What is this?

What is this? I don't really know, other then a continuation of my updates and writings that I was sharing previously on Caringbridge of this journey through cancer and now widowhood and single parenting.

Maybe it won't end up being anything at all, or maybe it will be a glimpse into my heart, my life, my current situation, my testimony.

Whatever it becomes, I am touched that you are interested.

Monday, September 23, 2019

5 year Angelversary









12:15pm passes. It’s officially been 5 years. I take a break from work and sit outside reflecting. 

This one feels big. 5 years is one of those milestones seemingly different than 2,3 & 4 years. As momentous as 1 year, but in a different way. 

1 year was acknowledging pure survival. One full cycle through this new life. 5 years is acknowledging this significant passing of time and many cycles through this new life.

I look for visual cues of the time passed. The back yard is so different from when we all sat on the deck that evening 5 years ago.  The wall between the kitchen and living room where we whispered grim updates is gone.  But the greatest reminder of the time gone by is Aria. A newborn then, and now a 5 year old. Only 10 weeks of difference between the life changing events of birth and death. 

I’m still not sure how this grieving thing goes. I can honestly say that not a single day has gone by in 5 years that I have not thought of Brandon. I don’t speak of him every day, but I am reminded of him every day. 

I miss him just as much as I did 5 years ago and the depth at which it hurts is the same then and now. But yet it’s very different.

Shock, fear, anger and disorientation all accompanied that pain then.  It was nearly constant and all consuming.  Now acceptance and normalization bring some sweet relief when I visit my pain. I’m reminded of how far I’ve come and how I’ve incorporated this loss into life, and no longer  desperately battling to bring back life into loss. 


It hurts as deeply and intensely as it did then, but I have more strength to hold it now and it’s more familiar now. I know I can set it down when I need to and sit with it without fear when I need to.  I’ve even come to take some comfort in my grief, that despite the years accumulating my soul has not forgotten him and still aches just the same over the loss of him.

I do have to work harder to retrieve memories and remember his favorite things and his little quirks. It used to be so familiar.  But as time passes some things fade. And that’s hard.

But I never need to dive deep to remember how he loved me. I still feel it today, and that’s truly eye opening to me.  How  impactful how we make others feel really is.  

Friends still cry with me, or tear up or voices crack when remembering Brandon. Sorry, not sorry, but it’s incredibly comforting to me to experience those moments. It lets me know the depth at which he touched so many and the love that so many have for him.

I can finally say I don’t identify myself first as a widow. I am widowed, and will always be. Being in another relationship or married will never undo my experience. But it’s not my greatest identity anymore I think because the effects of being widowed do not consume the majority of my life anymore.  Thank goodness for that. 

I often wonder what 10 years will be like. I wonder if 5 years from now I’ll be sitting in this backyard reflecting as I have for so many years now.  I imagine so - but one thing I’ve learned is that life takes crazy turns, and whether I’m sitting here or somewhere else, this day will always hold so much weight I know I will never forget.

9 comments:

  1. Christina, I don't personally know you, and I don't routinely read blogs, but I had a friend who was losing a husband to cancer five years ago and somehow came across your story. It is so beautifully written and relatable. It honors your late husband and the life he lived in such a honest and touching way. I'm sure your entire family, including your little girl, appreciate you keeping his memory alive in the hearts of so many. Be blessed.

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    1. Hi Stan, I am a little taken back by your comment, it is quite rude. I will always be widowed. My husband died. Nothing, no one and no circumstance will ever change that. And what I choose to share publicly is up to me, I am not required to share all the details of my life, though I have often mentioned my fiancĂ©e in my writings. I do not have to be “alone” to be a widow, and your statement comes off quite ignorant.

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  3. Hi Stan, this is Brandon’s brother. For you to speak this way to Christina really proves how little you knew Brandon. I assure you your financial donations are not required, nor are your ignorant opinions. You should really rethink publicly disrespecting my sister less than a day after she leaves a post in remembrance of her husband. I don’t know what compels you to be so crass, but I assure you it is not welcome here. Move along.

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  4. Stan,
    As one of Christina’s best friends, who has tried to be there for her as much as possible, and knowing what she went through, you have no right to judge someone else’s grief journey. If you wanna know where your “apparent donations” are going then donate to someone else. Get over yourself and stop trolling. As David said, MOVE along.

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  6. Your enemies would never tell you if you missed the mark.

    I'm sorry for not being careful with you at this time in your life. I'd like to ask for your forgiveness for my thoughtlessness.

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  7. Just for clarification for anyone following this comment thread, because donation money was brought up, I do not continue to receive donations. As a matter of a fact, it has been years since I've accepted any kind of donation to myself or Aria. And I am blessed to have been able to use that money to pay for childcare, full time preschool for 2 years, and have some left to be saved for college.

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Thank you for sharing your thoughts!