auntbijou: (Death)
It's been six months since the Husbandly One passed away. As the experts would put it, I have passed the six month goal that means my chances of survival have gone up tremendously.

Woo-hoo.

I miss him dreadfully. It sucks. I mean, I'm better. I'm not crying at the drop of a hat, I'm getting a grasp on handling the finances, though I still cuss him out when I can't find something or there's yet ANOTHER password to something he didn't write down.

I still have trouble sleeping. It's extremely difficult to get used to sleeping alone again, after sleeping next to someone for 29 years. Sometimes, I lie there for hours, waiting to go to sleep. Sometimes I read, or play a game. And sometimes, I'm out the moment my head hits the pillow.

It's all part of the grieving process, I know. But I hate it. I hate the bills I keep getting for him. I hate it that when I finally called Sprint to make the necessary changes to our phone account, to take THO off and I was all prepared to surrender his phone, I was a complete mess when they told me I could keep it at no charge.

I wasn't ready to let go of it yet.

I cried when the bank let me know they were taking his name off our account. I wasn't ready, but... I understand why. It just... hurt.

I hate it. I hate it all. I hate most of all that he's not here.

But I still am. I'm still here, and I will stay. Not happy about it, but... I'm doing it.

Dammit.
auntbijou: (Death)
The Impertinent Daughter is graduating from Texas State tomorrow. She's graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art, and she's graduating summa cum laude. And that's with taking not just studio classes, she took hard academic classes as well. English Lit, geology, political science, algebra.... and she kept her grades up, despite having to keep the family going after her papa started treatment for anal and liver cancer, and her mother nearly dying of pneumonia.

She's a wonder, y'all, and I am so proud of her.

And I wish like anything that the Husbandly One could be here to see her graduate. That was his goal on entering hospice. He knew he was dying, but he wanted to live long enough to see his daughter graduate from college. He tried so hard to live.

I hate that my husband's last rational words to me were, "I can't breathe!" I hate that being in hospice and having a DNR meant I couldn't call 911, and that I was alone with him when this happened. And that the closest hospice nurse to us was an almost two hour drive away from us.

It's been thirty three days since the Husbandly One died. Thirty three days since I lost the person I tell everything to first. Thirty three days of waking up without him in the bed with me, and having to remember all over again that he's gone.

There are times when it's so hard, I almost can't breathe. When the Impertinent One had gone on to the Texas State website to make sure they printed her name correctly, and discovered that she was graduating summa cum laude, she screamed, I screamed, we squeed and wibbled, and I told her how proud of her I am. Then I turned to say something to THO... and remembered. Oh... that's right. He's gone.

I miss him so very, very much.

Seven Days...

Sunday, November 17th, 2019 11:19 am
auntbijou: (Death)
Last Sunday,November 10th, a little after 2:18 a.m., the Husbandly One breathed his last breath and was gone. Just like that.



I was trying to give him a dose of medication to clear his airways, and had just asked him to open his mouth a little wider so I could get the oral syringe in. His eyes flicked toward me, his lips moved and he whispered... something... and then he was gone. I had stared at him, then stood up and said, "Oh," in shock.



Our friend, K, who was there helping me with the night watch, stood up and leaned over him to look, then looked at me, her eyes wide with shock, and she said, "Oh," the same exact way I had.



The next thing I knew, I was wrapped tightly in her arms, and I was roaring with grief as my knees threatened to buckle, because the worst thing ever had just happened to me, and I was trying not to leave with him.



Most of that night is a blur. I remember staring at his face earlier in the night, thinking death was coming soon as I noticed how his skin was molding to his skull. I remember staring at his face after the hospice folks had cleaned him up and dressed him, touching his face and crying at how small he was, how thin, how... cold. I remember sitting on the couch in the dining room, holding E's dear, dear face in my hands as she told me she loved me. I said, "I know you do, because you came here without your teeth."



I remember how kind the hospice people were, and the policeman who came in with extremely neatly threaded eyebrows. I remember my sister holding me so tight and telling me how sorry she was, and my other sister on the phone, telling me how much she loved me. I remember the guy from the funeral home, who sounded like Barry White. And I remember looking out the back door at this extremely beautiful sunrise and being startled that so much time had already passed.



And now, it's been seven days. Seven days since my husband died. Seven days since I last looked into his face, wishing I could relieve his suffering, and knowing there was nothing I could do except respect his wishes. He'd been unresponsive since Thursday morning. His last clearly spoken words to me were, "I can't breathe."



And because he was in hospice care, and had a Do Not Resuscitate order, I called Hospice and not 911. They helped me calm him down and get him breathing almost normally, but he was practically comatose after that. If you asked him to blink to answer yes/no questions, he'd do it. He'd smile, or smirk, or waggle his eyebrows, and he would hold your hand, squeeze it, and tug on it.



We held his hand around the clock. Seriously. We took it in shifts, there was always someone there to hold his hand when I needed to sleep, or to eat, go to the bathroom, go outside and cry... someone held his hand continuously. If you didn't, he'd look for a hand, reaching out and trying to find one.



So we held his hand.



It's been seven days since I held his hand. Seven days since I ran my fingers through his hair and talked to him. Seven days since I lost the one person who got me and loved me anyway. Seven days since I told him I loved him and he squeezed my hand back to say, "I love you, too."



Seven days of pretending to be a functional competent adult. Seven nights of sleeping alone in my full-sized bed that suddenly seems way too big. Seven days of pushing down panic and staying calm so my kids stay calm. Seven days of not going through the stacks of mail and papers on my desk to find out what OTHER bills didn't get paid.



Seven days of missing my best friend, the person I tell everything first, seven days of wanting to tell THO something, or ask him something, or just wanting to see him, just because.



Seven days of missing his Facebook Messenger icon being constantly up on my phone, because we sent jokes, memes, or photos we'd just taken of something interesting to each other.



Seven days. And I will never, ever be the same again.



Fuck. Cancer.
auntbijou: (Golden-eyed Weasley)
The first book I ever wrote was about fire lizards. I loved the idea of fire lizards! I loved the idea of finding eggs in hot sands on the beach, and having one break open and a hungry little dragonet pouncing out, all hungry and creeling, and because I just happened to be carrying a lunch bag, WHAM!... Impression.

Of course, I was fifteen and the book was for my sophomore English class in high school. But I wrote it, illustrated it myself, and hand-bound it. It won first prize in a creative writing contest I didn't even know about, but my teacher entered it on the sly. I was very proud of that book.

And, of course, I wrote it because I was Pern-crazy.

I read my first Pern novel when I was about twelve. It was Dragonsong by Anne McCaffrey, and I fell utterly in love with it. Well, actually, to tell you the truth, I fell in love with the illustration on the cover of the book, which is how I usually picked books when I was a kid. I would be intrigued by cover illustrations, and then get hooked by the words inside.

After that, I was doodling fire lizards all over the place. They showed up in my notebooks, in corners of my textbooks, on my piano music, napkins at lunch...

And then I discovered Dragonflight... and discovered there were more books by this wonderful, wonderful woman. Crystal Singer, and the Dinosaur Planet series, and her shorts in Get Off The Unicorn, and The Ship Who Sang...

I had always wanted to be a writer, when I wasn't wanting to be a astronaut/veterinarian/engineer/pianist/artist/scientist/dancer... well, you get the picture. My family is full of story tellers. But this woman... her writing set my imagination on fire, and I really, really started wanting it. Starting taking it seriously, and working at it. I started thinking it was possible.

Thank you, Anne McCaffrey, for all those wonderful hours sitting up on the roof, curled up in the shade of the tallow tree, reading about dragons and their riders, fighting against Thread, and Masterharper Robinton, and Menolly, and for the amazing Captain Sassinak and her brilliant fight against the Planet Pirates, and for Killashandra and the Heptite Guild, and the Rowan and Jeff Raven, and Afra and Damia, and... everything you taught me. I am going to miss you.

Rest in peace...

May 2020

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