One month later.
I still haven't gotten to the Thank You cards. They are sitting there with all the cards written on as to who was there and if there was $$ in the card. I checked the sign in book from the Funeral Home and those who visited didn't always leave an address.
There are so many other things to deal with, that I kept putting this job off.
The paperwork surrounding the death of my husband feels endless. I think I am almost done with all of it and I only have to deal now with Social Security. The guy I talked to at the local office sounded overworked and underappreciated. He kept telling me just to go online and do it. It almost sounded as if he wished I hadn't called and asked for his assistance. I imagine if I had an IT person handy, I would have gone online and done the work.
I don't. It was such a huge mess when I applied for SS, that I am hesitant to even try doing this thing online. I figured I'd have to drive to the office in person and present the paperwork, but the SS dude said we could do it with a phone call appointment and set it up for the end of October. This, after he told me that he needed a hard copy of our wedding certificate.
That does make sense of course, but in my head I visualized me trying to hand the paperwork to him through the telephone.
Then there are the practical things I forgot about.
Every fall Rich and I would set up our LP heater and make sure it was working properly. As the weather cooled this week, I realized that I never really got an understanding of how the cabin wall heater worked. It has a pilot light somewhere in there and we usually took the covers off so I could clean the fan and the vents.
I took one cover off and carefully cleaned things up. Then I realized that I needed a second person to do the rest of it. I called the company that had fixed this heater two years ago and asked to have the service guy come out and make sure the heater was working properly before turning it on.
To me the wall furnace is a motor - thing. I don't do motor things.
I'm still going through things. I opened the drawer where Rich kept his 'keepsakes' and discovered all of his things from his army days. I found rings from his days when he was a pool hustler and other bits that surprised me. I wished I'd dug into those items years ago and asked him about them.
In the back of the closet in a black zip bag was two of his dress uniforms. I knew they were there, but he always told me just to leave them alone. I laid them on the spare bed and wondered what all the 'stuff' on the uniforms meant. And then I wondered what the heck I was going to do with them.
I put them back in the bacg and hung them up.
I am slowly sorting clothes. My grandson Dennis has gotten a few of Rich's vintage western shirts that I still had. I often stop and give up to go do something else as it is slightly overwhelming to know that he is not here to use them again.
I've gathered a box of new and gently used pants he had to take to a place called Bethal Buttik. It is a thrift shop and donation place for those who may be in need. So many of his clothes were old and well-worn. His work shirts have holes in them from welding and grease stains from working on equipment.
I was always patching his shirts or pants until they literally fall apart. That was his motto wear it all the way out. It sure did save on buying new clothes.
I still get the texts or messages. "How are you doing?"
I am fine most days. The days I'm stuck inside the house are the hardest ones. The house is too quiet. No one is asking for popcorn to be made or what's for supper? No one is tapping his coffee cup on the table with a grin on his face...to ask for more coffee.
He's not here to remind me to feed the birds. He's not here to give me his morning monologue of which birds have come to the feeder. He is not here to ask how my walk was and what I got to see.
Even in his last weeks, I would tell him what I saw and what I thought. He was my sounding board even when he couldn't be.
I have stayed busy. I'd spent days helping friends at a wedding. This past weekend I went with another friend to see her daughter dressed up for Homecoming and enjoyed sitting out on her deck chatting.
Yesterday I took a hike with Charlie. I've been hiking this trail for years. They say grief comes in waves and in strange ways.
Charlie and I came up through the woods and saw this tree.
I saw the fungi all over the tree and the bare branches. This tree is a maple and should have still had its leaves. It was barren, with so many of its limbs now on the ground.
This tree was shown to me in 1995 as the grand old tree by Rich on a very special ride we had taken. It was the first of many mule rides with him.
I've always stopped by this tree to recall that first ride on a mule with my future husband. When I reached the tree with Charlie, a huge wave of emotion hit me like a proverbial brick. I sat down on the limb next to the tree and was overcome.
I wanted so much for him to be home when I got there so I could tell him of the tree's final demise. 2025 got to our tree too.
I sometimes wonder if what I am going through will help anyone else. Grief and loss are funny and odd things. It can smack you at the oddest times and places without warning.
I wish there was a guide to take me through this. I know that a true guide doesn't exist. I just have to continue to go with the flow.
That tree is so poignant. I can certainly understand why it overcame you in the moment. You had a long time together, and I think a very good relationship, so I am sure there will be many moments to come.
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