I buried my son in a 36 inch long coffin.
Shalebug was 37 inches tall.
I buried my son in a coffin one inch too short.
I am haunted by this.
I know, heck I knew at the time, it made no difference. Bug’s feet were twisted and curled and even in life he preferred to have his little legs curled up instead of stretched out, but I can’t stop fretting over the fact I crammed my son into a box one inch too small for his wee body.
What kind of mother does that?
Grief is a funny thing. It’s a palpable emotion that will consume every ounce of joy and happiness if you let it. It’s the monster that lives in your closet, a parasite feeding off your love and memories and always looking for your soft underbelly of pain, the chink in your armour.
This week, through a series of events I have had no control over, the monster rattled at my closet door and managed to find a way to slip through a crack to rip my shirt up and expose my garishly pale underbelly.
With it’s plaque covered pointy teeth, this monster leaned over me during my emotional weakness and ripped through my defenses so that I am once more bleeding tears of pain and sadness and loss.
There is no bandaid for this oozing wound, as all the joy I have managed to harvest since my son passed seemed to quickly seep out of my soul and into the monster’s foul, gaping mouth.
Which leaves me struggling with the knowledge once more that I crammed my little boy into a box too short for his small body.
Today I feel broken and hollow as the monster once more recedes into the darkness of the closet I wrestle to keep locked.
Today I exam the past and savour the what-if’s as they roll around my brain.
Today, I try to remember that at the time, it seemed like the right choice. We didn’t have the money to have a coffin custom sized for our boy, and there were only two options available to us. A three foot coffin or the next size up, at five feet.
The thought of my son lying in an adult sized box for all of eternity seemed ludicrous to me. What did he need all that space for? So I chose the smaller version, thinking I would find comfort in knowing he was snug as a bug as he lay beneath the soil.
I can’t for the life of me shake the image of that tiny oak box covered in white daisies being lowered into the ground.
I suppose I would be haunted by this vision still, even if I did choose the larger coffin.
I buried my son in a box because I couldn’t handle the idea of cremating him and the flames surrounding him.
The truth is, today, I can’t handle the knowledge I ran out of tomorrows with my son.
I’m grieving the fact he never had the chance to grow taller, get smarter, become more.
I’m struggling with the fact the only tangible evidence he once existed are the stretchmarks on my body and the stone marker on the ground.
The monster won last night as he terrorized my hard fought peace and bound me tight in the cloak of sadness once more.
Today I grieve; for tomorrow I will have no time to as I once more set out to find joy that is not lost, but eclipsed by this eternal darkness that rolled in like the fog on a gloomy day.
But today, today is for knowing I buried my boy in a box too small.
Stretch marks and stones, reminders of how I miss you so, Shalebug.









Jodee
OH I can’t think of anything to say.. So i’m just gonna send you a BIG BIG BIG BIG (HUG).
shelly
I cant begin to imagine your pain…but I’m crying with you.
Catootes
Sometimes my sister calls me, the same tone in her voice, for the monsters of grief have stolen through her defenses, to question the decisions she made, remind her of her loss, point out the places her son rested, in their home, while he suffered through bone cancer. To remind her, once again, that he is gone.
My heart weeps for her in those times, as it does for you now.
Johanna
I’m so sorry for your loss. My thoughts are with you.
tracey
Sending you my love. No words, just a hope for peace to find you…
Amo
I can’t even being to understand, but the love is here. The compassion is overwhelming.
“I would find comfort in knowing he was snug as a bug as he lay beneath the soil.” -I think you know this already. Don’t let the monster win. For you, for us, for every grief-stricken moment we all experience.
Jodie
As much as they say it will get easier, it never will. You just get stronger. This was so hard to read. You did right. And I cried.
MrsC
I’m so sorry for you and your pain. Although I have a different loss, you put my pain into words I’ve failed to find over the last 5 years. My heart to you.
Robin
I too know the monster. In my case he haunts me about being part of the decision to remove my brother from live support. The monster brings up questions like… what if we had waited longer to see if the doctors were wrong, what if we had gotten a 12th and 13th opinion, what if…
It also haunts me when I hear about people coming back from something that a doctor said was impossible, could my brother have also. Did we not give him enough time…
Daddy Geek Boy
This is one of the most hauntingly beautiful posts I have ever read.
I don’t know how you find the words through the pain.
Carolyn Harris
I understand. I lost my son. I’d like to say the pain goes away, but I’d lie and you’d know it. I’ve survived by telling myself he wouldn’t want me unhappy. I can see in my mind him telling me, “Cut out the crying, Mom, and get on with your life.”
Barbara
I’m so sorry.
You write so eloquently. I can almost see your monster.
MommaSunshine
I know that there are no ample words that I can offer you…just know that I am sending you all of the warmth and strength that I have to share.
Tomorrow will look better.
*hugs*
Lori
Sometimes you just have to yield to the grief when it comes and plunges you into its depths. And you hold your breath momentarily until you re-surface and can finally breathe in the fresh air again.
And then you write about it in all its sorrow. And life goes on, never the same, but still.
You touch so many lives in all that you have shared about your dear son.
creative type dad
Tanis, I really am at a loss for words. Just know that you are and every parent that has ever lost a child are in my thoughts and prayers.
Bug was truly lucky to have you as a mom.
Miss Britt
Oh, honey. I’m so sorry.
But YOU – you are a tangible reminder that he existed.
I met you long after he passed, and I KNOW that he existed – without having seen your stretch marks.
Kyla
We all know he existed, T. He survives in the memories and heart of those that knew him and so many of us who never got the chance to meet him. I think of him often, you know.
Domestic Extraordinaire
oh honey. Much love to you. I know that I can’t do anything to help, but know that I am thinking of you often. xoxo
MarcomMom
But you gave him a love big enough to stretch out in for all eternity until you meet again…
K
I truely hope you are doing ok. Just remember he knew he was loved. No one else could have loved him like you did and still do. Hugs and good thoughts to you.