What are the words?

What are the words
to say a final goodbye
to the woman who
gave you birth and
made you feel like you belonged
in a family where you always
felt outside of who you were
supposed to be

To the woman who
was your rock
your best friend
the person you could talk to
for hours on end
about everything and nothing

To the woman who
taught you what kindness
and compassion look like
that strength does not have to be
angry and loud
it can be calm and quiet
purposeful, getting things done

To the woman who
never once pressured you
to give her grandchildren
and accepted your understanding
of yourself as aunt not mother
even though being a mother
was a core part of how she saw herself

To the woman who
taught you to knit
while sitting in the front seat of the car
with you in the back seat
to crochet right-handed
though she crocheted left-handed
to cross-stitch
to bake and cook
and to steal away to find quiet
and read romance novels

To the woman who
lived out her faith just like
she'd seen her own mother do
quietly serving
welcoming everyone
teaching through her actions
blooming where she was planted
living out a life of love

To the woman who
unintentionally left you
with voices in your head saying
you're not doing enough
you're too fat
you're too messy
but whose arms were always
wide open to offer a hug
to make you feel at home
and loved unconditionally

To the woman
you have been grieving for years
as the cruelty of dementia
stripped away her words
her ability to communicate
her ability to understand
and everything that made her
who she was

What are the words
to say a final goodbye
to your mom?

These are the only ones I have

Thank you for being
all of who you were
for shaping me into who I am
even though there was more
complexity to our relationship
than I realized before you
no longer had words
I've always known you wanted
the best for me and to know
I am loved for all of who I am

There are no words to say
a final goodbye
to someone whose DNA is
intimately intwined with who I am
far beyond the realms of our biology

I am my mother's daughter
I would not want to be anyone else
I cannot say a final goodbye
I will carry you with me
wrap myself in an afghan
crocheted with your love
knowing that while you are now
physically gone
you will always remain
you are part of who I am
and I would have it no other way
a photo of my mom and I, heads leaned in together with our new haircuts
My mom and me. Neither of us appreciate being in front of the camera, but this is the last picture of the two of us together, and I know she was okay with this photo.

My mom died this morning. I’m numb. I’m gutted. I’m relieved. I’m grateful. I’m … I don’t even really know. Doesn’t matter how long you’ve known the loss is coming, grief is still hard.

I suppose I could have titled this My Mother’s Daughter to make it a pair with the poem I wrote to remember my dad, but our relationships were really different. One things is consistent, I am very much parts of both of them.

The words I cannot unhear

The voice I heard inside my head
I'm not enough
I won't be good enough
no matter how hard I try
that voice was my father's

But I've learned that voice
does not speak truth
it speaks from his own childhood
I know that family story
I understand the source
I know it does not reflect who I am ...
... at least most days I do

The voice I hear inside my head
You're too fat
You're lazy
You just need to try harder
You could lose the weight
if only you tried
You'd be so much better then
that voice ...

it is my mother's

The one who was also
the voice of love
the safe place
the one who understood me
the one who was my rock
it is more complicated than I've admitted
to anyone ...
... including myself

My father's voice is silent
he can speak no more
I learned to stop listening to his hurt
before the end I knew he loved me
the best he knew how
and he was proud
of who I had become

My mother's voice???
her words was stolen years ago
by the disease that stole what made her
my rock, my safe place
my mom

But hers is the voice that still rings loudly
not the voice of her love
not the voice of her understanding
the voice unacknowledged for its complexity
for the hurt that it has caused
and still causes as I write these lines

those are the words I cannot unhear
those are the words I wish I could forget
those are words that feel like they were said yesterday
even though she hasn't spoken a comprehensible word in years
those are the words I must learn how to silence

For a friend and sibling, whose name I do not know

for the one whose name I do not know
whose story I do not know 
except for a few tiny and life-changing details

you recently told your family
that you wanted them to use 
new pronouns for you
I do not know why you chose the ones you did 
but I know you chose they/them

the only other thing I know
one of your family members
asked online friends, followers and strangers
to pray for you

I hope you didn't see what he asked
you deserve better and more from those
called family

I wish I could say he asked for comfort
for you on this journey to living out 
who you truly are
who you were created to be
but he didn't
and my heart broke for you

I did say I'd pray 
though not for what he asked
because coming out is a precious journey
and you, like every trans or queer person, 
deserve to know that you are loved
and accepted
and valued
and supported
whatever label you claim in our rainbow family

so I prayed for you
to know peace and love from those most dear to you
to feel confidence as you take this step

and I prayed for your family
for changed hearts 
for willingness to set aside theology held tightly 
beliefs that would lead them to think
you are somehow less than 
perfectly
 loved and created by God 
exactly as you are
as queerly as you are
as whatever gender you know yourself to be

but in case their hearts cannot see you
in case they cling to to tightly 
to what was never true
I prayed for courage to walk the path you need
to honour who you are
and for comfort if you must grieve their loss
so you can move confidently forward
and bravery that you already have 
to find companions for the road ahead 
chosen family who know and love you

I don’t know the specific person I was praying for yesterday, but I encountered their brother on Twitter (nope, I’m not calling it any other name).

I wish … I wish so many things, but mainly I wish for a world where every 2SLGBTQIA+ person didn’t have to wonder if the people who are supposed to love them unconditionally would really be able to do that. I particulary wish that for those who have grown up in the church.

I am ever so grateful that by the time I finally figured out I was queer, my family had already made it to affirming (at least mainly), but I also know that version of the story is far too rare. So, really, this prayer is for far more than just one person whose name I don’t know but whose pronouns I do, it is for all of my rainbow siblings, in or out of the closet, whatever label, whatever gender identity or sexuality you know to be yours, whose families haven’t yet been able to see you for who you are. Some day may they change and until then, may you know that your rainbow family loves you and sees you.

You are queer enough and you are loved.

My Father’s Daughter

photo of two elderly people holding hands while lying in two hospitable beds pushed together.
Always holding hands
holding hands with my mom
it's the way he lived
and the way he passed peacefully
from this world
 
it's weird to know he's gone
our relationship was
...
let's go with
...
complicated
...
but he was my dad
 
while he wasn't a perfect …
  father
     husband
	grandfather
    	   uncle
		son
     		   brother
			cousin
     			    teacher
				friend
				     neighbour
					follower of Jesus
 
these things I know
 
he loved with his whole heart
as unconditionally as he was able
and family,
especially my mom,
meant everything to him
 
he strove to make the world better
for those in need
he taught with every breath
and not just knowledge, compassion too
 
he sought connection
with everyone he encountered
(I used to tease him that he'd have talked to
a fence post if he thought it would've talked back;
he never disagreed.)
 
he created in many forms
from poetry to bread-making
to graphic design to woodworking
 
he trusted and believed in a God who extends
mercy and grace to all
 
I don't think either of us ever liked it
when my mom would tell us we were alike
most often in our
...
let's go with
...
tenacity
(She used to blame that trait ...
though she called it stubbornness ...
on my Dad's side,
but I'd ask if she'd ever met her own mom,
and then we'd laugh;
I'm clearly genetically predisposed.)
 
but the truth is
...
I am my father's daughter

we're different in many ways,
but, also, in many, many ways,
this apple didn't fall far
from the tree
...
and that's not a bad thing

My Dad passed away late in the afternoon on April 27, 2020. The picture with this post was taken March 21, 2020. We knew then that his time was coming to an end and he was at peace knowing that my Mom would continue to be well cared for by the amazing staff at the care home where they live.

While it’s not officially the anniversary of his death, I will always count the very early days of lockdown as the anniversary, because that’s the last time I saw him. I originally shared this on my old blog in tribute shortly after his passing, but I wanted it to have a home over here and today seem the right day to do that.

Three years ago tonight, we sat vigil, not knowing if he would make it through the night. He did and he rallied for a bit, but we know it would not be long.

I am so grateful for the staff who made space for us to come, all gowned up, and sit with my Dad and Mom that night, March 20, 2020. It’s when we said our goodbyes.