Dear Aaron,
Once I asked a friend who lost her sister to cancer, "Does it ever get easier?" Her gentle answer was that grief changes, sometimes mellowing, sometimes roaring up at you. I've found that grief is only "easier" if you ignore it and dive into something else...to the exclusion of deep soul reflection.
Perhaps it's only natural that I miss you extra in December and January... The end of Semester and around your birthday. The end of Semester was so traumatising—losing our community to go back to people who didn't understand how much we had all changed... Going back to greyness—both in external and internal landscape—where there was nothing in particular to work towards or hope for. You, Reese, Chelsea, and to a degree Stephen were my lights in dark places when all other lights had gone out. In each of you was the light of the Messiah, spilling out onto anyone in your paths. I'm so thankful for that Light in the greyness; for your steady friendship those handful of years.
As we descend into the darkness of the Advent season, and the physical darkness of Winter, I can't help thinking of the Christmas you visited me in Indiana. It was exhausting, you were a bit flighty at times, and it is one of the sweetest memories I have. When you read Tolkien to me while sitting on the floor in my old room. You, lounging on the woodpile and reading. Walking in the frigid cold and trying to sort out our sore souls, our loves, our hopes... Both of our hopes were dashed, and somehow I missed what could have grown into more with you. Now that I'm married, I don't grieve that loss so strongly, but I wonder what course our lives would have taken if things had been different. They aren't different, though...and so, I miss you.
One day this autumn the song below came across my playlist. Without warning, grief spilled out of my heart and eyes. All I could think of was you...
Medicate, meditate, swear your soul to JesusThrow a punch, fall in love, give yourself a reasonDon't wanna drive another mile wonderin' if you're breathin'So, won't you stay, won't you stay, won't you stay with me?
It seems like there just weren't enough reasons left... You had fallen in love once, if not twice, and that didn't work out. Maybe you threw some punches. You spent time meditating on Scripture and music and good books...you even had medication. And I know that your soul was and is sworn to Jesus. Jesus is enough to make all wrongs right in His time.
So, the words I wish I could have told you and had you really hear are these:
Oh, you're spiralin' againThe moment right before it ends,
you're most afraid ofBut, don't you cancel any plans'Cause I won't let you get the chance
to never make them. . .
Don't let this darkness fool you
All lights turned off can be turned onI'll drive, I'll drive all nightI'll call your mom
Oh, dear, don't be discouragedI've been exactly where you areI'll drive, I'll drive all nightI'll call your mom
I have called your mom—many times—and it has been a help to us both. But I just. miss. you. You were the one who had changed because of Semester. You are the one I shared life experiences and memories with. And I wish I could see who you could have become. You could have filled books with poems and the air with songs. For now, they reverberate, hanging in the air...invisible, just unheard. So close, but impossibly far—the curtain of death hanging between us.
Oh friend... The darkness may have fooled you for a moment, but the light turned off can be turned on. The Light of Jesus never goes out...and it spilled out of you into dark places. The Light goes on and on, lighting up lives you never knew—but one day you will.
In many ways you have and will always stay with me. For that, I'm deeply grateful. <3
Call Your Mom — Songwriters: Todd Sherman Clark / Noah Kahan
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