Tuesday, March 18, 2025

In Memoriam #12

Another March 19 has arrived. Like clockwork, the star jasmine has burst into bloom, ushering in the season. I breathe in its dizzying scent. What am I to do with this reminder of how sweet the flowers were when my son Noah took his life 12 years ago?

I make a rare trip to the cemetery with my husband, Bryan. Noah’s gravestone looks ancient now amid the many shiny newer ones, whose end dates jump up at me: 2017, 2019, 2023. Why couldn’t he have lived those extra years? How much he could have learned, loved, created; how much more we could have enjoyed him. Why wasn’t he in the midst of a long life, like the old Russians with graves nearby?

Bryan and I stand over the stone and catch Noah up on the news. The little blips of our lives: the ski trip we just had with his brother, the 70th anniversary of his grandparents, how his best friend cooked dinner for us—all places he should have been. The Eaton wildfire that miraculously spared our house but destroyed his childhood neighborhood, leaving a wasteland he wouldn’t believe. The larger disasters swirling around our country and our world at this moment—also at a scale he wouldn’t have thought possible. How Noah might have helped us weather these storms.

I tell Noah about my new book of grief poems. For the first time, I read one of the poems aloud to him. It’s about how much I miss him and would gladly “go out to eat w you, anywhere./ Even yr favorite sopping lasts-all-day/chicken burrito at Lucky Boy. You/lucky so long, then not.” Maybe I'll come back to the grave one day and read him the whole book.

As is customary, we stop to rinse our hands with flowing water before leaving the cemetery. We’re getting back in the car when a tiny yellow finch alights on the fountain, a welcome flash of life.

I told myself a year or two ago that going forward, I would try to pay more attention to Noah’s birthday than his death day. But March 19 is carved into my consciousness. It tolls like a gong from my calendar: Beware. Take care. Leave this day free. So Bryan and I will do what we often do to remember Noah: Start the day at his favorite donut place. Bring a photo album to take on a walk at one of his surf spots. Write his name on the beach.

Recently, I heard the space-age sound of an incoming Skype call on the news and my mind immediately flew to Noah at 17, calling us from his host family’s home in France. How I missed him during his long senior year abroad; how I lived to hear the telltale ping of his Skype call. How little I knew how deeply depressed he was there after a break-up; might an intervention then have prevented his crisis at 21? Had I known how short his life would be, might I have pleaded with him to stay home?

I place camelias from the yard on Noah’s grave, leave kisses in all the O’s engraved on his stone.

To my fellow survivors: How are you moving through your grief and days of remembrance? What smells or sounds sparks memories of your loved one?

3 comments:

  1. Hello again dear Susan, our circumstances have brought us together across the ocean. I am thinking of you today as I approach the 24th March. As we enter March the physical pain of grief returns with a vengeance as if it were unexpected, it is expected and I’m not sure if it is unwelcome as part of the ongoing grief which is different now. Strangely although I recognise my brothers birthday I had t until last year connected the 24th with those two dates. Gareth’s birthday is May and I still find it hard to commemorate it. Somewhere in the ether I feel he might return although I know it not to be true. As the days lengthen at this time I feel vulnerable and exposed by the light as it is a reminder of that dreadful week. With love Ros

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  2. Dearests Susan and Rozzy, March has come again, and my David's birthday , the 20th, with it. I have been thinking of both of you these days. I cannot say I am feeling great these days, because I am quite often rather pessimist and easily thinking about the worst possible senario regarding to every small or bigger difficulty the rest of my children might encounter. A mother's life, at least for me, is mostly (80% ) anxiety. To others I look cheerful, I try to box those feelings, or to distract myself with various activities, I don't feel confident any more to even slightly intervene or even give advice. Pray for me my dear sisters because my faith in life is withering. I wish you the best. Vassiliki

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  3. Dear Vassiliki I’m sorry that you share the pain of March memories and I am thinking of you. I share your anxieties in relation to family and have developed a tendency to ruminate on all possible catastrophes. Some days I am better and these last few days have become easier but it can take very little prompting or trigger to hurl me back into a torrent of worry. I am trying to focus on being constructive, to progress my language learning, read good books, swim and walk perhaps in the same way as you are. I am holding you in my thoughts and prayers, Vassiliki and hope for peaceful days for you. , I sometimes read John O’Donahue and his blessings often make me more ready to face the day. I will type out a particular one if you are interested, he also wrote a blessing for those bereaved by suicide. With love Ros

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