By Way of Explanation

January 19th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

For the past ten days I think I have been dining with grief. Of course, we’ve shared a number of meals over the years. And the times in my life when I wasn’t really eating very much at all had a lot more to do with grief than I was wiling to admit.

You see we all lose people and things and opportunities. Sometimes they are things that we appreciate very much and know we hold dear. Sometimes they are things we took for granted, even tricking ourselves into thinking that they might not matter at all. Even when we think we’re ready to let go, grief is still a process we can never quite prepare for and ultimately can’t avoid.

I lost a marriage and the family that went with it. In the process, I lost a lot of the ideas I had about my own family.  So I have been questioning all of my notions of myself.  You have seen some of the machinations of that inquiry in my writing. I know it’s not been pretty.

Those of you who have actually sat down with grief and made its acquaintance know that it requires you to lose a part of yourself. Sometimes the loss being grieved is precipitated by the loss of self. Without exception, once a loss has occurred, it is our greatest fear that we will lose ourselves entirely.  Perhaps the only greater fear is that no one will notice.

Each loss impacts who we are to ourselves and others. One way or another, grief can define us. We can resist with too much terror or engage with too much despair.  Embraced gently, like the breaking, beating hearts we all are, grief redefines us, over and over again.

So these dates that didn’t make my calendar have been a long time coming. They say grief waits. And I have certainly waited to try to avoid dealing with it. But eventually it catches up with you, you catch up with it, or, in my case, I run so far in so many different directions that I end up crashing into myself, again.

Jon Kabat-Zinn, a name mentioned more than once in the course of my dinners to date, has written a book entitled No Matter Where You Go, There You Are. I suspect it could be the working title for all of our lives, but I know it has resonance for mine.

We can get lost in the searching and forget who we are.  Grief’s greatest gift is the chance to reacquaint ourselves with our own hopes and fears. It is a reminder to live on purpose, intent on making the most of what we have while we have it.

Grief is a way to strengthen ourselves so that we can open our hearts even further, fully aware of the courage being asked of us. We go on loving and hoping and dreaming and making our mistakes not because we might get hurt, but because we will get hurt and when we do it is the good that will sustain us.

My encounter with grief has physically manifested in a very bad cold, an intellectual reminder that I cannot separate any aspect of my health from another. But here I am, hungry to be writing again, despite the figurative lump in my throat.

My time grieving has me thinking about resilience. We all lose things and we all grieve. We also create and find ways to thrive. Grief simply changes our perspective, blurring our vision to force us to turn inward before washing our eyes clean to face the world again.

Two of the Many Who Impact Me

January 10th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

Two secondary school students speak candidly about the pressures they are feeling and the importance of mental health.
TIM HORTONS in OSHAWA . . . 12:00 p.m.
Bagels and Cream Cheese, Donuts and Coffee.
THE CONVERSATION
For the past decade, the people who have had the greatest impact on me have been students and their families. Today was a [...]

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Melcher Family – The Thin Edge of the Wedge

January 8th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

The Melchers have been active in community theatre as individuals and as a family. They sat down with me on a rare night when Graeme was home from Queens, Mark was home from work and Nancy was not at rehearsal.
THEIR HOME . . . 6:00 p.m.
Shrimp and Rice with Green Beans. Tossed Salad. Sorbet and [...]

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Good Neighbours – In Memory of Mrs. Smith

January 7th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

On Tuesday, my mother gave a eulogy for Mrs. Smith, her neighbor of forty years. My father and I sat listening among many others from the neighbourhood my parents still live in. My mother has been reading my blogs and knew that I would be writing about neighbours  in memory of Mrs. Smith. Their friendship [...]

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Sylvia Bereskin – For the First Time

January 6th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

Sylvia Bereskin uses her time writing a blog for feminist women retiring with gusto. The title of her work is For the First Time.
SYLVIA’S HOME IN TORONTO . . . 7:00 p.m.
Quesadillas, Nachos with Salsa and Guacamole, Tortilla Soup, Chicken Mole with Rice, Jicama Salad and Sangrita, Sorbet with Chocolate Mousse Cups and Lattes.
THE DISCUSSION
Sylvia [...]

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Potluck – Happy New Year

January 4th, 2010 by Erin Hannah

It is the season of resolutions and I am the first to get caught up in grand improvement schemes. Indeed, some have interpreted this project as just such a scheme.  While I can acknowledge that I am writing about these dinners in hopes of inspiring both myself and others, the holidays certainly reminded me to [...]

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