It’s raining out…just a wet, gray and gloomy morning. As I am sitting here at the tiny table in my little cozy, creative, corner, looking out the window in front of me, a memory comes to mind.
The kitchen window I am sitting at is facing our front yard. This is where our big garden used to be. At the bottom, right in front of our rabbit barn we would typically plant corn.
I recall this one specific morning from a few years back: As I shut the door from the twins getting on the bus for school, I holler at Ryan “Hey Ryan, are you aware of your time?” like every morning. He had half a dozen alarms set, all different kinds of songs, to be sure he wouldn’t miss the bus to get to school, 1.5 hrs after the twins. Usually, I would get a sleepy “yeah” back. This morning, there was silence. I proceed to knock on his door. He was a hard sleeper, obviously. I knock,”Ryan, goooood morning”…nothing. So I opened the door to find nothing but a glorious mess in the room. The kid wasn’t there. I got sick to my stomach and wasn’t sure what to think of it. He snuck out at night and didn’t come home. ‘I hope nothing happened, I hope the kids’ alright…WTF Ryan?!’
So I called the police, I mean, what else should a worried mother do? I haven’t seen my kid since 8 pm, who knows by now what all could have happened. I paced the dining room, the kitchen, the living room while telling the lady on the other line my dilemma…the kid’s gone. As I am making it out to the front porch, while still talking to the 911 responder, I scan our garden – just to find Ryan in between the corn, looking at me from behind all kinds of green. Hiding. I look at him dead in the eye, making hand waving motion for him to come up. He slowly did. “I screwed up, mom. I fell asleep on my friends couch.” Is what he got out. As I continue to explain to the lady what just happened, the police showed up in our driveway. I hung up the phone, greeted them and asked kindly if they could take my son to school, after he washed his face and brushed his teeth, please. Ryan was mind blown, not happy, saying he hasn’t missed the bus yet, he still had time. “Nah, kid! This is your ride this morning,” pointing at the lovely county sheriffs white shining suv in our drive way. OH THE JOY, I got out of this. Well, the sheriff gave Ryan a way to school and I continued on with my morning, after finally letting go of the anger and frustration my son just brought upon me. This, never happened again…:D
Today, with Ryan being dead, I would go through this again. I kid you not. I’d take all these damn teen struggles back. Still, there is a realization today, I feel. I look out my window and see him standing there, behind the corn -that’s not there anymore, in the garden, that’s not there anymore. Still,I can see all of it, and him. And he is there, here.
Lately I’ve been thinking my feelings and emotions have been shut off. There has been so much I have been focusing on. I am functioning, functioning with intent, but I haven’t felt Ryan to the extent I did in the first weeks. Nowadays, there are times where I literally feel him within me. Every time I look at a picture of him for example, he is here. But when going about my day and focusing on the rest of my sweet pack, he has been distant. Living with a constant sadness that has filled the void in my heart, I understand I can feel joy and be happy too, just like he would want me too. But the ‘being here’ of a person that moved on to the spirit world doesn’t always look and feel the same. My lesson lately has pointed me in different directions. Music. A word. A landmark. Whatever it may be.
The other day I was driving by myself. It’s been hard for me to turn up the radio and jam out – which is typically my most favorite thing about driving. Since loosing Ryan however, I haven’t been able to listen to loud music and even found myself having the radio turned down, to where I drive in silence often. That said evening, it was so. Driving in silence, it was dark and rainy. I didn’t even think about it, when my hand just turned up the radio. There it was. Simple man, by Lynyrd Skynyrd. When he was younger, we talked about this song being our mother- son dance on his wedding day. No, I was blatantly stating that this is what I want, hehe. You know, like a mother sometimes does. The song was on and I listened to it. It was beautiful. It was this moment I realized I don’t have to feel him with me constantly. Suddenly it dawned on me, all the little things that some see as coincidences, maybe, these little signs everywhere are showing that he actually is everywhere. He is in the song. He is in the Ryan muffin we get as treats sometimes. He is in the Burrito blanket he wore wrapped around him all day, every day, when he came out of his room. He is in bus 103 that stops one road down now since Ryan isn’t getting on anymore. And he is currently still standing there in front of the rabbit barn, looking at me, up here in my kitchen. I got so excited and filled with joy, because suddenly I understood the phrase ‘He is always with you’ and ‘He is always here’ from an entire different view. Again, I let the limitations created by mind and society limit my perceptions. I found myself breaking out of something, whatever that may be. He is here. I truly believe the soul is multidimensional. So while he can be here in a song, he could be walking the halls in his school at the same time, next to causing goosebumps on a family members skin on another continent, and while doing that, he could be journeying the path given to his soul currently. With Ryan appearing in front of me in so many different ways, while it is up to me how I look at it, none the less- My son is here. With me, All. The. Time. So for today, my conclusion is: If we limit our mind to thinking our loved ones are only here when we consciously feel them in us or with us, we miss so many other times, situations, incidents they are actually here, showing themselves to us, just not how we would expect. Expectations make things seem like they need to be linear and turn out how we want them to. In some way. Well, none of anything is linear, especially life, and grief. It is really messy, like anything can sometimes be, but if I can let go of the expectations and just notice, a whole new world opens up for me. And Ryan, he is always here. ALWAYS.
