Sunday, September 16, 2007

gray

when a colleague dies, business as usual disappears and everyone walks around with their heart at half mast. there’s a fog and a confusion that is exchanged in wordless glances . there are puffy eyes, heavy sighs, and lots of tight- lipped sympathetic smiles.

when that colleague dies of cancer, it’s worse. it’s more unbelievable, more sad, more wrong. there are too many levels of tragedy and irony.

i’m glad it was gray and cool out. bright sun would have felt like an intrusion or like the skies were celebrating, and that would have felt wrong.

if i wasn’t already, i am officially the town cryer. ‘i wish i could cry freely’, one of my physicians said. ‘it’s a gift’, i told him drawing a tissue from the holster on my hip.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm so sorry for your loss, life is such a bitch sometimes and words are just not enough at times like these. X

Thoughts on Life and Millinery. said...

It is war here on earth. The enemy is all sorts of things, sickness and death being a particularly successful opponent. When one of the people who wars most fervently against sickness and death is claimed, it is fitting that there be more than just sorrow.
You are right, it is a gift to be able to cry. Tears are a tribute to the fallen, a precious sign that their lives are missed here on earth.

Anonymous said...

My uncle is an oncologist.

My grandmother died of cancer.

Scott said...

Oh, I am sorry for your loss. I'm sure that coworker, who took such good care of cancer patients, was well cared for in her(?) illness.

Anonymous said...

grief is so individualized. some cry, some journal, some talk to their spouse. everyone needs to mourn in their own ways i guess and be allowed that.

Sue Doe-Nim said...

Methinks you're on the cusp of greatness.

Come and get your award.

I expect an acceptance speech

http://suedoenim.blogspot.com/2007/10/how-to.html

Barbara said...

as another nurse, i can so identify with your words, your angst, and the understanding of being witness to the thin veil between life and being gone when someone dies. when a friend/cohort dies, it is so much more intensely personal, perhaps almost as if we were standing in family shoes.

as a quilter, i also mourn the loss of creative ability linked to our heritage when a quilter dies. odd? i think not, but that's me.

blessings and peace - Barbara RN

Smalltown RN said...

It is ironic that working in the area that you do that one of your own should succumb to the desease as well...guess no one can escape the big "C".....I am terribly sorry for you loss.....

Anonymous said...

Missing your posts, hope you're ok?