Thursday, April 30, 2020

The Empty Chair


I’ve been working through a meditation course on Emotions with Oren Jay Sofer.  If you’re a meditator and you haven’t found him yet, I highly recommend him.  The long of the short is that he believes in the ABCs of emotions as you meditate.  Awareness, Balance, Curiosity and Strength.  As I meditated this morning, I became intensely aware that I am dragging a three stranded rope of emotions along with me: grief, sadness and guilt.

I am grieving the loss of Griffin.  It impacts so many things.  Things that are lost: my sense of self as a father, my family’s structure and dynamics, the loss of seeing him launch into the world, the feeling of having lost 22 years of time and investment in him.  And I have to remind myself that feelings are like the weather: they’re neither right nor wrong, they just are.

I am sad that I walk by his room and an empty wheelchair sits at his desk.  I am sad that I don’t get to answer 23 question he’d ask that just have easily could have Googled.  I am sad for Gretchen, that she carries a Mother’s burden which is undoubtedly much heavier than mine.

And guilt.  Here is the emotion that binds the rope together.  How could I have done better for him?  How could we have done better for him?  How did we not put the pieces together that his body was failing him over the past three years?  Multiple hospitalizations where he admitted with a BP of 60/35 and was septic from a bladder infection.  When your 19-year old has had 24 surgeries, hospitalizations somehow become a part of the noise of life.

And yet an inexplicable bladder perforation last year rang alarm bells, but not loudly.  Guilt that events like these frustrated me, have a sense that if only Griffin would take responsibility for his bowel and bladder regimen (which he wouldn’t and didn’t).  Guilt that we weren’t patient with Griff when he sleeps till noon, not complete the one chore we left for work asking him to do.  Guilt that we too often let our anger boil over into yelling at him.

So, I carry my rope of pain.  I choose to believe that I am carrying my rope for a reason.  I choose to believe that this rope will either be used to pull me to higher level of awareness and compassion, or to lower me into a deeper place of understanding myself and the holy.  Maybe it’s both at the same time.  I just don’t know.  So, for now, I am simply going to carry it.  Live into to it with spaciousness and balance.  Neither ignore it nor let it wrap itself around me and tie me up.  Examine it without trying to uncode it.  Allow my rope to be a source of gentle strength while I wait on the Almighty.

3 comments:

  1. Peace. Prayers. Tears. With you, brother.

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  2. Im just catching up on your events and writing. Prayers and love to your family, beautifully and powerfully shared. Thank you for expressing

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