Saturday, September 3, 2016

I Am Them. They Are Me.

The following is result of Operation Blog Recovery (Of what I could retrieve): The following content is collected from a platform that is no longer operational. Gaps and spaces in the formatted text could be the result of broken and/or expired emoticons, links or web-hosted pictures. You can be assured that the opinions and thoughts expressed are from the original writing. Hell, I’m not even going to correct spelling or grammar. Enjoy! Or not.

Originally posted on January 27, 2009 - Tuesday


Current mood:  artistic
Category: Life



I cried a lot today. Even now, I love him so much that it’s difficult to bear sometimes. When you truly love someone, it doesn’t matter how long their absence, there’s always a hole in your heart that can never be fully mended. It’s an emotional battle scar that continues to act up when a reminder, or memory, suddenly pops into your head. It’s kinda like that tricky knee that gets stiff when it’s about to rain or get cold. Your lost love is always ‘there’ no matter how much you try to suppress it. This past weekend included my oldest brother’s birthday whom we lost several years ago, it still feels like yesterday though. My sister somberly reminded me of that while working feverishly hard this past early Saturday morning (she works from home and is ALWAYS working). We weren’t in the same room when she reminded me; she was in her office and I was in my bedroom. When both doors are open, we can have a pretty decent conversation through the hall. So, I stole my moment of quiet sadness and let the waterworks gush forward for a minute or so. You should know that I’m typing through my tears this very moment but it’s important that I get this written (eventually). My whole family deals with his absence in different ways but always in a conventionally sad way I suppose. At work today, I blamed severe allergies and the awful weather for my vividly red eyes. This past weekend, I really wanted to describe how absolutely amazing he was but I couldn’t get through two lines without breaking down. I won’t try today either because there are too many beautiful things to cram into a single entry, too many to even put into words. I’ll do my best to record a light view however. Originally, I’d intended to have a time-stamped memorial entry on his actual  birthday but I can’t do that yet, it’s still too hard. Regular holidays and anniversaries are hard enough to deal with without him. One day I hope to be strong enough to memorialize his memory on his actual birth date. But not today. As I’m sure I’ve mentioned before, there are four of us kids in our immediate family; two born in January (my two oldest brothers) and two born in July (my sister and I). I guess my parents were partial to months beginning with “J.” When someone asks me today how many kids there are in our family, I always say four. He will never be truly past tense to me, I don’t think it would ever be possible for any of us to think of him that way. My brothers are less than a year apart in age and I’m a year and 24 days older than sis. Aside from our physical similarities, my oldest brother and I were always considered the boy-girl “twin” sibling equivalent. He and I look most like my mom, my brother and sister look more like my dad’s side of the family. My feelings about him are no more significant than those of my siblings, and to a greater extent my mother, but since he’s been gone, there’s always something asymmetrically off-kilter about my existence. I’m sure that feeling would be multiplied by a million compared to how my brother feels. After all, I still have “my girl twin” to look to for love and guidance everyday, he doesn’t. I’m not sure how to explain it really, but that doesn’t make it any less real. You know, it doesn’t matter how much time passes, my love for my oldest brother never gets any less significant. Every time I think about him not being here, it still feels like somebody punched me in the chest with all of their might. I wonder what he would think of the woman I’ve become. I’m pretty sure he’d be very proud of me, he always was. I’m sure proud of him and so grateful to have known him.  It’s really quite inexplicable, this feeling. Time makes it easier to deal with, but never erases one measure of the hurt. In a twisted kind of way, that’s good. That pain always reminds you of their presence which I wouldn’t ever want to go away. I see pictures of my brothers as children and would swear on a stack of bibles 10 miles high, that they were the two cutest little boys I’d ever seen in my entire life. They still hold that record. They were absolutely gorgeous young men too but I love the pictures of them as little boys. My dad took all of us camping and fishing a lot (we had the flyest outdoor gear too). Several of their camping trips were before sis and I were born but we camped a lot too.  My very favorite pictures of them are the ones of the two little ashy-black boys (in two beautifully different ebony shades) in the water at Garner State Park without a care in the world. My mother said they stayed in the water so much that there were gray in color by the time that got out at the end of the day. Their extraordinarily handsome sons look so much like them but I don’t think they’d mind if I state that there couldn’t be any little boy in creation that could be as cute as they were. Not even the fly young men my sister and I will be blessed to have some day will compare. I realize I MIGHT be a little biased about that though. Actually, sis and I were never even supposed to “be.” After my two brothers, my mother was pregnant with twin boys. She miscarried on a camping trip when she was pretty far along in her pregnancy. While inside our camper, one of the boys actually fell out of her onto the camper floor. My daddy rushed her to the hospital where she delivered the other one, stillborn. She had the misfortune of seeing them both and knew that one was lighter in color than the other, just like my two brothers. I think my mother first told me about them when I was in junior high or high school. As you can imagine, I was terribly sad for her when I realized what that loss must have felt like for her. Then, I started to realize that had they been born, my sister and I likely wouldn’t have. I think mere seconds after that realization, the next words out of my mouth to my mother was “Peace Twins!” as a kissed my two fingers and threw them in the air. When I blurted that out, she was a little shocked at first but quickly forgave me and even giggled a little. She knew that the two little girls she had afterwards, were then ones she was always meant to have. My brother’s loss breaks my heart the most when I think of how my mother feels. She’s always called us her “Four Pieces of Gold” and loves us all so much. And though she is a wonderfully loving, unique and outstanding mother, she was never the same after losing him. I can’t imagine she ever will be. Sadly, that’s her cross to bear for her entire life. I hurt for myself and my entire family, but mostly for her. I have to confess that my heart gets heavier with each word typed, so I’d better end soon, otherwise my heavy heart will drop out of my chest with sadness and pride. I feel sadness for our Earthly loss and pride for what was and is. Hopefully, this is a fitting tribute to my wonderful brother and fabulous family alike. My family, a perplexing mix of originality, determination and warrior spirit. My father, the fearless rebel maverick. My mother, the lovingly unique nature child. My oldest brother, the sweetly quiet poet. My older brother, the powerfully paternal protector. My little sister, the bravely maternal angel. And me, the grateful loyalist, the staunch defender of what is and will be, the lover of all my family blessings. I am the literary keeper of our strong family legacy. I am an astonished admirer of my origin. I am humbled. I am loved. I am blessed. I am me.





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