Friday, March 29, 2013

Today I rediscovered who I was before David.  I found myself thinking of myself differently.  I can't really explain it, but at the end of the day I realized I had been moving in the world in a different way, like I used to when it was just me. 

I dug up three garden beds and planted three rows of potatoes, nine broccoli plants, carrots and more lettuce.  I weeded the garlic and onions that I planted in the fall.  Maybe tomorrow I will plant the peas and dig the tomato bed.  It felt good to be doing hard work, even if I was crying while I did it.  David took such care of me, he always did the hard work of digging while I came behind and planted.  We shared a love of gardening, although I think he tolerated my enthusiasm for self sustainability.  He'd grown up that way and didn't always see the need to go back there.  I remember at the begining I used to tell him, "I don't need you, I'm fine by myself."  He would always smile and say, "I know." I held on to that so carefully for a couple of years and then slowly I came to rely on him, to be part of a team.  That is one of the hardest thing to lose now.  Being part of a team, working together, planning, sharing. 

I spent part of the evening with Peggy and Micheal and their daughter and four grandchildren.  Busy and noisy, but very fun.  Driving home I realized that I had been relating to the kids differently than I did when David was with me.  I was more like I am with my students, somehow different, even though with David I was also still me.  It's so odd, to see myself as someone alone and someone with David.  I never really felt like I got the hang of it, sharing my life with someone else.  I was still working out how to be me and be us.  One of the things that makes me sad is that I was finally, this last year or so, getting into the groove of it. I had made the switch from "me and you" to "us."

So, now I relearn who I am alone.  Like everything else in this process, it is a mixed bag.  Exciting in some ways and so very sad.

2 comments:

  1. Love your thoughts and your honest, heart-felt writing.

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  2. Yes to all that. A spell of planting weather is perfect medicine for so many things. Maybe not a cure, but full of healing grace.

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