Tag: life

  • Full Circle I Never Expected

    After my brother Josh passed, I was lost. The two best friends I was born to were gone, and I was left to be the lone sibling. Everything felt heavy and dark. I couldn’t seem to find where I was going or how I was expected to move through the world. The tides felt as if they were sweeping me away from shore, one wave at a time, relentlessly pulling me farther and farther out to sea. My panic attacks felt like I was swallowing mouthfuls of ocean water, salty and dehydrating. 

    One day, in a blur of fright, I found a grief center called the Christi Center, here in Austin Texas. To this day, I don’t know exactly when or how I found it, but I did. I decided to go there one evening just to see what it was like. I remember some moments in the center vividly, like waiting for my turn to hold the purple heart stone. They would pass this beautiful stone for each person to hold and speak their loved one’s name out loud, the one or ones who had passed. I could never speak a word. I would hold that stone and hysterically cry with tears burning the corner of my blood shot eyes, then hand it to the person next to me, I never spoke. I wasn’t able to break the cement that held my tongue in place. I had so much inside of me but my brain wouldn’t, or couldn’t, let those emotions gain oxygen. So they raged inside my body, bouncing around in fury. 

    Yet, I found myself listening to each person speak. After passing the stone, we would break up into groups that I never quite fit into, but I still seemed to feel content with. There are some stories I remember fully. It is as if I can see a movie of their experience playing in my mind accompanied with the perfect soundtrack. I can still hear their voices narrating their journeys of hurt and grief as they tried to find their footing. There was a weird sense of protection I felt in the Christi Center that I can’t fully explain. 

    The Christi Center became a security blanket for me. As I pulled up to the center that was once a home, but at some point transformed into a safety net for the community, I could feel my heart pounding. I always felt so nervous walking down the driveway into the building behind the main house that faces the road. I could feel my entire body tremble with anxious vibrations that were incessant, with a small voice begging me to turn and run. I know what I was afraid of. Still, I don’t know what kept me putting one foot in front of the other, propelling my body into the building, but I’m happy it did. I wanted to be there more than I was afraid of my grief and new existence. 

    The Christi Center is a significant part of my grief journey. I may not have shared my thoughts out loud for others to hear, I may not have spoken the names of my brothers audibly, but their memories are etched into the walls of that building. Their memories breathe with other’s memories shared between the drywall and wood, the seat cushions, the purple heart stone, the fears and tears of surviving loved ones. They all still live inside that assembly. 

    That’s why yesterday was such a meaningful and symbolic moment for myself and for my grief. I was able to return to this place that has been such an important aspect of my journey.  To have the Christi Center, we have to acknowledge the time, energy and care of those who facilitate the operations of this profound anchor. This anchor is the love that Christi Lanahan’s parents have for their daughter. That love drove Susan and Don Cox to create this physical space for others to gather and express their grief which has evolved into so much more. The staff and interns are who have created, and continue to maintain this sanctuary with a sense of compassion that cultivates a gentle energy that flows through the air. 

    Yesterday, I was welcomed into the center as a guest to offer a gift. The gift of kindness and thankfulness to the amazing interns. I spent an hour with them and focused on gentle movement and guided meditation. The staff and interns hold so much grief for others, and I was honored to encourage them to focus on themselves, to release tension, and to let go of anything that may be weighing on them. It felt like a full circle for me. I once was reluctant to walk down that driveway, now I’m eager and thrilled to be able to give back in my own way. 

  • Not Another Milestone Kicking Up the Grief

    My partner, Doug, and I decided that it was time! Well, he really has been eager for a while and I’ve been pushing it off a little more. But “we” decided to start looking for a home to purchase. 

    Yes, it’s exciting to think of owning your own home, especially now that it seems out of reach for so many people. He has been sending me different homes for over a year now. It started with condos downtown since we currently live downtown Austin, and he loves the walkability of it. Then I came in and smacked the reality into his sweet brain because, ummm sir, those things cost way too much and their HOAs are so expensive on their own. So, I told him we really need to focus on details of the home itself and not just the amenities that come with it. That’s when things really started to get real. 

    Doug became open to looking at houses or condos a little farther out. He started sending me so many houses daily, and then wanted to go to open houses to just check them out. I am still a licensed real estate agent (been in real estate for 10 years now) but I didn’t want to look at homes outside of open houses since we weren’t prepared to move for 7+ months at the time. So I was just going with the flow until about 3 weeks ago! We went to an open house that ended up being a new build community, which is a new development neighborhood. New developments are where they build homes as they sell to people who pick one of the floor plans that are available. 

    So we pulled into this VERY new development which had only 3-4 homes built, and one was the model home that they set up as the on location office. It’s mostly just open plots, lumber everywhere, contractors working on different projects, and the cement pour of a soon-to-be swimming pool. It was so beautiful! I really didn’t think Doug would like it because it’s a bit farther out that I expected him to go. We spent time in the model/office and the other model that they have built. They felt a little too big for us but Doug just seemed smitten with the entire concept of the new community. He started asking me some questions and saying things like, “Oh, I’d be so close to work and we really aren’t that far for anything we’d want!” We still went to a few more open houses that day and he said something that just hit me, “Nothing seems to even compare to that new home that we saw. It’s like, they just don’t give me that excited feeling.” 

    About three weeks ago is when we first saw the new build. We both made compromises on things we both really wanted, which I believe is what made us realize this was the location and house we wanted.  We decided to check with a lender to see what we could qualify for and if it would cover the floorplan we really liked and we did! I kept asking Doug, “Are you sure?”, “Are you positive you are good with not having a-b-c?”, to which he said, yes. That’s when we decided to go back and check it out again, check the location and surrounding area, and ask them questions. I was definitely second guessing everything because of my grief and he was excited and ready to go! 

    After that is when my brain started going wild! I thought about my dad, Bubba, and how he wouldn’t be here to check the drywall. He was a professional drywaller his entire life. He started at age 9, and I actually have his first putty knife that he was given as a child and still used up until just a couple months before he passed. He also taught me how to drywall and I would go on jobs with him. I didn’t do any of the hanging itself because I was 12 or 13 the first time he took me on a job. BUT, I could tape them off and keep up with the best of them! I loved going on jobs and just working with my hands like that. He even joked that I was better than some of the guys he hired to do full jobs with him and that I should quit school and do it full time with him! Of course that would never happen, but I could help when I could! 

    Well, a couple days later is when we decided to tell them, “Yes, we would like to build our home in this community.” So we are now under contract with them and we are hoping it will be built and ready to move in before our lease is up in late July. Anyone in real estate, or who has bought or sold, knows there’s so much that can happen between the time you sign the contract and the day that you close. So we are going through the motions and process one day at a time. Doug has already made a list of things we need to do a week before closing! haha

    Here I am, fighting back tears and fears. Grief hits in so many different ways. I never know when something will trigger my grief and send me down a path of tears, pain and frustration. I feel the pain of missing out. Missing out on having Bubba be so proud of me, and seeing me continue to push forward and even have amazing days filled with success and joy. And the frustration of not having him here with me to experience the gift of homeownership. He never owned a home besides a trailer and he never had a brand new vehicle in his life. The milestones he didn’t get to experience himself, he always celebrated even more when I reached them. It’s so hard to not have him here celebrating this one especially. 

    The same goes for my brothers. My brothers really missed out on a lot in life. We lost them way too soon and way before they were able to really start achieving the goals they had for themselves. They really had some wonderful goals that I wish we could have experienced with them. So, now that I’m in the phase of buying a house, I feel heartbroken for them. I want them here with me as Doug and I transition from renters to owners, because I never thought I’d get to this place in life. They always had more faith in my abilities than I had. So when I start second guessing myself, I do two things. First, I ask myself if I would say these things to my best friend. If I wouldn’t, then I refuse to say them to myself. Second, I think, what would Josh or Adam tell me right now? My brothers would never discourage me or even question if I could do anything. So then I change my thinking because that’s the least I can do for them now. 

    Celebrating my loved ones looks so different than I ever expected. Celebrating them now is to achieve my goals. Celebrating them is thriving to be better each day. Celebrating them is sharing my story of grief and pain as I speak about them and how they would support me in my everyday life and in my milestones. Even when happy milestones seem to have an achy soreness to them.