One Year Ago: Part IV (… continued from yesterday)

It was either my pinched face or the audible sob that woke me from my dream about Nate. It had been so real I’d had trouble moving away from his dream-hug to the reality of being alone on a single mattress in Hans and Katy’s living room.

If we wake from a heart-pounding nightmare, comfort comes in thinking, “Whew! It was only a dream!”

This time, though, despite the mystery of Nate’s neutral response to me, I wanted to stay in it. Everything about my racing emotions believed I’d actually been in the same room with him.

Trying to savor the warmth of what felt like a supernatural embrace, I lay still for a long time. And because the clock read 3:21 AM, I knew I could go back to sleep and was hoping to re-enter the dream as successfully as Lucy re-entered Narnia. If I had more time, surely I could convince Nate to stay with me rather than turn and walk out that door. But of course my half-awake, half-asleep brain was tricking me.

The next thing I knew, 20 month old Nicholas was tugging on my blankets, encouraging me to get on my feet. It was morning, and Nate was gone.

All that day I thought about the dream in an effort to keep it alive. On the surface its meaning seemed obvious: (1) The crowd of people represented those who’ve gone ahead of us to be with the Lord, or in the case of Katy’s parents, those who eventually will do so; (2) My inability to secure Nate’s exclusive attention was the result of knowing marriage is non-existent in heaven. We’ll all be one big family, children of God and siblings of Jesus; (3) Nate’s serene appearance represented the perfect peace of our glorified existence.

That analysis may be accurate, but another version is that I simply miss my husband.

Widow friends tell me life will continue to be full of significant relationships and happy gatherings, but it’ll never be quite as good, because the “husband of my youth” will not be with me.

Six days later, I’m still pondering the dream, wondering if I ought to be learning something from it. I think back to the room full of people and wonder, “Was Jesus in that crowd?” If he was, I didn’t see him. As a matter of fact, my human longing for Nate was so strong, it hadn’t crossed my dreaming-mind to seek the Lord in that multitude. I was only and all about seeking Nate.

The significant meaning of the dream, I’ve come to realize, is that during times of sorrow over missing my husband, I ought to look away from him and look for Jesus instead. During these days of going back one year, I’ve been impacted by how dramatically present the Lord was throughout Nate’s six weeks of cancer and the months that followed.

So if I’ve learned anything through my dream, it’s that hanging onto a departed Nate will never be as satisfying as clinging to my still-present God.

“Look to the Lord and his strength; seek his face always. Remember the wonders he has done.” (Psalm 105:4-5a)

One Year Ago: Part III

While in England, in high gear with three little ones and their parents, I continued to re-read my blog posts from last year at this time. Each night on my living room mattress I allowed myself a few minutes of quiet time to travel back to those difficult days, hoping in some way to participate again in Nate’s life. Last fall our whole family was pacing together toward the sad conclusion, and reading the details was hard.  Nevertheless, going over each date’s entry felt like visiting with him, despite the distressing nature of the posts.

And because he was the last one on my mind as I drifted into sleep, it was inevitable I’d eventually dream about him.

The dream I had last week was emotionally stressful, the kind that caused a pounding heart and made me wonder whether or not it was really happening. In the dream, I was part of a crowd of people milling about in a room full of conversation and laughter. Both of Katy’s parents were there, which made me wish Nate was there, too.

And then suddenly he was!

Busy greeting friends with his familiar handshake, he didn’t see me in the crowd. I frantically pushed my way through the mob to get to him, and when I finally planted myself directly in front of him, he smiled and responded with a hug. It felt warm and familiar, although something strange was also going on. Others in the room seemed to have as much claim on him as I did, to the point that I was bumped to the side and eventually swept up in the crowd while it swirled around him.

Stumbling backwards, I lost sight of Nate and suffered a terrible sense of emptiness while my eyes darted back and forth, craving more contact with him. Eventually I spotted him again, but he was heading for the door, so I ran after him shouting, “Nate! Wait up! Please!”

He turned and smiled at me, not an excited or eager smile but the same peaceful expression he’d shown me before. I ran over and threw my arms around him, holding on with all my strength, determined not to let go this time. As he hugged me back, I felt an intense warmth flow through me, almost like an electric blanket, and was aware it was something unusual, maybe even supernatural.

But then he let go. When I continued to cling tightly, he didn’t re-hug but patted me on the back instead, like a parent pats a child who’s been hurt and is crying. Although he didn’t speak in the dream, somehow I got his clear message,  “It’ll be OK. You’ll see.” But just like a wounded child not yet ready to receive comfort, I continued to be upset, breaking into tears.

(… to be continued)

“He has not despised or disdained the suffering of the afflicted one; He has not hidden His face from [her] but has listened to [her] cry for help.” (Psalm 22:24)

One Year Ago: Part II

Thinking back to the significant events of a year ago with Nate’s cancer dominating him, I’ve been reading my own blog posts: Sept. 27, the shock of diagnosis; Sept. 28, last day at work; Sept. 29, first radiation treatment; and Sept. 30, a difficult treatment day.

I’m letting my mind think back to that time just until the 42 dates have passed. And then, I tell myself, I won’t do it again. My widow pals say, “Go ahead and spend time remembering. Experience it again. It’s the most dramatic time of your life and won’t be dismissed without acknowledging the pain.”

And so I’m there.

Although reading the blog this week and looking at my 2009 calendar has been an exercise in mourning accompanied by occasional weeping, for the most part it’s been manageable and has made me appreciate Nate more than ever. But today a dam broke.

I was cleaning house in preparation for the arrival of nine college friends, sweeping up swirling clouds of Jack’s dog hair. Trying to slide a living room chair aside, I felt resistance so reached underneath, pulling out a child’s puzzle, the kind with tiny knobs on each piece for little toddler fingers. I’d bought it for Skylar, and when she recently visited, we’d found the other puzzles but not that one, the newest one.

With a rush of emotion, I knew it had to have been shoved under the chair a year ago when all of us daily sat with Nate in the living room. That one realization zapped me like an electrical shock, and I started to sob. When the puzzle went under the chair, Nate was still alive. Instantly I was swamped with overpowering longing to go back to this date a year ago; memories and blog reports weren’t good enough. I wanted to go back for real, to have Nate with me again.

Finding the puzzle produced a wrenching moment of impossibility without any remedy, and I could hardly stand it. The only thing to do was to pick up my broom and sweep… and sob.

In several more minutes the floor was clean and the crying was over. But then I thought of all the different reasons people cry, all the tough situations life brings. The variety is endless, and tears eventually come to all of us. No one is exempt from the feeling of “wrenching impossibility.”

As difficult as it was to experience that today, my gut instinct tells me it was a few moments of healing. I believe God orchestrates these blips on our emotional screens to distance ourselves from the heartbreaks in our history and bring us to a better reality absent of wrenching impossibility. This doesn’t mean new heartbreak won’t come. But somehow knowing we’ve made it through one disaster will help us get through another.

Before I put the puzzle away, I stared at it for a minute. I wanted to picture my grandchildren playing with it rather than the circle of sad family members in the living room last fall. And with the cheery mental picture of those little ones, I knew I could move forward.

At least for now.

“He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” (Revelation 21:4)