Tag Archives: #survivingloss #grieving

#teasertuesday 8.6.24

Today, it’s a book cover tease, lol…

From the upcoming ( 11.11.24 release) of A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS _A DICKENS HOLIDAY ROMANCE Book 26)

Successful Chef Anton Saparosa had the perfect life. Great marriage; beautiful and adoring wife; trendy, SoCal restaurant frequented by celebrities – many of them his friends.

Then Covid hit.

Anton’s perfect life dissolved before his eyes. With nothing left to keep him in California he starts an itinerant cross-country journey searching for something to give his life meaning again.

Happenstance lands him in the tiny town of Dickens just as Dorrit’s Diner is thrown into chaos.

Literary Agent Portia Avon needs a rest. A messy divorce has her craving quiet and the company of her friend and client A.B. Cards, nee Abra Bree. She comes from the western heat of California to the eastern cold of Dickens and plans to do nothing but rest, relax, and read during her holiday stay.

When Portia spots a familiar face in Dorrit’s, she’s confused. Why is Anton Saparosa, one of the most recognizable chefs in California, working as a fry cook in Abra’s mom’s diner, and going by the name Tony Smith?

A question Portia wants an answer to, but one Tony isn’t willing to share, especially with a woman he can’t stop thinking about.

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#FridayFive 6.21.24

It’s been a while since I did one of these, but I actually have a topic for today, lol.

Here are 5 things I think you should know about my upcoming Dickens Holiday book A CHEF’S KISS CHRISTMAS ( Cover reveal coming in July 2024, so stick around, kids.)

  1. hero is a chef ( Duh!)
  2. heroine is a literary agent ( First time I’ve used that profession!)
  3. Abracadabra has 2 kids now
  4. the Covid pandemic and its aftermath is a major factor in the plot
  5. deals with loss and grieving and depression and still manages to be funny and heartwarming – hey! It’s a Dickens book!

More to come with the cover reveal starting on July 1!

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13 months…

One year plus one month…

Reflections seem to be taking over my psyche lately, so I thought I’d share some of them today. I think this will be the last time I blog about this because…it’s time.

What I’ve learned in the past 13 months.

I’m stronger than I ever imagined.

I can still learn how to do grownup things I never had to deal with before, like banking, selling a house, finalizing an estate.

Greif comes in waves, tsunamis, and sometimes just raindrops.

You never really get over your guilt. But you can learn to live with and accept it for what it is.

My mother hid a lot about herself and her life.

The reason she did was to protect me.

My mother was smarter than anyone – including me and her husband – ever gave her credit for.

She lashed out when she felt: threatened, hurt, or like she was being taken advantage of.

Her capacity for love and forgiveness was truly God-like.

Things that got me through the hard days…

Watching TikTok videos of screaming, drama-queen Huskies behaving like Huskies, or puppies doing puppy things on Reels on Instagram. They made me laugh and smile for a few minutes.

Staring at pictures of my grandson.

Hugging my grandson.

Taking care of my dog.

Crying. Yeah, I know this one is a little counterproductive, but sometimes you just have to let it out, you know?

Blogging about my struggles. Even though I am an insanely private person – despite being in the public eye – writing about what I was going through truly helped me compartmentalize and deal with the emotions flooding through me.

Hugging my dog.

Watching mindless Housewives Reality TV. Don’t judge me, lol. It really helped take my mind off the grief.

Here’s what didn’t help me get through those dark days…

People close to me telling me to get a grip. That everyone dies. That no one can live forever.

People telling me that I should just think about the wonderful long life my mother lived. It’s obvious they didn’t know how she struggled in it.

People telling me it was “her time” to go. Like that made it better, somehow, knowing there was some cosmic plan for her sudden death.

Isolating myself.

The uncomfortable looks people gave me when my emotions got the better of me, or if I answered honestly when they asked how I was doing. If you don’t want me to be truthful, don’t ask me because I don’t lie.  Hence, the isolating.

People saying things like, “The grief will lessen with time,” or “you’ll feel differently in a year.” It’s a year…still feel the same.

Things I’m taking into the future with me…

Life goes on. Cliché, but so very true.

There really is something beneficial to getting out of bed every day, making it, and moving one foot in front of the other even when you have no mental energy to do so.

I’m not the only daughter to ever lose her mother. I am, though, the only daughter to lose my mother. Even so, we, the motherless daughters, now belong to an exclusive club and can empathize with everything we’ve each gone through like no one else can because we get it.

People die, but memories don’t.

Having faith helps. It doesn’t necessarily have to be in God, but having some thought of a power greater than yourself does make the bad things easier to deal with.

It’s okay to cry for no apparent reason and no one should judge you when you do.

Understanding that the price you pay for loving someone is the emptiness you feel at their loss.

I’m going to butcher this quote, but I do remember hearing it, somewhere. “Grief is the price we pay for love.”

And I think that’s the most important thing I’ve learned during these horrible 13 months.

Grief is the price we pay for love.

Miss you, Mommie ~

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One Year…

How is that possible? I asked myself this when I woke up this morning. It was just yesterday she died.

It’s said your life can change in the blink of an eye, a single heartbeat, the flap of a butterfly’s wings, once.

All true.

What’s never discussed is how that change impacts your life.

A year ago I lost the person I was more closely connected to than any other.

The very first heartbeat I heard was my mother’s.

The very first voice I heard and recognized was my mother’s.

The very first smell I recognized was my mother’s natural scent.

I grew inside her. She was, truthfully, my everything for the nine months I gestated. Her body fed me, and nourished me. Her heart beat for me. Her lungs breathed for me.

Without her, I simply wouldn’t be.

And there’s something I’ve never thought about or considered until today.

She truly was everything to me; my very existence.

She was there for me every day thereafter, guiding me, caring for me, feeding me, and keeping me safe. Until I didn’t need her help any longer. Until I was able to do all that for myself.

Or until I thought I was so grown up I could do it for myself without any help.

How is it possible it’s been a year?

But then, I remember everything that’s happened this past year, all the grief, all the horrible moments of indecision and mental clouding; the pain – physical and emotional; the way I had to grow up in an instant at the age of 62 and do things I never thought I’d need to do as someone’s child.

Or wanted to.

I look back on this year – God, is it only a year? – and think of everything my mother missed. The birth of her great-granddaughter; her 56th wedding anniversary; the way her husband bounced back from his 2 surgeries.

I look back on this year and think, I can’t believe in the span of three weeks I buried my mother, faced a second surgery in as many weeks with my stepfather, sold their house, assumed guardianship financially and emotionally of my stepfather, settled my mother’s estate, as small as it was, got rid of all their possessions – except for the ones that meant something to me – made all the financial decisions for both of them, which I will continue doing until my stepfather joins my mother, and managed to still write 6 books and not lose myself completely in paralytic grief.

I look back on this past year with surprise and real regret when I think about how much I didn’t know about my mother and my stepfather’s lives, both before they were married and after. About how much I missed because she kept things so close to her vest and never thought saying them aloud was the right thing to do. About the secrets that unfolded, slowly, but assuredly, after she died. About how much she suffered, mentally and emotionally, throughout her life.

Real regret. I think sometimes it edges out the grief.

But then…grief returns.

A year, in the big scheme of things, isn’t that long. Considering the average person can now live beyond 90, one-ninetieth of that seems so small an amount of time.

But then, consider all that’s happened in this year and maybe, not so small after all.

I was asked how I feel today, one year since my mother died. How am I doing? How am I handling the anniversary?

I’ll tell you how I feel, how I’m doing…I’m…surviving. That is, after all, all I can do. One foot in front of the other; one day at a time. All the ridiculous cliches that mean nothing and everything.

I’m surviving.

Every day I’m a little stronger; a little more able to get through the day without blackness circling my heart.

Every day I move through the pain a bit better; faster. It doesn’t incapacitate me any longer. It doesn’t paralyze me, or make me numb. Some days, the pain is actually just a memory, not a living, breathing entity.

And every day I get back to being just a little bit more…me.

One year…

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December 26th…

Not gonna lie: yesterday was rough.

I understand that any first holiday after a loved one has died is hard to get through, but Christmas? The day when you celebrate family above all else? Yeah, hard doesn’t begin to describe it.

When I used to work in nursing, I typically volunteered to work on all the holidays for two reasons: #1 – overtime pay. As a single girl living in NYC, I always needed an influx of extra cash, so getting paid time and a half for the holiday shift was gold for me. Reason #2 was that I was that single girl living in NYC when all my co-workers were married with kids and families they wanted to spend time with on the holidays.

I never wanted to spend time with my family – such as it was – just my mother and stepfather, when I could make some badly needed extra cash. Besides, it was just the three of us, that long ago Easter ham incident killing the holiday dinners with my grandmother and aunt for evermore, and most times when we got together there would be some kind of emotional scene, argument, or something else and I wound up leaving, hurt, angry and pissed.

And I am horrified and so disappointed in my younger self that I felt that way.

It’s said the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. By that definition, my family was insane as a unit because we did do the same thing over and over again whenever we got together. When it involved my grandmother or aunt, that insanity rose exponentially. So it wasn’t a three-day wonder why I chose to work a holiday instead of spending it sitting on the edge of my seat, just waiting for a bomb to explode while trying to eat an overcooked, inexpensive cut of meat and boiled potatoes.

Regrets are something I don’t allow myself because I’m savvy enough to understand you can’t change the past. You can only ensure the same thing doesn’t happen again in the future by changing your actions, reactions, or word choices. As I sit here thinking about how difficult yesterday was, I do have regrets about those past holidays where I bailed on my parents, though, opting to work instead of spending time with them. With the ignorance of youth, I never anticipated them dying. I knew they were going to. Someday. But that someday was a small nugget in the back of my brain.

If I had those times back, knowing what I know now, I would still work some holidays, but not every single one. Yes, the money was needed and appreciated. Student loans, rent money, food, and basic needs were helped to be paid with the time and half pay. But I could have skipped a shift or two if I knew doing so would make my mother happy and give me a chance to maybe divert her emotional demons toward some positive outlooks.

And this is why I don’t do regrets- because the anxiety and sadness that typically develops when I consider what I should have done instead of what I did, takes an emotional toll on me and hits me hard.

Just as hard as yesterday was to get through….

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A non-thankful Thanksgiving…

Another holiday first. While I didn’t spend Thanksgiving with my parents for many years, this year’s day is particularly unsettling.

Since my mother broke her hip the first time, I would deliver a complete Thanksgiving dinner for the two of them every year. My mother loved turkey, so I’d roast a 10-pounder, slice it, then put it into containers so they could portion out what they wanted. My homemade gravy, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, sweet stuffing, warm biscuits, and a fresh apple pie made up the meal. I delivered it all on the Wednesday prior to the holiday with the caveat they not break into it until the day.

They never listened.

I’d get a phone call every Wednesday, early evening, with my mother claiming it was the best meal she’d had all year.

I had to bite my tongue every year because I’d specifically asked them not to eat it until the following day, the actual holiday.

But, my mother was my mother and had a mind of her own.

I know this was a control thing on my part. I didn’t want them to do anything I hadn’t asked them to do. What I tended to forget every year was that the holiday was just a date on the calendar to both my mother and stepfather. It meant nothing, in reality, since they’d spend it alone, watching the Macy’s parade and just sitting around the house. They didn’t attend Thanksgiving church services ( perish the thought!); they had no friends to spend the day with, and I was always off to my in-laws for the few days of the holiday week.

The guilt I feel now that I never spent any real holiday time with them those last few years is monumental. What would it have cost me to go to their home, even if it was on the morning of the holiday to have breakfast? I could have delivered their meal then instead of the day before and then not gotten mad when they ate it before they were supposed to.

And how stupid is it to even say when they were supposed to? Seriously. They were grown-ass adults and could do what they wanted, eat when they wanted, no matter who thought otherwise.

This year, as always, hubby and I are going to spend the day with his family. My daughter and her growing family will join us.

And I have no one to cook for this year. No turkey and all the trimmings to make and then deliver. No salvos to wait until the actual day to eat it all. A plea that will not be paid heed.

 I will go and visit my stepfather in the nursing home on Wednesday and most likely bring him a chocolate turkey. He will spend his first Thanksgiving as a widower with a bunch of strangers, eating institutional turkey and trimmings.

The guilt continues to grow, kids. Each and every day…

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6 months today…

August 18, 2023

6 months today.

I’d like to say it’s gone by quickly.

I’d like to say I’ve started moving on from my grief and guilt.

I’d like to say I’ve accepted everything that happened and am now at peace with it.

I’d like to say I still don’t have periods where I suddenly burst into tears, or feel my heart pounding like a drum line marching o n a football field.

I’d like to say I am moving on. That I’m not paralyzed at times with indecision, or making choices I will either come to regret or instantly do.

I’d really like to say my life has finally gotten manageable again.

But I can’t.

I can’t say any of those things and be telling the truth.

What I can say is that I am taking it one day – sometimes one hour – at a time.

What I can say, truthfully, is that talking about it helps. Saying my feelings aloud not only validates them but fills me with a strange sense of purpose.

What I can say, is that each day is slightly better than the day before.

What I’ll never be able to say is that I don’t miss my mother.

Because I do. Every hour of every day.

Despite our tortured relationship…maybe even because of it…I miss her.

Terribly.

I miss the crazy malapropisms she unconsciously made almost daily.

I miss the way she’d ask me a thousand questions about the same thing.

I miss the way she referred to herself in third person when she was speaking hypothetically.

Does it make me sound crazy to say I miss fighting with her? Verbally sparring with her? Getting her to understand a different point of view than just hers?

I’m sad she only got to meet her great-grandson once.

I’m sad she’ll never meet her great-granddaughter when she arrives this winter.

I’m sad she’s not around to cook for anymore.

I’m just…sad.

6 months today.

The time flew by in a blink and yet dragged mercilessly.

6 months today…

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Serenity…

This was the first week where I didn’t cry every single day. I cried, don’t get me wrong. Just not daily.

Progress?

Maybe. But more, I think I am finally starting to emotionally accept what happened. My logical, nursing-educated brain understood my mother’s death the day it occurred.

My heart and my emotional brain? Not so much.

But the absence this week of the daily tears, the heartbreak, and the guilt I was experiencing, and at the oddest, most inopportune moments, has abated.

For now.

I know that doesn’t mean I’m done caring about my mother. The furthest thing from it. I live with the daily wish I could have been there, held her hand, and told her I loved her one last time. And done everything I could to prevent her from dying.

But I wasn’t, and I didn’t.

What this suspension of daily waterworks means, I think, is that I’m coming to terms with my mother’s passing, knowing nothing I could have done would have prevented it. Nothing I could have done would have altered the course God sent her on. Nothing I could have done would have made what happened any less horrible – for her and me.

Accepting her death, how it came about, and what it means for those she left behind has been a tortuous road these past 13 weeks, one which I wasn’t prepared to travel and have been having a great deal of trouble navigating through.

I always assumed being a nurse, having watched so many patients die over my career, would have prepared me better for the end of my mother’s life.

What’s that old saw about assuming something? Yeah, joke’s on me, isn’t it?

Nothing could have prepared me for what happened. Or for losing her. Nothing. I think I am finally starting to understand that.

With a little time, a little self-reflection, and a little emotional distance, I think I’m starting to fully accept it and am learning to move forward.

As I do, I’ve been reciting The Serenity Prayer during those times when I find myself falling into guilt again:

“God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”

It’s the wisdom part that’s taking a while to grow within me…

~ Peg

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3 months…

So today marks exactly 3 months since my mom died.

A lot has happened in those 12 weeks. Some good; some bad.

The good, first.

I was able to sell their home without too much trouble.

I’ve been able to cancel all their accounts with relative ease. Some, truthfully, were harder to cancel than others. I’m NEVER getting a Discover Card for myself,  that is for sure. Worst customer service I have ever experienced and there is still an issue 3 months on.

My stepfather, despite the second fall and subsequent re-surgery on the same broken hip that started the entire rigmarole, is doing okay in the nursing home, physically. Mentally and emotionally? Another story entirely.

Now, the bad.

My stepfather did have to have a second surgery since he re-broke his operative hip the day after my mother died.

He is failing mentally. Quickly. He repeats the same thing over and over to me when I visit. He cries often when I visit, lamenting my mother’s death. He has not accepted he will be living in the nursing facility from now on, yet. I don’t know if he ever will. Just the other day he asked if he had enough money saved so that when he “gets out maybe he can buy a little mobile home.”

It broke my heart in two when he asked that. I tried telling him he was a resident of the nursing home for the umptenth time. He cried.

The bills keep piling up. 2 surgeries; 2 multi-state ambulance transports; his care in the nursing home. It’s a lot. All their savings will be gone sooner than I think they ever expected. And they never had any kind of insurance other than Medicare. And we all know how that’s going.

For me, I am still feeling the guilt. I had a dear friend tell me, recently, something from her husband. He feels the sense of extreme guilt I am experiencing about putting them in the nursing home and then mom dying within 2 weeks, is actually my grief manifesting itself as guilt.

I think he may be right.

I carry my grief like I wear my clothing – always on me. It is a little easier, though, to get through a day without crying now. Some days I don’t cry at all. Then I lie down to go to sleep and when I say my prayers, the tears form.

I know this will pass.

Eventually.

For now, it’s just a day to day, sometime hour to hour thing.

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I think I’ve lost my funny…

This is hard for me to say, but since my mom’s passing, I’ve lost my funny.

I write RomComs, quirky characters, and silly/weird situations for my romance novels. I’m known for my snappy dialogue, my character’s sometimes snarky inner thoughts, and my ability to make you cry on one page and bring you out of with laughter on the next.

I’ve got a bunch of books I need to get finished to release this year (2023) and I’m really struggling because I just can’t find the funny.

Not in my characters, my storylines, or my dialogue. Not even in myself.

It’s like my funny bone died when my mom did.

Not that she was a barrel of laughs, but she did say some crazy-funny things at times.

Like she called the gynecologist the groinecologist – a word I used in one of my Match Made in Heaven books.

Once, during a fight we were having when I was a teenager she hurled my current COSMO magazine at me and screamed, “this is nothing but trash about organisms and slutty shit.”

I knew she meant orgasms, but if I’d corrected her she would have gotten even more angry, and referring to something as shit was synonymous with a normal person saying stuff.

When she got angry she usually slipped into a Mrs. Malaprop persona. And if you told her who that was she wouldn’t have had a clue and would have thought you were insulting her.

Once, when I was about 12, I said something snarky and she threw a slice of pizza at me and called me a little shit. The pizza was cold, so no damage done. I picked it up off the table and ate it.

Twenty years later I referenced that, laughing at it then because the argument had been about – of all things – if I could use tampons (she wouldn’t allow me to), and she got all mad and pissy and said, “You deserved it because you were acting like such a little shit.”

Le sigh…

Please don’t get the idea she was abusive- not in the true sense of the word, anyway. She just had a hard time handling the emotions of a neurotic teenager, going through a horrible menopause she didn’t understand, and since she had been parented by a mother who didn’t love her and was cold to her, she had no true sense of how to parent me.

But we did have some funny times, too, lest you think it was all horrible.

We never had a clothes dryer in our home because she couldn’t afford one, so whenever she washed clothes they were always hung out on the line to dry, no matter what season it was. Once, the temperatures dropped and she didn’t know they were going to, so she hung out all the laundry she’d done in the evening, thinking it would be dry by morning. Morning came and all the clothes were frozen solid. She brought in a pair of my stepfather’s cotton boxes and they were as stiff as a sheet of cardboard. You could have flung them like a Frisbee. My flannel nightgown had both arms frozen and sticking out to the sides, the gown portion hard as concrete. Her bra stood up on its own. When she brought it into the house she said, “If I wear this my posture is gonna be perfect for the first time in forever.”

I remember laughing hysterically because she never self-deprecated. Ever.

For some reason, both she and my stepfather loved to go for walks in the local cemetery. Every single time—Every. Single. Time—she would say, “People are just dying to get in here.”

Dumb, but…funny, you know?

She had her moments, she really did.

Maybe if I try remembering more of the funny ones I’ll get my funny back….

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