Those Difficult "Firsts"

I remember New Year’s Eve, December 31, 1994. Nina loved any opportunity for a celebration. She invited a couple of her high school friends over, planned games, tried some new recipes, and bought her customary bottle of sparkling apple cider to drink out of plastic champagne glasses. Nina rivaled Martha Stewart when it came to her enthusiasm for entertaining! Her friends stayed overnight and their joyful laughter could be heard well into the wee hours of the morning. Luckily, I have such a sweet, pleasant memory of what turned out to be the last New Year’s Eve with our Nina. 

Because of those “lasts”, we are faced with the “firsts”. With only two days left of the year 2000, I was tempted to write about New Year’s resolutions. However, since I make my resolutions on the 1st and notoriously break them by the 2nd, my credibility is definitely in question!  But since Monday will be January 1st it seemed like a good time to mention what for many of you will be the beginning of those difficult “Firsts.”  - the first holidays, first birthday, first death anniversary, the first family vacation  without your child, and so on. Unfortunately, this is an area that I am qualified to write about becauseI have “been there.” 

I know that, in particular, those who are newly bereaved face the new calendar with apprehension because of those “Firsts.” Whether there is a major holiday in that month or not, each one brings its own emotional challenges. For those whose children sadly died before they had memories of what their child had done the year before, the calendar speaks to them of shattered dreams and hopes that died along with their child. For the rest of us, it is the bittersweet recollections of years’ past.  With February comes memories of hand-made Valentines with childlike scribbles of “I love you Mommy & Daddy.”  Maybe March brought attempts at kite flying and April dying Easter eggs; May and June with Mother’s and Father’s Day and the stab of pain in your heart that your child is not here to celebrate such important days with you; Fourth of July celebrations and summer vacations, school clothes shopping, the excitement of meeting new teachers and new friends. In October, carving pumpkins and trying to decide what costume to wear trick or treating. And then right back to those most painful of months where in a short time span we are thrust into family-centered, Norman Rockwell-like celebrations of Thanksgiving and Christmas or Hanukah where our loved ones who died are so conspicuously absent. When we enter in our child’s birthday and the anniversary of their death it is frankly overwhelming. It is no wonder that at each support group meeting we hear the same words spoken over and over again: “This has been a very hard month.” 

I cannot imagine facing these “Firsts” without the support of my bereaved parent friends.  I sadly think of even a few decades ago when there weren’t any groups like TCF to assist those whose children had died. Those unfortunate parents were only allowed the time of the funeral to grieve. Then the expectation was, especially if they had other children, to get on with their life for those surviving family members. They buried their child and many times, because they weren’t allowed to, never spoke of them again, as if they had never existed.  They didn’t have other bereaved parents to walk the grief path with them and to validate that what they were feeling was “normal” , for us, anyway. They didn’t have another mother or father who had been down that same path available to tell them that though the “Firsts” are difficult, most often the anticipation of the day is worse than the day itself. They didn’t have those seasoned grievers to assure them that they too would rediscover the ability to laugh and find reasons to live again. 

Though it is unrealistic to think that the holidays and any of the other special days will ever be the same again, I, and so many others who have been on this most difficult of journeys are here to tell you that they do gradually become easier to bear.  Undoubtedly, the holidays will always be tinged with sadness But we, who have made it past the “Firsts” and the “Seconds” and beyond, are here to tell you that you will get through it. We want to help, in any way that we can; let us walk beside you. Please remember always - you are not alone. 

~Cathy Seehuetter,Cottage Grove,MN

 

About the Author
Cathy began writing about her grief not long after her beloved daughter Nina Westmoreland was killed at the age of 15--on Cathy's birthday--at the hands of a drunk driver. Her stories have been published in Chicken Soup for the Christian Family Soul, Open to Hope, Tincture of Time, and the Best of Bulletin Board, as well as numerous grief publications including Living With Loss and We Need Not Walk Alone. Cathy has served on the TCF National Board of Directors from 2004-2010, and is currently Minnesota Regional Coordinator and St. Paul, MN's chapter leader. Since that time, her stepson, Chris, took his own life in June of 2012, and she hopes to write about her journey as a bereaved stepparent and the complexities of a loss by suicide. She is the proud mom of her three surviving children and five wonderful grandchildren.
Helping The Bereaved