Telling the Truth

connecting the dots of my life

Month: June, 2023

Grief and Broken Hearts

Grandpa Gury with our Mom and her four daughters, 1959

grief insinuates
prickly memories into air
struggling to breathe

waves of despair
wash over old gains
searching for home

abrupt endings
leave little space or time
for grieving hearts

Last night Sister #2 died of congestive heart failure. Ruth was born in July 1945. The photo at the top is one of my favorites–all four sisters, Mother, and our maternal Grandpa.

Due to health issues, we won’t be flying or driving to Texas for Ruth’s memorial service. Here’s one more photo from the beginning of our life together. Sometimes I wish I could go back and start over, this time without fear of my father or other men and women in my life, and without things like ALS or congestive heart failure hanging in the air.

Easter Sunday with Ruth, Diane, Elouise,
plus Judy in the doll carriage, 1952

Thank you for stopping by today. The world is different now than it was 80 years ago. Sometimes I wonder if it’s worth it to keep going. But then…without warning…I meet wonderful people who remind me that we’re not alone. Especially in times like these.

Elouise

© Elouise Renich Fraser, 26 June 2023
Photos taken by my father, JERenich

Hum, Hum | Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver’s poem is as personal as it is blunt. I haven’t been able to get it out of my mind. My comments follow.

Hum, Hum

1.

One summer afternoon I heard
a looming, mysterious hum
high in the air; then came something

like a small planet flying past—
something

not at all interested in me but on its own
way somewhere, all anointed with excitement:
bees, swarming,

not to be held back.

Nothing could hold them back.

2.

Gannets diving,
Black snake wrapped in a tree, our eyes
meeting.

The grass singing
as it sipped up the summer rain.
The owl in the darkness, that good darkness
under the stars.

The child that was myself, that kept running away
to the also running creek,
to colt’s foot and trilliums,
to the effortless prattle of the birds.

3. Said the Mother

You are going to grow up
and in order for that to happen
I am going to have to grow old
and then I will die, and the blame
will be yours.

4. Of the Father

He wanted a body
so he took mine.
Some wounds never vanish.

Yet little by little
I learned to love my life.

Though sometimes I had to run hard—
Especially from melancholy—
not to be held back.

5.

I think there ought to be
a little music here;
hum, hum.

6.

The resurrection of the morning.
The mystery of the night.
The hummingbird’s wings.
The excitement of thunder.
The rainbow in the waterfall.
Wild mustard, that rough blaze of the fields.

The mockingbird, replaying the songs of his
neighbors.
The bluebird with its unambitious warble

simple yet sufficient.

The shining fish. The beak of the crow.
The new colt who came to me and leaned
against the fence
that I might put my hands upon his warm body
and know no fear.

Also the words of poets
a hundred or hundreds of years dead—
their words that would not be held back.

7.

Oh the house of denial has thick walls
and very small windows
and whoever lives there, little by little,
will turn to stone.

In those years I did everything I could do
and I did it in the dark—
I mean, without understanding.

I ran away.
I ran away again.
Then, again, I ran away.

They were awfully little, those bees,
and maybe frightened,
yet unstoppably they flew on, somewhere,
to live their life.

Hum, hum, hum.

Mary Oliver, A Thousand Mornings, pp. 39-43
© 2012 by NW Orchard, LLC
First published by Penguin Press 2012

I’ve been reading this poem for weeks. I’m not one for walking in the woods or lying in meadows. I am, however, keenly aware that I am not the woman my father intended me to be.

My first attempt to leave home took the form of marriage. Thankfully, I married a man able to stay with me even when life seemed not worth living. It took effort, multiple mistakes, tears that would sink a ship, anger and humiliation before I made a break from my childhood and teenage lives. Both were driven by my father’s insistence that I keep his rules without fail.

Making this break entailed years of personal work. The kind that climbs mountains and walks through forests of more-of-the-same, though with different people and in highly different settings than my home life. Put bluntly, I didn’t know what had been ‘stolen’ from me, or how to retrieve and own it.

In my world of academia, there weren’t any bees humming to encourage me. I did, however, discover excellent friends who stood with me, plus an exceptionally wise psychotherapist.

NEVER think that what you struggle with is ‘small’ or ‘nothing’ to worry about. And NEVER believe that you can get through the struggle without difficult changes in your life.

Thanks for visiting, reading, and daring to be true to the wonderful person you were created to be.

Elouise

© Elouise Renich Fraser, 19 June 2023
Photo taken by DAFraser in Longwood Garden Meadow, June 2019

Giving up without letting go

My mind is weary.
My body aches.
I don’t know what tomorrow will bring.
Things that seemed set in concrete
keep shifting.
People I love are gone
or going.

Even so,
The sun is gorgeous today.
The sky is brilliant blue
dancing with fluffy white clouds.
Birds sing their hearts out.
Children scream with glee
in the school yard.

It all happens so quickly —
this strange thing we call living
while dying.

During the last several weeks I’ve been seeing doctors about my health, including my diet. It turns out I’m part of the 2% population in the USA who have hypokalemia. The percentage does not count patients in hospitals, nursing homes, or other medical facilities where hypokalemia is common.

I have one more doctor to see in the next two weeks. By then I’m hoping to have a better grasp of what this means for my diet, my heart, and my kidneys. I’ve already begun to gain weight, so that I’m now back in the ‘normal’ category. I’m also delighted to be munching on nuts, seeds, and other welcome bits that are part of my new diet.

One more thing has weighed heavy on me these weeks. My remaining two sisters have serious health issues. They live at great distances from each other and from me. Sister #3, Diane, died of ALS after living with it for ten years. In some ways, she was my closest sister. I’ve decided to go back through journals I kept when we were able to be with each other.

Diane made a huge impact on my life. Especially when it came to dealing with approaching death. She was never one to be morose. She was, however, painfully honest from the beginning to the end. Now it’s my turn to deal with whatever is coming my way.

This morning I walked in our neighborhood. The birds were singing their hearts out.  The children on the school playground were screaming with joy. As for me, I was stunned at the bright blue beauty of the sky, and the number of songbirds I saw and heard. Call it food I didn’t have to prepare or measure out in pre-set proportions!

These are trying times for the entire globe. I pray you’re finding ways to do what you must, while also enjoying the surprises of each day and night.

Thanks for visiting and listening.
Elouise

© Elouise Renich Fraser, 5 June 2023
Photo taken by JERenich, Easter 1953; with thanks to Mother for making our Easter dresses.