logo-image

A Part Of You

Lisa Thomas • Apr 25, 2018

Recently I had the opportunity to speak with someone I had not spoken to in years.  They had previously lived in our area and we had attended church together . . . but then her husband began experiencing what turned out to be the early stages of Alzheimer’s.  At that time they were living in a home nestled in the middle of 90 acres . . . 90 heavily wooded acres . . . with a four to five acre lake.  She could read the handwriting on the wall and knew, for her sanity and his safety, they would have to downsize considerably, at least on the amount of property.

And so they did, selling a place with historical significance and literally hundreds of pink and white dogwoods, a multitude of azaleas in every color imaginable, and countless wildflowers—an untouched paradise save for the house they built on the water’s edge.  It was a magical place that allowed for endless wandering and new discoveries on every adventure, a place that, once you were there, bound you heart and soul to the land and its history.

Life moved on and the years passed.  Her husband’s health continued to decline and, once more, downsizing seemed a wise course of action.  So the house was sold and they ventured into the smaller side of a duplex they owned in a larger city.  When the adjoining tenant’s lease was up, they gave them notice and prepared to make what would hopefully be their last move—across a wall and into a tad more square footage.  But there would not be any trails to hike, no historical structures to discover, no dogwoods within arm’s reach of the porch or azaleas and wildflowers setting the woods ablaze with color.  There would be no lake to contemplate while sitting on the porch swing, coffee in hand, or birds to enjoy as they worked to maintain the property.  But for her sanity and his safety . . .

As we talked that day and she related the details of life as she now knew it, her voice broke and I could hear the grief in her words.  “I loved that place.  I loved it so much.  I’m an outdoors person and I always enjoyed hiking there—and it was so beautiful and so peaceful . . .  But we can’t go back anymore.  We used to, just to fiddle around and rake and clear the brush, but we can’t go back now.  We just can’t . . .” And although I tried to assure her she had done the right thing by selling, and reminded her of how difficult it would have been to continue where they were, I knew that my words, though they were true, would not ease the pain of loss she was experiencing.  And it wasn’t just the voluntary loss of their beloved home so many years ago.  It was the loss of a way of life.

Most of us have something that Life—or Death–has taken from us, something that was so much a part of us at one time, but to which we can no longer return.  Life can be cruel like that, asking you to work hard with the promise of better things to come, and then yanking the proverbial rug from under your feet.  Whether it’s a place or a time or a person, the adjustment to the loss is never complete.  It can’t be.  Whenever something or someone so dear to your heart goes missing, for whatever reason, a part of you is lost as well.

By Lisa Thomas 17 Apr, 2024
I have a confession to make. There are days when I’ll set the air conditioning on 65 and get the house cold enough to hang meat . . . and then light the fireplace.
By Lisa Thomas 10 Apr, 2024
If you’re a semi-regular reader, then you know I’ve been enduring that right of passage known as “The Packing of Parental Possessions”. For the last several months, the focus has been on cleaning out the apartment they occupied for 30 years . . .
By Lisa Thomas 04 Apr, 2024
When John Jacobs died of pancreatic cancer on October 29, 2005, his family was devastated. The New York defense attorney believed in staying connected to those he cherished the most, something he managed to accomplish by calling them three or four times a day on his beloved Motorola T720 cell phone . . .
By Lisa Thomas 28 Mar, 2024
There’s a place I’m privileged to visit on occasion—a civilized wilderness of sorts—where very few people intrude and my desire for hermitism (not to be confused with hermetism which is a philosophical or religious system based on the teaching of Hermes Trismegistus . . . mine just means I like being left alone) is fulfilled.
By Lisa Thomas 20 Mar, 2024
I am a lover of words and occasionally manage to put them together in a half-way decent manner. Ask me to speak to you spontaneously . . . off the cuff . . . with no preparation . . . and my brain freezes.
By Lisa Thomas 14 Mar, 2024
In a bookcase in the office in Savannah, you’ll find all kinds of books, mostly on grief (which makes perfect sense given that it’s an office in a funeral home).
By Lisa Thomas 07 Mar, 2024
When my daughter was in second grade the music program at her school disappeared. I don’t remember if it was a lack of personnel or a lack of funding or a lack of personnel caused by a lack of funding . . .
By Lisa Thomas 29 Feb, 2024
On November 21st of 2021, I wrote the blog “The Ultimate Reminder” about a gentleman I’d literally known all my life . . . about his acknowledgment that his circle of older family members and friends was rapidly dwindling . . . about how hard it was to watch them leave.
By Lisa Thomas 22 Feb, 2024
Recently local and national news outlets picked up the story of Pauline Pusser’s exhumation, turning it into front page news and lead stories.
By Lisa Thomas 14 Feb, 2024
We didn’t meet under the best of circumstances—I was the funeral director and he was the husband grieving the imminent death of his wife.
More Posts
Share by: