There are many reasons autumn used to be my very favourite time of year. The trees and their leaves, changing colours like some mystical fairy tale painting. I love watching the leaves float to the ground like little falling stars. I love breathing in the crisp autumn air and feeling the crunch of dried leaves crackle beneath my feet.
Autumn brings with it birthdays. Lots of birthdays. My grandmother (how I miss her), my brother – who turns 33 today (Happy Birthday Stretch!), my daughter and in a few days, my very own birthday. Quite a lot of cake for one month. I have many September childhood memories filled with chocolate frosting and wrapped in tissue paper..
Of course the birth of autumn brings with it the start of school. A parent’s personal celebration. What is there to not love about September?
Turns out, a lot.
These days, autumn and the months which follow, are brutal. It would be less painful if I just bent over and you all took turns kicking my ass.
Seriously. And not just because my arse region has recently acquired some padding.
This is the time of year my husband and I refer to as our “Season of Grief.” It is a tough time for all of us around here. We miss our kid. Our son, their brother. The next few holiday and birthday-riddled months do nothing but amp up our grief and spin it into an emotional monster which threatens to swallow us whole.
It is hard to have a birthday or holiday celebration without noticing the glaring absence of a boy long lost. I know as I put on my mommy happy face and try to make the best of this trying situation that I’m not the only one affected, the only one limping along in pain.
What does one say to their children when you know what their birthday wish is, and will be? What does one do when you watch your otherwise-very-happy child blow out her candles, close her eyes and wish her brother was home in our arms? How does one react when you hear your son pray every night to see his little brother once more?
It kills me. Slowly, one cell at a time, it’s taking me down and stomping on my spirit.
There is no escape from this feeling for the next few months either. Next month is Frac’s birthday, Thanksgiving and then the anniversary of Bug’s passing; November brings about the painful reminder of Boo’s father’s absence, only to be followed quickly by Christmas. Just when we have hobbled our way through the most painful holiday of the year, we get beat on the head by Bug’s birthday, the first week of January.
It’s a party non-stop around these parts for the next four months.
I had hoped this year would be easier. After all, we are approaching the second anniversary of his passing. The pain has to end sometime, right? Or at least slacken a bit. This choking noose that leads me around by my heart every day has to relax eventually, one would think, right?
That may be true, but I’m still waiting.
I wait to notice when my scars are scabbed over and finally healing. I wait for the seepage to stop. I pray every day that nothing comes along to pick at these wounds and releases the pain again.
All of this waiting is damn near driving me insane. Almost as insane as painting those darned polka dots on my daughter’s walls. I’m trying my best to keep it together, but I have to tell you, this sanity business is harder than it looks. All I want to do is hide in my pantry, curl up on the floor with a soft pillow and nurse a nice red into oblivion. I’d try it now, but I’m pretty sure Fric and Frac would find me and knock on the door, demanding to be let in.
I wish there was a magic formula for me to stop missing my Bug, to stop feeling this pain. I’m sick of carrying this weight on my soul and quite frankly, I resent it all to hell that this is my family’s burden to bear. This is the legacy I passed on to my children. A pain that will follow them until the day they die.
I somehow managed to find the gift that just keeps on giving. Too bad I can’t find the receipt to return it.
I just wish there was someway I could make my children’s birthday wishes come true and bring their brother back.
While I’m at it, I’ll take three magic beans and that goose that shits out golden eggs too.
Might as well reach for the stars when I blow out my birthday candles.






b*babbler
Oh dear. I have no sage advice, no pithy words of wisdom.
I’m so sorry, for you and your family. I hope, as hard as it is, you can find some measure of happiness during the upcoming season. I hope that each day that passes the pain eases a little bit more.
Nancy
I’m sorry, my friend.
I hope you know though that there’s another legacy you are giving to Fric and Frac: the everlasting love that you feel for them, and that you demonstrate to them daily. By being there for them through the good times and the bad. By painting da-glo polka dots on Fric’s room. They see, and they remember.
((hugs))
Erin - ExpectingExecutive
You and your family will be in my thoughts.
Many hugs and wishes for peace.
Erin
Ree
You are simply one of the strongest women I have the pleasure of virtually knowing. My thoughts and prayers for your family during this season.
Hannah
I don’t know what to say. My heart cracks for you all over again every time you talk about your Bug. I hope that as more time passes your family will be able to remember the happy times he brought you, more than the sorrow he left when he moved on.
Jen
Your writing brings me to tears of joy and of pain. Joy to read the love with which you so clearly write. Pain to read the love with which you so clearly write.
I can offer you nothing but my thoughts and prayers from a stranger far away. But they are a fellow mother’s thoughts and prayers… I wish you peace.
MamaMichelsBabies
Oh man… I wish I had something more then me telling you that I’m thinking of you and that Boo of yours. I wish I lived closer.. I’d stand guard at the pantry door so you could find some oblivion, even if only for a little bit. I hope the year is a bit more tender on your hearts then last year was.. even if it’s not alot, even a small bit.
*hugs*
Lisa Milton
I am so sorry. I wish I knew what to say. You and your family are in my thoughts and prayers. I wish there was something I could do; something tangible to mollify the pain.
Please take care.
Kristen
Hey — How about some assvice? I don’t have much to say, it’s a hard season for us, my sister (who passed as a baby)’s birthday is late August — same day as my huz’s and I know for her it’s a painful time of year.
So, we try to do something happy and fun — in memory of course.
There you go. I don’t know how you do it, girl.
xox
qt
Hugs to you friend – I, too, wish that I had something wise to add but I do not. I will be wishing you peace.
FishyGirl
I wish I had something to offer you, T, something that would ease things, even if only slightly. I am so sorry that this is your cross – untimely loss should never be anyone’s, but certainly never the parent of a child. Never.
I will say this. How you handle the pain, the grief, how you work through it, WILL leave an indelible impression on Fric and Frac. Since death is so much a part of life, learning to process it, cope with it, showing them HOW to go on when you just don’t want to, ever – these are vital life skills. When my mother died when I was 15 I didn’t have a good role model for how to process things, how to handle my grief, when I would have given anything on earth to have her back, even for just a few minutes. My father was a basket case, and to this day, 22 years later, I am still surprised he made it through the years without committing suicide, though he talked of it often. It took years and $$ of therapy for me to get to the point where I could even talk about her, and most of that could have been avoided if my father had been there for me, acknowledged my grief, and shown me how to go on living again.
You are THERE for your kids, T, there to hold them and comfort them and help them through their grief, even as your own heart has been shattered. There to talk to them and answer their questions and to show them that you still have love left in those pieces of your heart. There to paint polka dots on walls and embarrass them in front of their friends. There to show them how much you miss their brother, but that it’s okay to go on living, too.
May you find comfort and peace in each other’s love through the difficult months ahead.
Kyla
Oh, T. I am so sorry, friend. I don’t know how you do it at all…but you have such strength inside. I know you wish you didn’t need that strength at all, though. I’ll be thinking of you all and holding you close in my thoughts.
And also? Maybe you should try and quit smoking in Spring instead.
Heather
Oh, T.
May all of you love each other extra fiercely over the next few months.
I wish I knew how to help.
slouching mom
Aww, RM. I’d send kisses and hugs and wine and cake and boobs, yes, even boobs, your way if I thought it would help.
But I know it won’t. This is your grief, your pain.
I am here, though, and I am one of many, and maybe that helps, if only a bit.
Meg
Fall is a bad time for me as well. Oct 7 is the 6th anniversary of my first son’s birth and death. I can tell you that it does not get easier and things will never be OK again, but it does become more OK, if that makes sense. Only the years passing will bring any kind of semblance of peace. *hugs*
Mrs. Chicken
Red, I’m sorry for your pain. I know what you mean about thinking it will ease. I haven’t found that magic spell yet. If I do, you will be the very first person I share it with.
Wishing you peace, or whatever comfort you can find.
Ms. Crafty Wanna-Be
Oh T….you make me cry. Almost every damned time I read your blog. Like I mentioned before, reading your blog dedicated to Bug really gets the tears a-flowing.
I (along with many others) will continue to pray for you and for the hurt to lessen a bit. You are so strong and are there for Fric & Frac…and that’s all you can do now.
Happy early birthday and I hope the pain is a little bearable on that day…and that you have peace.
mamatulip
I am here whenever you need me, for whatever reason.
I’ll help you get through this season.
craziequeen
Aw honey, I wish I could wave a magic wand and make the pain go away.
It doesn’t, I still hanker after my lost unborn baby who was due 22 years ago this month. Even harder as I found out later I couldn’t have any more.
On a brighter note – I love the measley room!! I think it’s brilliant.
cq
Wendy
There is nothing to say to make it better. I hope you all make it through these next few months better than you did the first time. And hopefully with each passing year the pain slightens a bit, but not the memories.
Good Luck and you all are in my thoughts.