Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Just a Memory




What we have once enjoyed, we can never lose. All that we love deeply becomes a part of us.Take comfort in your memories, for they will be a part of you forever.


I was heading out the door a few days ago. Just a quick jaunt down the road to buy my favorite fountain soda...a must-have if I'm going to clean. Seems simple enough, doesn't it? After all, I do it all the time. So, I grabbed my wallet and keys and was just about to open the door to my garage when I was knocked to my knees. Literally, not figuratively. Within seconds I was struggling to breathe. My head was spinning. I was sweating and nauseous. It was all I could do to drag myself to bed and let the panic attack consume me. I just curled up into a ball and choked out sobs between gasps for air, as I waited for the pangs of fear to dissipate. Eventually, it stopped...and when it did I was emotionally and physically bankrupt. Within minutes, my entire day was sent into a tailspin. No fountain soda. No dusting. No laundry. Just silence and numbness...and fear. A deeply rooted fear I've been suppressing for a long time. A fear I don't think I've ever truly admitted to myself. 

The fear of forgetting. 

Forgetting the sound of Brittany's voice, the sound of her laugh...my laugh...because she inherited it from me. Her smile. Brittany's beautiful, carefree smile. Her stunning blue eyes that let the pureness of her heart and soul shine through. The way she frowned in frustration or was simply lost in thought when she twirled her hair around her finger...another odd trait we share. And I feel like those visions are slowly slipping away, not always as vivid in my mind as they once were.

Am I forgetting? Is my little girl becoming just a memory? Was she even real? Sometimes it seems too good to be true. How can someone so beautiful and perfect belong to me...be an actual physical, living, breathing part of me? Everything is changing. It's becoming different. And I don't like it. I don't like change and I don't like different. But I guess I started fighting that winless battle almost 29 months ago...the day Brittany left me behind to deal with this inevitable change...July 13, 2010. 

Yes, I have countless pictures of Brittany at all ages. I can stare at them all day, as I often do. I scatter them around me on the floor and lose myself in her. I close my eyes and try to hear her laugh...hear her say "Mommy, I wub you sooo much!" when she was just a tiny headful of tousled blonde hair. I try to remember the sound of her little voice when she would get into my makeup and beg me to put "yipstick" on her. I struggle to remember her voice say, "Momma" when she was happy or "Mother" when she was frustrated with me. But they're all just moments frozen in time now. No sound, no animation...just memories. I made a vow to myself a long time ago that I would never let that happen. I had to keep her real...tangible. Many parents who have experienced the death of their own children warned me that eventually it would, indeed, change...it would become different. "Well, maybe for them," I thought, "but certainly not for me!" Oh, how I was wrong. That's something I don't easily or often admit to, by the way. 

My biggest fear is happening. It is changing. And it is becoming different. And that scares me...a lot...because I don't know how to stop it. I don't want moments frozen in time. Of course I want the memories I already have..but I want more of them. I want new ones. Live, animated, tangible moments. And I will. They just won't be with my beautiful little girl. That's a bittersweet pill to swallow, my friends. And one I'm struggling to choke down.  

So I'm trying to hang on to the knowledge that God blessed me with Brittany for as long as He did. I'm trying to embrace the 21-years of memories He granted me. Memories that no one else shares. Absolutely no one. Memories held sacred between mother and daughter alone. Years of private conversations, inside jokes and secrets whispered in the dark. A bond of trust that allowed her to share not only her dreams with me, but her fears, too. Even memories of the countless hours I held her in my arms, wiping away her tears when she felt forgotten by someone she loved, but barely knew...those are memories I will never let go of, either. Not because I want to remember her pain, or the pain I felt for not being able to fix it, but to remember how it felt to hold her in my arms, stroke her hair and whisper that everything will be OK. To remember her beautiful blue eyes look up to me and say, "Thank you, mom. I love you and I'm so glad I have you...not just as my mom, but as my best friend." 

Are things changing? Is it becoming different? As sick as it makes me to admit it...yes. But one thing that time can never change or make different is the love I have for her...the love she has for me...and the bond we share that not even death can sever.

And you know what? I will make more memories with Brittany someday. Live, animated, tangible moments that will never be frozen in time...because she'll be waiting for me at the end of my life...blue eyes more brilliant than ever...a smile brighter than than sun...with Jesus by her side. I can only imagine me weeping and smiling and running into her outstretched, lanky arms saying, "I've missed you so much, pretty girl!" Maybe she'll even wipe away my tears this time and say,"I've missed you, too, mom! But now we have all of eternity to make new memories." And what a memorable, animated, tangible day that will be. 



I love you Brittany...timelessly <3






6 comments:

  1. I have a 4 year old daughter...my heart hurts for you everytime I read your blog, I can't imagine how it feels on your end, because it is such an unimaginable feeling. I pray for you, and Brittany all the time. <3

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  2. Thank you...your prayers mean so much.

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  3. Hey April, Just read your recent post. Our family will never forget Britt! I just asked Rachel the other day or so "Hey what was the creamer Britt liked in her coffee you used to rave about" - she replied from her room and came out... Cinnabon. Had a hard time finding it, so it may be the creamer one day that I remember from her but so many other things, foods she loved, and of course her laugh! April you and your family are always in our thoughts and prayers. Peace be with you knowing you will someday be with Britt. I have read other posts, you are helping so many others that are so fortunate to find your blog.

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  4. April, I have been following your and Brittany's story since the accident happened.Never would I have imagined 2 years later I would be faced with the same horrific experience. I lost my 19 year son Jesse on 7-16-2012 in a ATV accident.Please keep sharing your feelings and thoughts.They help me and I'm sure many others.So sorry you have to go through this you are in my prayers.

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  5. I read your blog everytime you post something new and this one really hit me. My daughter used to say "Yipstick" and "yuv" and my 4 year old daughter says it now also. I had to stop reading this post several times because I just cried and cried. I never comment on anything- I rarely make comments on FB either, but I just had to tell you that you are a GREAT mother to your daughter and your son and you have truley helped me become a better Mother.

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  6. Thank you all for your comments and for your continued support of my blog. I know I don't write very consistently, but when I do, I speak very honest and raw about how I feel at that moment.

    Nancy...Brittany loved that creamer! She said "Mom! You've got to try this!" She was right, of course! Yummy!

    Sandy, I'm sorry for your pain. I know It seems like no one else could ever hurt as badly as you do...I know I thought that...but I understand. I understand it all...and it breaks my heart that you, too, are hurting. So often it feels like just yesterday, and the Holidays make it even worse. Please reach out to me anytime.

    And for "yipstick" and "wuv you"....I'll cherish that always. Your compliment humbles me beyond words...and I'm a writer! Thank you for such kind words.

    Thank you for all of your encouraging and open comments. You have no idea how much they mean to me.

    Blessings to you all...

    April

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