Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

the kids are caring for me, too


I arrived to Manila after what certainly felt like forever. My butt had forgotten what it feels like to sit on a plane for over 16 hours. I got to the K.I.M. base and had an email that I never want to see: one from my parents saying only the words “call us when you have a chance.”

“Cori, I have some hard news to tell you. Zack died on Saturday in a skydiving accident. His chute didn’t open. I am so sorry” my mom told me once I finally found a phone. Those words keep ringing in my ears even now, days later, and I still wonder if it’s true.

I am thousands of miles away, in Malaybalay now, grieving the loss of a dear friend. One of the closest guy friends I’ve ever had, someone who cared about me so much, who stood by me even when I had walls up and wouldn’t let him closer. He and I were similar in many ways with our longing for adventure and our inability to ever really settle down. We’d always argue over who was more noncommittal.

What do I do with this loss, this heaviness in my heart for this friend I’ll never get to say goodbye to? What do I do with all of the unknowns of what our friendship really was, of why he died at only 27? What do I do with the care that I received from him, his kindness and warmth? How can this really have happened?

I cry, I grieve, I cringe as I think of how he died, I hurt for his dear family so much. I zone out and imagine his funeral and cry some more. I remember times we spent together and smile if only for a second. I feel the ache in my heart. It lingers and does not rest. It hurts.

I go then and play with the children here who I haven’t seen in nearly a year and a half. I lift up 4 year old Andrew, my boy and the main reason I came back. I tickle him and delight in his giggles and hugs. Glen Mark climbs up the couch and sits next to me, pointing to his books and saying “daa daa” over and over again. Little John Carlo and Mary Joy are two of the sweetest kids to be around with their deep brown eyes and long eyelashes. “Ate, Ate, what’s this? What’s this?” they ask repeatedly as they point to anything they can get their hands on.

I love on the kids, but have found that they are loving me as well. I am letting them. They are a comfort amidst my sorrow and pain. They too greet me with smiles, hugs, and laughs, and I let their warmth soothe my wounded heart. I feel that if I had to be away while this happened, this is the place for me to be. Where there’s not really any pressure but just a place for me to love and be loved, to care and be cared for, in one of the simplest environments I know. It’s where I have time and space to sit with myself, or if I am interrupted it’s only by sweet seven year old Rosalie who comes over and draws in my journal while I hold her in my lap. This, my friends, is therapeutic.

                Zack, the words I have for my grief feel so incomplete. I never thought I’d say this, but I thank God for that ridiculous Geological Perspectives class where we met seven years ago. I am so grateful for how you stood by me, cared about me, pursued me, and never relented in asking me to go on adventures with you. I’ll never forget our conversations or how you always made the world a lighter place for me, seeing my burdens that I held so heavily not as road blocks but as just a small part of the bigger picture. You had such a heart for those who are hurting and gave much of yourself to others. You were never satisfied, and I respect how you continually kept your heart alive.

                I could go on and on, but the words don’t suffice. I miss you. I don’t know how to say goodbye.  But thank you..

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

midnight and the resurrection

ashley, scott, and chelsea just left my house.
we talked, we laughed, we played my new therapist game for about 10 minutes..
then, probably just after midnight, we started talking about the resurrection.

ashley spoke of how frustrating it can be that at the times you really want it it's nowhere to be found, or you're totally not expecting it and it comes beautifully and powerfully.
I said that's probably the point of it.
it can't be forced or manipulated.
but how has this whole concept become so utterly foreign to us?
we also talked about hope. it's almost like we were taught to hope
in hoping, instead of the real nitty-gritty kind of hope that you
would die without.
even now, writing this, the words and sounds
don't really fit the concept.
they feel surfacey and insufficient.

what does it mean, and what did it look like, for Jesus to actually come out from the grave
and to leave it behind him?
we thought that he probably didn't just walk out of there triumphantly and powerfully,
although it certainly was an act that defines courage and strength..

instead, he probably left his grave with a limp.
hoping hurts.