Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Stung


I was doing OK today, trudging diligently through the onerous task of combing over my father's credit card statements to identify recurring charges so that I could move, cancel, or otherwise rearrange items that my mother will still use (the Netflix subscription, the cell phone auto-pay) to appropriate places as I tidy up things. I was fine, despite some expected frustrations and complexities, right up until the moment that it came time to cancel his New York Times subscription.  

There was no point to keeping it -- Mom has her own, and so do I. And so, I logged in and clicked through to begin the cancellation process. (It is always easier online than having to talk to a person, especially when the reason for canceling is, because someone is deceased.) The system politely offered my some options instead of full cancellation: did I want to put it on hiatus? Did I want a print copy instead? No, thanks. 

Then it asked: did I want a year's worth of access to just the games, for free? And it showed the little game icons, including the Spelling Bee. And my heart clutched a little bit, because Daddy loved the Spelling Bee, and played it every day.

Thank you, but no, New York Times. He can't play any more.

It let me cancel without further ado. And I put my head on my desk and cried, just a little, for that bee.

Sunday, February 26, 2023

Responsibility

 Herself speaks.

With the passing of my lovely father, the responsibility for Family Paperwork has fallen to me. I'm slowly gathering all of the Important Papers - bills, tax-related documents, credit card statements, and so forth - and organizing them as best as possible, trying to ensure that everything is orderly and complete, making sure that Mom doesn't have to deal with anything difficult, ensuring that the well-oiled machine Daddy set up during his lifetime continues. 

Honoring his memory through Paperwork. It's a little odd, I know, but it's what I'm doing. It's all I can do for him now, and it's my privilege to be able to do so. 

With this new responsibility, though, comes a few Feelings. And those Feelings are surfacing in strange ways, about tiny things. 

For example: there's a weird piece of trash in front of the house now. It appeared there -- Thursday? I think? -- and I did not pick it up on my way in to the house, because I spotted it on my way in after work and was carrying my briefcase, purse, lunch bag, Beloved Husband's lunch bag, and my laptop bag (it goes back and forth to the office on days when I have Estate Matters to handle during business hours too), so I had no hands free. I could have gone back out to collect that piece of trash after I'd put my things down inside the house, but I did not. I reasoned: other people live here too. That piece of trash does not have to be my sole responsibility. 

And now I am waiting for someone else to pick it up. Will someone do it? Will it take my asking, would you please get that? for it to happen? 

Once upon a time, the feeling that people relied on me to take care of all things both big and small was a warm fuzzy feeling: it meant that people found me reliable, necessary, needed. Being needed meant so much to me. Such confidence in being the Responsible Person, on whom people relied.

Now in the heart of middle age, being needed sometimes is a too-warm coat: oppressive, exhausting. And being the Responsible-Person-on-whom-people-rely, feels a lot like being-taken-for-granted. 

Not to be needed is frightening, though. What if people don't need me any more? Do I have value if I am not needed? 

Philosophically, I can answer emphatically, of course I do. I would tell any human being who might be struggling, that they have intrinsic value regardless of what they are contributing at the moment. That would include myself. 

But in reality, it feels a little different. If I am not needed, would people communicate with me? Want to spend time with me? Reach out to me at all? 

What if I am the one who needs? Would people support that need? Or would they find me oppressive and exhausting?

The thoughts are too big, and I am tired. 

Maybe I will just go pick up that piece of trash, and go for a walk. 

Tuesday, February 21, 2023

Photogenic

She really is such a photogenic kitty. And a very good pet, too. MEOW MEOW. 


Sunday, February 19, 2023

Kindness

 Herself speaks.

The most remarkable thing about Daddy's passing away: the pure kindness from other people.

I couldn't figure out at first why this was somehow so surprising to me. It's not that I expected people to be mean. Perhaps I expected people to be more indifferent? I'm not sure what I was expecting, to be honest. People have reached out to offer condolences, and have said thoughtful and meaningful things. And they don't expect anything from me, as far as I can discern. 

Perhaps that is the strangest part. On the whole, people don't communicate with me, unless they want something from me. So to have someone send an email or a letter solely to express sympathy for my loss, seems very unusual. 

It also brings to mind something that worries me a little bit right now -- I am not particularly able to be giving right now. I am preoccupied, grieving, self-centered. I do not have a lot to offer other people. And there's that teeny little fear way down inside: will the people who are important to me, abandon me because I have so little to give right now? Perhaps this is what Death does: it makes us fear loss more. 

And so I'm grateful for these kindnesses, because they are reassurances that perhaps I do have some value to others, independent of my ability to do anything for other people right now. 

Thank you, kind people. 

Saturday, February 18, 2023

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Haus

The buns do enjoy a new cardboard house to chew upon.