Baseball games and your GiGi

 Ronan,

It’s days like today, when I’ve had so much going on and I feel like I’ve been doing so “well,” whatever that means, that I have to stop myself ten times a day, close my eyes, and sit inside this reality of mine. These are the days when I have to consciously think about your death, because the time that once stood still now feels like it’s flying right past me. I keep hearing, “Look how much you’ve already done. You should be so proud of yourself.” I pause when I hear that. Am I doing too much? Am I not crying enough? Am I honoring this pain, or am I distracting myself so I don’t have to feel it? I worry about that. But I can’t stop what keeps coming my way. I can’t just sit back and ignore it. That would feel like throwing the gifts you’re bringing me straight into the trash. I don’t have a choice. I have to keep up with what’s unfolding if I’m going to accomplish whatever it is you’re asking me to do.

So on days like today, when I’m not bombarded with fifty things, I close my eyes a lot. I take deep breaths. I let myself go back to the saddest moment of my life, when you took your last breath. I let the sadness engulf me and I allow it to exist. I embrace it. I nurture it. I don’t hide from it. I give myself quiet moments in the car, driving alone, looking for you in the rearview mirror. I go into the grocery store alone and have to mentally talk myself through the experience. The world looks different to me now.

I go to the older Fry’s instead of the fancy one we used to go to. It feels safer there. The people don’t blind me with bright smiles. In fact, so many of them look weighed down that it makes me ache for them. I cry in the grocery store, not because of my own pain, but because I see the pain of others — the man with mental illness talking to the pancake mix, the homeless woman with one shoe missing, the little kids covered in dirt while their mom snaps at them to put the cereal back because it’s too expensive. Has the world always been this sad, and I just never saw it? Did you make me so happy that sadness simply didn’t exist in our world? You made every second of my life feel full, no matter where we were. We could have been in the middle of a war zone and I would have been happy as long as we were together. Now it feels like I’m in the middle of a war, except it lives inside my head, and you are not here. How does someone survive that? People tell me all the time how strong I am. That confuses me. I don’t feel strong. I feel like I don’t have a choice. I feel like I am a fighter because I love you so much that I will do whatever it takes to keep going. Maybe that’s what strength is. To me, it’s just love.

For not having a busy day, it ended up being a busy one. I was gone most of it, and tonight your brothers had a baseball game. I almost had a panic attack thinking about going back to that field without you. I never wanted to be the mom who sat and watched the entire game. I wanted to be the mom chasing you around, never fully able to sit still because you were too busy climbing fences or throwing dirt in protest that you weren’t old enough to play. Tonight I sat and watched your beautiful brothers. I sat there while tears streamed down my face because one of the boys on the team reminds me so much of what you would have been — naturally athletic, ahead of the other kids because of your older brothers. Your daddy knows that too. He came over several times, put his hand on my shoulder, and asked if I was okay. I gave him my half-smile and nodded while the tears hid behind my sunglasses and fedora. I did the best I could, but sitting at that game was beyond painful. I don’t think it will ever feel normal again. I felt like a fish out of water. I could almost hear your little voice yelling, “Gooooo Quinny! Gooooo LiLi!” You would have been the team mascot, hanging on the fence and furious you couldn’t be out there with them.

I am so sorry. I swear this feels like my fault. I was your mom. It was my job to keep you safe. I failed. You died, and now what? Now I’m sitting at little league games pretending anything about this life is normal. Baseball games and snow cones and laughter continue, as if the world didn’t stop. They continue for everyone except the mother who doesn’t get to bring her almost five-year-old to watch his brothers play. She brings his blanket instead and holds it in her lap because he is gone. Who is in charge of this so-called life? I think I’ve said it before, but I want a motherfucking refund.

That’s all I can write tonight, little one. I’m exhausted. I’ve been falling asleep easily lately because of all the moving and going I’ve been doing during the day. I love you. I miss you. I hope you are safe.

Goodnight, baby doll. Sweet dreams.

xoxo

 

Comments:

5 responses to “Baseball games and your GiGi”

  1. Glenda Avatar
    Glenda

    Sweet dreams RoMama. Hope your lil spicy monkey comes to you tonight.

    Peace and strength
    Always Ro!
    Fuc!!!

  2. Paula Avatar
    Paula

    Oh..your writing is so beautiful. Your doing the right thing staying busy. Staying busy doesn’t mean you’ve moved on. Nobody thinks that. And please don’t say his death was your fault. As you know NB is also known as the silent killer. Often no symptoms until too late. That’s not your fault. NB is never any parents fault. Its just a stupid sucky muther f#$%ing disease. Ronans going to change the world and the lives of others through you. He lives on and he doesn’t want you to be anything but a great wife and mom to your 2 other boys. And that you are remarkable at. Ronan knew your love for him was to the moon and back. Stay strong my friend. We need you in this world.

  3. Jennifer Miller Avatar
    Jennifer Miller

    Maya,
    Thank you for this blog. Seven years before I was born my mother lost a child. She doesn’t really talk about it. I know that he was born premature and he passed as a result of that. It is because you have the strength and courage to record your thoughts on a blog, that I’m able to understand her better and what it is like for her. I’m so sorry that you are going through this. I’m telling everyone I know about the foundation and trying to get them to vote in the Chase contest and or donate.

  4. Taylor Avatar
    Taylor

    Maya…I want to reiterate something. YOU DID NOT FAIL. One fails when they give up and you have NEVER given up. Remember, the race goes not to the swiftest, but to he/she who endures. You have endured. Therefore, you are not a failure. You are a fighter. You are doing something. You are FEARLESS.

  5. Isabelle Avatar
    Isabelle

    Maya,
    RoBaby LOVES you, no matter where he is. His body is on your dresser, and his heart is in yours. He must love those days that his Mama isn’t blinded by tears on the highway. Ronan sends you gifts; the falling book, the purple ROmmigbird, those days that you can do things without risking car accidents, fights, days that you cry in bed for seven hours straight. Those days are ROblessings– Cherish them, they’re like a star wars secret kiss; from your Ronnie

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