Grief is a *Explicit Language Follows Pt 3
Wow!!! You either came back for the third in my gut-wrenching journey or you
are new to this blog and hopefully will be compelled to read the first two
parts of this series, along with the previous blogs that are much lighter, I
promise. Just know, this is me, writing my greatest pain out there for you my
dear reader, hoping my pain will help others make sense of either their
coworkers’ pain, their friend’s pain, or even their own pain. Grief is both
universal and personal, everybody has many similarities, but we all manage it
differently.
In January 2022, I came into my place of work on a Tuesday morning. It was
the day after Martin Luther King’s birthday and it just felt very hostile in
the plant. No one was being difficult and workwise, it was a great day. But
there was this oppressive cloud just hanging over the facility. The next day,
the husband and wife owner did not come in. I spoke to the wife, but it wasn’t
until I left that day that I discovered that Pete had succumbed to a long-term
illness he had been suffering from for years. Those close to him knew it, but
many, such as myself, had no idea. It was not until months later that I learned
that we had almost lost him previously. Pete, apart from my brother, was the
best dad I ever saw in action with his children. His oldest son worked with him
and although they did not have a sunshine and roses relationship, the deep love
Pete had for him was undeniable. When I would hear Pete hold court with his
three daughters in his office, talking about history or anything you can
imagine, all three daughters who had a 10-year age gap, were included and
active participants. Pete’s youngest son would come in and talk shop with his
dad, discussing what was quality product and even giving suggestions. He was
his father’s right-hand man in this area. Farm life is demanding work, and the
kids all participated. They not only participate, but they are also students
who excelled in school and play sports. I have been to some of the kids’ games,
and these are wonderful kids.
During the next three months, Pete’s widow and I would talk a lot. I would
try to comfort her and take any burden I could from her plate. It was during
this time that I became friends, not just a worker, with Tara. I protected her ferociously
and tried my best to protect her from customers who would ask completely
inappropriate questions.
Sidenote here-Please, unless you will sit in the family section of a
funeral, just offer your sympathy or understanding. Too many people asked
questions that broke us all. I work at a place that is a big family, this is my
tribe. When people, especially those we only know from the context of them
coming into the store, asking for all kind of details or either through actions
or statements telling a widow that they don’t think she can handle the place
she helped build so they take their business to a competitor, FUCK YOU!!!!!!!
Sorry, that little F-Bomb should be the only one directed at people personally.
When you live in a small town, yes, people are going to know your business, but
that does not mean you can go in and demand answers and intrude into their
lives. Although the bulk of the community backed the family up and were there
in a way that let me know my move to a town of eight hundred from Baltimore
City was the right move, I hope the inappropriate ones are haunted by their
actions. Because the family is.
Now, I am moving to the one loss that is the reason for the whole series. I
will start at the beginning.
My boss’s widow usually worked at their small store on Saturdays. After his
death, I took over working most Saturdays. It was a change from my normal job
as an Office Manager and it felt good to help to support another person going
through a pain, I hoped I would never feel. It was on Saturday, April 2, 2022,
that I worked my normal shift. It is arduous work and I usually left there
exhausted and took the rest of the evening to relax but I felt energetic. I did
a little extra store cleaning before leaving and then I hit both grocery stores
in town to do grocery shopping. Now, my wife at this time is working in New
York so I have the house to myself. I got a phone call from my brother within
seconds of putting the last bit of groceries away.
“Wow, I don’t know how to tell you this. Um, Autumn was in an accident,
she is being air lifted to the hospital, she has a lacerated liver and
…” the rest of what he said was a blur. Autumn was my mother’s first
grandchild out of two, both of my brothers. I felt dizzy and didn’t know what
to say. I told him I would be there as soon as I could get there, even though I
live in New Hampshire and he lives in York County, PA. I was told that Autumn
was being air lifted to the hospital for a three-hour surgery. Her boyfriend
was driving, and he was hurt but Autumn’s side took the impact. He would call
me back with an update. I immediately called my wife, scared to death. She got
on some clothes, threw some things into a bag, and was on her way to me within
15 minutes. It was a 6-hour drive.
About 30 minutes later while talking to my mother, both of us in a panic, my
brother called my mother. I let her go, trying to prepare myself for what was
to follow. Moments later, my brother called me back with my mother on the line
and I heard the words I had feared and still do not believe:
She didn’t make it.
I was in my living room when he uttered those words and for a second, I had
no bones below my waist. I collapsed to the floor. I laid on my living room
floor, crying and screaming for my sweet Autumn girl. The pain my heart felt at
that moment, and every moment when I think about it is truly a pain in the
heart. But not a squeezing pain, I wish. It is more someone with long nails
scooping it out of the chest cavity with razor sharp fingernails, not taking
care not to scratch and scrap the heart, then carelessly toss it around before
shoving it back in incorrectly and forcing a fit. My mother received this
information while at her mother, my Granny’s, hospice bedside. Luckily for my
mother, there was a social worker present, as this was a hospice center. My aunts
were also coming to the hospice later that night and my mother had to tell the
staff not to tell them about Autumn. And that was because of Autumn’s younger
sister.
Her younger sister was away that weekend at a youth group retreat. The
pastor, who Autumn’s mom worked for, went and picked up Autumn’s younger sister
and got her back home where my brother had to do the second worst thing he
probably had to do in his life, and that was tell this beautiful 13-year-old
that her sister had passed. I to this day do not know how he had the strength
to do that, and I feel forever in his debt that he could. Imagine having two
daughters when you wake up in the morning and then having to tell the one that
the other is no more. Neither can I.
When I called my wife back and told her, she had me call our neighbors to
sit with me. We lucked into moving next door to a couple from Texas, yes in New
Hampshire, who were retired from the police force. The husband specifically had
been trained in crisis/grief management and was able to help me through the
next 5 hours. I do not remember much except holding two pictures. One was of my
mother, my brother and his wife, Autumn and her sister, and myself at Disney
World. The other was a photo collage that Autumn had given me Christmas 2021 of
pictures either I had taken of the two girls or pictures with me and them. It
was from the moment I received it the most treasured gift I had gotten from the
girls. My wife and I left the next morning and drove to my brother’s house.
That night we met her boyfriend, the one who was driving. He had been released
from the hospital after some head stitches and some other relatively minor
injuries. When I met Autumn’s beau, I met the sweetest man I had met in a long
time that I could tell worshipped Autumn and he was nothing more than an
unlucky cog in the machine of life. What happened with that accident was a
freak accident. Autumn’s beau was not speeding, was not distracted, and was
taking Autumn to work in a twenty-five mile an hour zone. It was truly a no-fault
accident and the thoughts of what was happening in the car, the conversations,
the vibe, haunts me. I know it was one of happiness and possibilities that was
about to end in the most tragic way.
On the morning the family and a dear family friend who is a part of the
family, met at my brother’s house to head to the funeral parlor to make
arrangements when my mother told me that my grandmother had passed. Granny, one
of the strongest women I know, had passed after living ninety-one fabulous
years. One thing that continues to haunt me is imaging Granny dying and going
to the next plane of existence and seeing Autumn. The happiness and heartbreak of
this imagined reunion that took place breaks my heart repeatedly, every time I
think of it.
I decided at the funeral home while making arrangements that I wanted to get
a memorial tattoo for Autumn ASAP. My wife and I went to four different tattoo parlors
until we could find one to fit us in prior to the funeral. I now have tattooed
on my left inner forearm a more that Autumn had written to me when she was
around 9 years old, that hung on my refrigerator, and I had even posted on Facebook.
I knew that the tattoo would be something that I would not notice most of the
time but when I do, it makes me smile.
“If your allergic to cats then why do you have 3. THAT’S STUPID AND
DUMB.” Autumn, like many in our family, had a wicked sense of humor and
loved to tease me. Those two sentences sum up our relationship and show the
silliness and wonder that was Autumn. In fact, it was done so well, her
boyfriend saw it and immediately knew it as Autumn’s handwriting. Thank you to
my tattoo artist.
Well, my dear reader, it looks like one more installment is in order. This
has been quite a draining yet healing experience writing and sharing these
blogs on grief and I hope that others read and feel less alone. Until next
week, thank you so much for helping make my dream come into focus.