a six year old boy to see a dead body, especially that of his Father. 

“Nathan, I’m not going to let you see Daddy’s body”, I said

“Why not?” he asked

“Because Daddy would not want you to see him like this.  He would want you to remember him the way that you do now, the way that he looked the night before he died when he was practicing baseball with you, or the last time you saw him when he dropped you off at school the day he died”, I replied.

“But I want to see him”, Nathan protested.

“But don’t you want to honor what Daddy would have wanted?” I asked.

“OK” he said but I could hear the resistance in his voice.

It was not until months later that I started to question my decision based on what I was reading in books, literature from my support group, and conversations with the Grief Counselor who Nathan and I were both seeing.  According to all of those sources, seeing the body can be a way for children to understand the finality of death.  Nathan also told me several times after all was said and done that he wished that I had let him see Gordie’s body. 

Even today, I do not know if I made the right decision.  I repeatedly think about it and question my decision.  However, I do believe, without a doubt, that Gordie would not have wanted Nathan to see him that way and that is what keeps me from agonizing about whether or not I screwed up. 

The final trip in preparing for the services was the meeting with the Catholic Church.   Gordie’s Mom, Dad, Step-Mom and Brother went with me.  Again, I was in a fog with a voice in my head on a continuous loop asking, is this real?  Within minutes my phone starting lighting up with texts.  Jane and Brenda were texting me recommendations for readings and songs.  I actually smiled.  My Catholic Besties knew that I was not the greatest Catholic and that I would have no idea what to pick and what Gordie would have been OK with.  The Coordinator at the church would provide me with some choices, I would look at my texts and then make the choice.  My friends had it covered, just like they had everything else covered. 

At one point, I hit my max.  I could not do it anymore.  The Coordinator suggested that we make a program.  I said no.  I could not handle it.  She said they would put together something to hand out hand that listed the readings and songs.  I said fine.  I was done.  I wanted to go home. 

There was one thing left that I wanted to do once I got home and I wanted to do it with Greg, Gordie’s best friend.  I wanted to make the music for the visitation.  Only Greg and I would know what music Gordie loved and what he would want played at the first night of his send off.  We gathered around the kitchen table at my parents’ house with my Mac and iTunes account.  We started writing down bands and songs that Gordie loved.  Big Head Todd.  Dave Matthews Band.  U2.  The Police.  Pearl Jam.  Lenny Kravitz.  Bruce Springsteen.  Cold Play.  Kid Rock.  And of course we had to find something from Frank Sinatra, one of Gordie’s most favorite artists.  We chose “Fly Me to the Moon”.  Then we added songs that we thought were appropriate for the occasions.  The Samples “We are Shaking”.  Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide”.    The Blues Traveler’s “The Mountains Win Again”.  Eddie Money “My Friends, My Friends”.  REM “Nightswimming”.  We remembered concerts that the three of us had attended together.  We reminisced about other memories tied to the songs.  And, we cried.  Wow, did we cry. 

The playlist from Gordie’s visitation is still on my iPod today.  I listen to it when I want to feel close to him and to this day, I still cry when I listen to it.  Music was a big part of our lives together.  We both loved music, we attended many concerts together, and we had introduced the boys to our love of music from birth. 

About a week after Gordie died, Nathan was playing with my iPad and went into my iTunes account.  He asked me which songs in my library Gordie liked.  I sat down and pointed to some of his Dad’s favorite songs.  I then started to take care of some things around the house.  Nathan stayed in my room listening to all of the songs that I had pointed out.  Nathan became addicted to my iPad and iPod, not for the games, but for the music.  It became his way of dealing with the pain and, I believe, his way of feeling close to Gordie.  He would listen to music on one of those devices for hours, in my room or even in the car.  For weeks and months he would ask me “Did Daddy like this song?” and then file it into his brain.  It took me a while to realize that he was making playlists with all the songs that I told him Daddy loved.  It was then that I realized what I was going to get him for his birthday, which was 2.5 months after Gordie died.

November 25, 2016

Nathan's realization about his new life



As I was walking into my parents’ house after moving stuff out of the Estate with my friends, a car drove up that I did not recognize.  The person parked the car and got out.  It was Greg, Gordie’s best friend for the past 14 years, who still lived in Colorado. Greg, his wife Regina, Gordie and I went to the same high school.  Greg and Reg lived with us for three months in Colorado when they first moved from California.  Greg and Reg were Nathan’s Godparents.  Gordie and I were the Godparents of their daughter, Hazel.  They were as much a part of our family as our blood relatives.  Greg walked up.  I clung to him and cried.  He was crying almost as hard as I was.  I had called him the night before soon after my Mom had taken Nathan to her house.  All I remember was screaming in the phone “Gordie died.  Gordie died.  I need you.  I need you”.  And then I remember handing the phone to my Dad.  Greg had taken the first plane out of Colorado to get here. 

“I’m here Stace”, he said, “for whatever you need”.

He came inside and Nathan rushed to him.  Greg gave him the biggest hug and told him “I’m sorry about your Dad”.  Nathan was so glad to see his Godfather.  It was the first smile I had seen on his face since he came home from school the day before.

That night I took the boys to dinner at Gordie’s brother Pat’s house.  Before Gordie died we had planned to have dinner there with his Mom and Step Dad.  It was the first dinner with Gordie’s family that I ever had without him.  I asked Greg to come with me and the boys.  He did and my in-laws were thrilled to see him.  Having Greg there was like having a tiny piece of Gordie there…for all of us. 

When we were getting ready to leave, Pat, Greg, Nathan, Liz, and I stood in the hall. 

Nathan suddenly asked “Am I going to get a new Daddy now?” 

We were speechless.  I started to cry. 

Greg knelt down next to Nathan and said “Your Dad will always been your Dad even though he’s in Heaven”. 

Nathan asked in small voice, looking so sad with those big brown eyes, “But who is going to practice sports with me so that I get better?” 

If my heart was not already completely broken from my own loss, the rest of what was remaining broke at that moment.  My six-year old son was already beginning to understand what life would be like without his beloved father who had been not only his primary caregiver but also his idol. 

Greg answered Nathan’s question “Your Uncle Pat, Mr. Chris, some of your Dad’s other friends, and me when I see you.  We will make sure you have someone to practice sports with Nathan.  It will be OK”. 

Nathan looked doubtful but he did not ask any more questions.  That night though, after we got home and got ready for bed, Nathan started to cry.  It would be the last time that I saw him cry about losing his Dad.  And this time he really cried.  Big gut wracking sobs laced with the statement “I miss Daddy” over and over again.  I held him and tried to wipe away his tears but I could not make it better for my little boy.  I grabbed Gordie’s pillow that the girls had packed for me.  I also grabbed a picture of Nathan and Gordie on Nathan’s first day of preschool.  I asked Nathan if he wanted to sleep on Daddy’s pillow.  He said yes.  I showed him the picture and asked if he wanted to put it under Daddy’s pillow.  Again, he said yes.  But the sobs continued.  He cried himself to sleep once again.  I lay next to him and rubbed his back.  Finally, he fell asleep. 

To this day, Nathan still sleeps on his Daddy’s pillow.

November 19, 2016

Losing my husband and home in less than 24 hours


The morning after Gordie died I finally quit trying to sleep at 4am and went out to the family room of my parents’ house.  My sons were still sleeping and my parents were in their room hopefully finally sleeping.  I just sat there alone and in shock.  Gordie was gone.  Now what?  I grabbed my laptop and started emailing some of our very close friends from Colorado.  It was an hour later in Colorado and I knew some of them were early risers.  One of them called me a short time later.   I tried to tell them the story of what happened the night before between sobs.  As I said it out loud I could not believe this was my life I was talking about.

After I finished talking to my friend, I sat there wondering how I was going to tell everyone about Gordie’s death.  I assumed word was traveling around our tight circle in California.  I had called some friends the night before while I was waiting for the Police to let me go.  Two of my closest friends even showed up at the Estate that night.  I can still remember seeing their faces walking through the door and just collapsing in their arms.  Getting word around Colorado, where we had lived for 13 years, would be more difficult.  We had such a diverse group of friends there.  So, I put a post on my Facebook page. 

Friends, it is with a broken heart that I write that my husband, Gordie Ball, died in a tragic accident on Friday. Our 2 little boys and I are in a state of shock and a world of sadness that seems unending. I ask that you pray that Gordie did not suffer and is already golfing in heaven and more importantly, for my boys...that they have a wonderful life even though they have lost their Dad. Gordie, I miss my best friend.

The irony of me posting Gordie’s death on Facebook is that he hated Facebook.  Every time he caught he on it he would say “Time Waster!” and laugh.  He always groaned when I posted pictures and videos of him on my page. 

The boys woke up a little while later.  Nathan looked stunned.  Wyatt thankfully had no idea what was going on.  My Mom helped me feed them breakfast and get them dressed.  My friends were calling and texting, asking me what I needed.  I called one of them and said I needed help moving things out of the Estate so that we could move in with my parents for now.  I knew I could never live at the Estate again. 

As I hung up the phone, I realized I have not only lost my husband, I have lost my home.

I showered and brushed my teeth.  I could not eat. 

My friend Sierra came to get me.  Sierra was one of my friends who came the night before.  She and I had been friends since Junior High.  She literally almost lifted me into her car.  My friends Brenda, Stacy, Gwen, and Suzi.  Suzi was my other friend who was there the night before and she was married to one of Gordie’s best friends.  Everyone was crying and hugging me. 

We walked inside.  I looked up the staircase expecting Gordie to come down the stairs.  I looked into the kitchen expecting him to come around the corner.  He was not there.  The house was messy from all the activity the night before.  There were dishes in the sink.  Wyatt’s Elmo chair was tipped over in the Family Room.  My file box was all messed up from when I had to find Gordie’s social security number for the police the night before. 

My friends gently asked me what I wanted to get done. 

“I’d like to get the house in order so that I don’t have deal with a mess when we move out”.  I said.

“OK” my friend said.  “What else?”

“I need to pack a bunch of stuff for me and the boys so that we can live at my parents house for the interim” I replied.

“OK” they said.

Brenda asked me if she wanted me to sort through Gordie’s desk in case there were bills or other things that needed attention.

“Yes, I replied”.  And then I remembered that half of our stuff was in storage after moving to California from Colorado fourteen months ago.  We had only moved half of our stuff into the Estate because we intended to buy a house within 6-12 months of moving back to California.  I wish we had stuck to our plan.  We would have been in a different house had we stuck to our plan and this might never have happened.  I would think about this for the rest of my life…what if we had moved out of the Estate, would this not have happened?

“Brenda, Gordie was in charge of the storage units.  I don’t even know where they are located.  Can you please look through his desk and files for any information on the storage units”. 

“Of course” she said. 

The girls started to divide tasks and rooms between them.  Suzi and Stacy were assigned to help me upstairs.  I showed Stacy where the suitcases were and she opened up several of them on the floor.  There were laundry baskets with clean clothes on the floor in Gordie and my room:  we had just returned from Hawaii a week ago and I was still struggling to get all the laundry done.  I just started handing stuff to Stacy:  clothes for the boys, clothes for me, shoes for all of us, sports uniforms for Nathan, work clothes for me, bathing suits for the boys, stuffed animals, the kids favorite books, bedding for Wyatt’s pack and play.  I grabbed Gordie’s pillow and smelled it.  It smelled like his hair.  I asked Stacy to pack it.  Then I went into the bathroom were Suzi was organizing.  I pointed out my toothbrush, Wyatt’s toothbrush, and Nathan’s toothbrush.  Suzi packed them.  Then I grabbed Gordie’s toothbrush and looked at Suzi.

“I guess I should throw this away?” I asked.

Suzi said it was up to me.  Then she tried to make a joke about how worn it was and how Gordie probably needed a new toothbrush months ago.  I actually laughed and then I threw it out.  Throwing out his toothbrush seems like such a trivial thing but weeks later I could not stop thinking about it.  It was probably the first moment I realized he was not coming back. 

I did not learn this until later but my friends started hauling stuff to my parents’ house immediately.  Not only did they pack it, load it, and drive it to my parents, they also unpacked it at my parents’ house and helped put everything away.  Somehow they even hauled our fish up there.  He was happily swimming in his bowl on my parents’ counter when I came home later.

I remember that someone made the bed that Gordie and I slept in.  Gordie and I rarely made our bed.  Correction, Gordie never made the bed.  I occasionally made it on the weekends.  My friends asked me if I wanted them to wash the sheets. 

“No, please don’t”.  I said.  My response was fortuitous.  For months after Gordie died, I left those sheets unwashed and when I returned to the Estate for mail or more stuff, I would usually smell the sheets.  Often I would lie down on his side of the bed and just cry and inhale the fading scent of him. 

As Suzi, Stacy, and I were finishing upstairs, my very best friend, Jane, and her husband, Jon walked in.  Jane had been in Las Vegas the night before.  I did not call her the night before because I did not want to ruin her trip.  But someone called her and she called me the night before as I was talking to the police.  She had told me they were flying back.  I told her not to but clearly they did because there they were.  I collapsed into Jane’s arms.  She looked as shocked and traumatized as I felt.  Jane and Gordie had been very close. 

Jon asked me if I had eaten anything.  I said I couldn’t.  He said I needed to eat and forced me to tell him something that I would eat.  I requested a smoothie.  He was out the door to get my smoothie almost before the words were out of my mouth.  It was the first of many smoothies that I would consume during the following weeks.  It was all I could get down most of the time. 

I went downstairs and the place looked transformed.  Everything was clean.  Everything was put away.  There were bags of things ready for the next trip to my parents’ house.

Jon came and delivered my smoothie.  He left to give me some alone time with my girlfriends.

All of the girls were there at that point.  They asked me which of the pictures in the family room I wanted to take to my parents’ house.  I told them I needed to just sit for a few minutes.  We sat in the family room. 

I started to cry and ask “Why?”  “How?” 

They did not have any answers for me.  They were as shocked as me.

I looked out those big picture windows.  I said I wanted to go to the pool.  I asked Brenda to come with me. 

We walked down there.  The pool was in a state of disarray.  The cover was about 70% removed.  Clearly the police had pulled it back when they recovered Gordie’s body.  Other than the messy state of the pool, it was as peaceful as it had always been.  The grounds at the Estate are truly breathtaking.  I could hear birds singing.  I sat down next to the water regulator that the police believed Gordie had been working on right before he ended up in the pool.  I looked at the pool.  I could picture him floating in the pool, in his jogging clothes and running shoes.  I sobbed and looked at Brenda.

“How did my husband die in there?” I asked.

She looked at me and touched my back “I don’t’ know Stace” was all she said.

We walked back up to the house.  Everything had been packed in cars while Brenda and I were at the pool.  It was time to go.  I peeked up the staircase one more time.  He was not there.  I told my friends to give me a minute while I set the alarm and locked the house. My friends walked out the door and down the steps to their cars.  I walked over to the alarm and was flooded with yet another sense of loss.  We did not own the Estate but it had become our home the past fourteen months.  Wyatt had taken his first steps in this house.  Nathan and Gordie had played flag football on the back lawn for countless hours.  Gordie had taught Wyatt to hit a golf ball off the back porch.  We had spent our last Christmas as a family here.  Gordie had hid hundreds of eggs around the grounds for our last Easter egg hunt.  We had taken so many family walks around the grounds with Wyatt in his push car, Nathan driving his motorized Jimmy Johnson car, and Ralphie running gloriously off leash, all around the enclosed property.   The Estate was our home and now it wasn’t.  My In-Laws would never have forced us out but we could not live there anymore.  Our home had been ripped from us, just like Gordie had been.

As I walked down to get into one of my friend’s cars, I had one thought.

How the hell does someone lose their husband and their home in less than 24 hours?