Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Mourning With Joy

 It's been a few weeks now since we lost our dear Gabby. Today was the first day one of my other nieces from Arizona and I were able to smile a bit while talking about her. The Arizona niece and the rest of the family who traveled back to Alaska to memorialize Gabs all came down with colds. I guess the weather transition paired with the stress just wore everyone down. I myself was battling a sore throat. So, when talking about all this over the phone, my niece and I both laughed when we remembered how Gabby would always nag us to drink Echinacea tea for a cold.

It felt good to think of and talk about Gabby with smiles and not just tears. 

I have a neighbor whose elderly father passed away within a day or two of Gabby's death. His wife died about a year and a half ago. I talked to her more than I did with him and when she knew she was dying soon from a returning cancer, I walked down to their place to visit with her and take her fruit. We chatted a bit and before I left, I asked if she minded if I prayed for her. Somehow, I knew she was "religious" but I didn't know if she had accepted Christ. She said she would like to pray so I did. I asked that Jesus reach her heart to let her know that she could have peace after death (because I was too chicken to directly ask her about her state of salvation). I asked that he ease her fears and physical pains so that she could leave this world without a lot of suffering.

After that prayer, I was trying to decide how to just ask her if she was saved. I didn't get a chance because she told me that she did feel at peace and was not afraid to die. It was very frustrating not to know what exactly she believed about death and peace. I cowardly let it go at that and said goodbye. Her daughter told me a few days later that she had died in her sleep. Hospice had come and kept her medicated. 

When her husband died the other week, I hadn't taken the chance to talk with him about his salvation. He had spent a lot of time away, visiting a sister in Texas for a couple of months, then visiting other family members for a week or two at a time. His daughter works and I think he just didn't like being alone in the apartment so much. When I heard that he'd passed, I was in the first phase of my own grief. Today, I saw his daughter this morning as she was outside loading things into her car. I'm told she is moving across town. I still think about my hit-and-miss witnessing attempts with her parents. And I feel like such a coward.

I have actually tried to witness to a couple of my other neighbors. Two of them were chatting when I went into the lobby to check my mail. As usual, they spoke and I was drawn into their conversation. One of these ladies had lost her husband a couple of years ago. They'd been married for 68 years. They and the other couple I mentioned were some of the first people I met when I moved here. 

The widow was telling us about her morning, She had been to church (she is Catholic) and mentioned that she'd spoken to one of the priests about praying for her late husband. I didn't really follow all that she was saying because I don't really understand Catholicism. I'm not even sure if she is Roman Catholic or not. I do know that she seemed to think that we could pray for the dead. The other lady is obviously of the same beliefs, whatever they are because she seemed interested in knowing what the priest had to say.

Since I was less cowardly that day, I managed to put in my two cents' worth. I casually mentioned that "in my faith" (cringe), we don't pray for our dead because believers are saved by the blood of Jesus. They didn't seem offended, thank goodness, so I kind of rambled on about liking the simplicity of knowing that I can't do anything to save myself because Jesus has done that for me.

I probably sounded like an idiot but I did get it said. They both just kind of nodded but they didn't ask any questions. Someone else came up by then and the conversation was diverted to something random.

So, yeah, I really need to work on my witnessing efforts. 

About 2 years ago, I bought a bundle of Gospel of John tracts that I would anonymously place around the community room and in the lobby. When people were taking them one by one, I bought more. (As I was writing this post, I went over and ordered a variety of gospel tracts from ChristianBook.com). If I can't be more brave, I can at least do something.

Anyway, I am glad that I did talk to my niece before she died. Like me, she was raised with a knowledge of salvation but never really committed one way or the other. Thankfully, she did accept Christ long before she passed. She had only just started reading her Bible, studying and discussing Christianity but it's not studying or reading that saves us. She had Jesus.

By the way, in case this helps anyone else in dealing with their own grief, I would suggest writing letters to the person. I don't know why but I started writing and sending emails to my late niece's account.  I might have gotten the idea from a documentary I watched a while back. There are people in Japan who'd lost loved ones in during earthquakes or tsunamis - some natural disasters. Some organization or the other set up a booth with an old-fashioned rotary dial phone. People go into the booth for privacy, pick up the phone and talk to their late loved ones. It was heartbreaking to see one really old man talking into a silent phone to his late wife. He was just telling her that he loved and misses her. So, yeah, maybe that idea was in the back of my mind when I started writing the emails to Gabby. That might sound weird, but it's been helpful. 

Peace

--Free


Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Still Mourning

When my niece died Saturday before last, I felt gut-punched. Initially, on hearing the news from my brother, I felt dizzy and nauseous and I think I cried. I remember feeling as if I was hearing words that did not make sense. 

"This is bad news. This is sit-down news."

I'd expected it to be bad news. No one - not even family shows up unexpectedly at 3:30 in the morning with anything but bad news. And in a way, I'd been expecting something to happen. I hadn't been able to sleep and had been sitting up all night, feeling restless and waiting - for something. You know that feeling? So when my brother and my sister-in-law walked into the apartment (my SIL was carrying pastries from Hyvee with a couple of disposable plates resting on the lid), I knew I would hear something not-good.

"Gabby passed."

What? I saw my brother's mouth moving and I heard the words but it all felt surreal. For a minute, I was thinking that I could not have heard Gabby's name before the word "passed" and I tried to think of what "passed" could mean.

I think that I repeated it in my head ("Gabby passed") trying to do what one of my other nieces later said: "Make it make sense". And I couldn't.

And I think I cried - maybe wailed, maybe whimpered - and then I had to stop and try to process whether or not I was awake or asleep. Dreaming a nightmare or having some kind of auditory hallucination.

"Gabby passed".

Still today, I keep hearing those words in my brother's voice. I keep trying to "make it make sense". And I just can't. Every time I close my eyes, I see Gabby. Laughing Gabby, loud Gabby, mad, happy, sad, hurt Gabby. I see her as she looked during one of the few FaceTime (?) chats we had. I see her walking across the stage at her high school graduation (with me and her mother and marveling and laughing as she strutted up to get her diploma in super high-heeled shoes). I see her looking serious and mischievous and playful. I can even remember how she looked the day she and her twin brother were born, sleeping in the little NICU incubators next to each other.

Her brother seems to be handling this better than I am. Or he is doing what I am doing and pretending to be handling it because if he lets go even a little bit he will not be able to pull himself back together. 

Gabby.

I love everyone in my family - even the ones I don't like a whole lot - but Gabby was special. Gabby was the one I have been closest to since her mother (my sister) died. When My sister died, I had my best friend and Gabby. When my best friend died, I had Gabby. And now Gabby is gone. I, the biggest loner/hermit ever, feel so alone without Gabby in this world.

Gabby is the one who I gossiped with. I wouldn't know half of what goes on in this family of ours if it were not for Gabby. Gabby and I talked usually several times a month - sometimes a week - and we didn't have short phone calls. We had those long calls, just being on the phone as she worked and I cleaned or cooked. Sometimes, we irritated each other. Sometimes, one of us didn't want to start one of those calls because we didn't want to spend hours on the phone! Sometimes we got mad at each other and ignored one another. Until the mad spell was over.

Gabby was my "buddy niece". She always returned texts and she always called back. She was not just my niece, she was my friend. I think I am just now realizing that. And I don't think that anyone else in my family realizes that either. It's weird, but Gabby and I had a bond that might surprise some of our family. And because I don't want to make anyone else feel sadder than they already do, I try to hold it in. They can't make it better. Only God can.

She was only 36 years old. And I have sinned by questioning God. I've asked why not take me? Why not take someone who didn't love life as much as Gabby did. Then I repent. God knows what we don't. He has His plans and His reasons. And He did not take Gabby until she had salvation.

But it still hurts so much. I cry or hold back tears so much that I go hoarse. It's hard to enjoy anything - sleep, food, a pretty day.

For a few hours, I was mad at myself that Gabby and I hadn't talked for a while. I'd had COVID and she'd started a part-time job (she had plans that needed a lot of money), and so we hadn't had one of our long chats for a long time. But the thing is, if she was still here, we wouldn't do anything different. Because we don't know the future. 

One thing that I said to another family member after Gabby died is that we need to be careful about our words and actions. What we do to and say to someone could be that last thing. But that's not realistic, is it? We do and say and live and love and laugh and are human. 

I am praying for God to heal this sadness. I know that Gabby would not want me to be feeling this sad for this long. She would want me to be happy again. But she was such a big part of that joy. So for now, I am still mourning and waiting for better days.

Peace

--Free

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Yoga IS a Religion (IMO)

This is just a short post to clarify why I don't practice Yoga.

Recently, when I was posting on FreeBeingFree about how I was dealing with my depression, I mentioned these non-Yoga stretching exercises. The ones I found are perfect for me - especially the nighttime stretch I've been doing.


Many people debate whether or not Yoga is a religion. Most of those people would probably agree with the following:

And while there is a lot of debate about whether or not Yoga is a religion, what matters to me as a Christian is that almost everyone agrees with the following:

Yoga (/ˈjɡə/ (listen);[1] Sanskritयोगlit.'yoke' or 'union' pronounced [joːɡɐ]) is a group of physical, mental, and spiritual practices or disciplines which originated in ancient India and aim to control (yoke) and still the mindrecognizing a detached witness-consciousness untouched by the mind (Chitta) and mundane suffering (Duḥkha). There is a wide variety of schools of yoga, practices, and goals[2] in HinduismBuddhism, and Jainism,[3][4][5] and traditional and modern yoga is practiced worldwide.[6] (source)

And,

It is a philosophy and a spiritual practice and many people with different religious beliefs find it is a complement to their faith. (Source) [my emphasis]

My Christianity is the only spiritual practice I need. And any other spiritual practice is forbidden to me as we Christians are not to mix the sacred with the profane.

Anyway, I know that will offend a lot of the people who practice Yoga (a "spiritual practice", mind you) apart from Eastern religions and faiths. There are churches that provide Yoga classes. That baffles me And even if in doubt, shouldn't we as Christians, just abstain from the practice?

So I wanted to clarify why I was so excited to find stretching exercises that don't include anything that could glorify other gods and religions.

There are many other stretching exercises offered by Caitlin Englebert on her YouTube channel

Peace

--Free