O truly necessary sin of Adam, destroyed completely by the
Death of Christ!
O happy fault that earned so great, so glorious a Redeemer!
I think about Mike all the time. I want to talk about him, tell about him, as do countless others
who love him. Part of me worries that we will turn him into a tidier package
than he was, a shining, simplified Mike-in-death who is somehow easier than my real, complicated,
handsome, challenging, brilliant, sensitive, searching husband – a man who was
many things, but never easy.
We went through times of great struggle in our relationship.
We had young children, I was trying to balance our home life and my work, Mike
had an endlessly demanding career at the college. It’s not easy raising a
family. But it wasn’t just the usual pressures on us, it was us – Mike and me, in all our
particularity, running up against a pattern of falling into alienation that
took time and passion and commitment to work through each time we hit that
wall. We would reconcile and come back together, until life would carry us
along and tensions would build all over again.
Mike suffered periods of depression and would sometimes
become more withdrawn and irritable, working too much; I would grow resentful
and silent and take on too much of the child-raising and home-sustaining work.
I longed for him to reach out to me with affection during those times of emotional
and role-related distance. Often he didn’t. But neither did I. Eventually I’d
get so angry that I couldn’t hold it in, and I’d overreact to a seemingly
insignificant offense. We’d talk, and sometimes fight, and stay up too late,
and eventually melt and forgive and get in bed and talk with open hearts,
clearing the way – until it happened again.
I remember one of the worst times, when we were struggling
to come back together again and it just wasn’t working. We were avoiding eye
contact and hanging onto anger for at least twenty-four hours – much, much too
long. I could barely function out in the world, carrying the wrongness of this
separation from Mike around with me. Everything I did was colored by the pain of
it. It was a Saturday afternoon. I was in line at Whole Foods with one of the
kids. I felt my phone vibrate in my back pocket, took it out, and read Mike’s
text: I can’t stand this any longer, it
hurts too much. Please. I love you. Forgive me.
Or something like that. It was years ago. I do remember the
phrase “I can’t stand this,” and how it articulated exactly what I was feeling:
I too cannot stand this for another moment. I literally can barely stand up in
this interminable line; the cart is the only thing between me and the scuffed
linoleum floor. I cried and cried, right there in the line, and raced home to
him.
It was only after Mike got sick, and we’d been through a
couple of months of treatment, that I had a profound realization: I was not a
passive victim in our relationship. I had sometimes chosen to see myself that
way in the past, when Mike was depressed or overworked and withdrawn. But I was
responsible for myself in our
marriage, and when I chose resentment in silence, I was shirking my
responsibility. I had been avoiding it because I was scared. Scared, I think,
that Mike didn’t love me completely, and if I were to speak up when hurt or ask
for more – if I were to claim full partnership – well, I might lose him. But the
fear and insecurity were mine, about
my own weird combination of temperament and a socialized commitment to niceness
and conflict avoidance. When I stewed in silence, I wasn’t trusting Mike. I
wasn’t trusting us.
Resting in private anger was cowardly, and not allowing our
marriage to grow and stretch as it should. I felt shocked by this realization.
I hadn’t been brave enough to be fully present. I hadn’t trusted Mike’s
capacity to receive my feelings and stay connected. What an earth-shattering
idea: I was withdrawn too. I wasn’t
allowing my beloved in. We talked about it. I apologized. I began to see with
new eyes, and felt a restless urgency about taking up my responsibility and
being honest with him, as honest as I could.
Mike’s illness brought this to the fore for me because our
time together was no longer something to take for granted. Not that I ever did,
not really. My dad’s death from cancer at forty-four taught me that. But Mike’s
disease and those early treatments made it so real: the situation brought my
love for him into relief, and the glaring awareness that there was no time to
fuck around – no time for dishonesty, mistrust, or alienation. I wanted to
clear those things away, to be together completely. Not that I always
accomplished it – old habits die hard – but I do think our marriage changed for
the better. I’m grateful for that.
O happy fault. I’m
sure Mike introduced me to the phrase many years ago, probably when he first
began to read Thomas Aquinas seriously, though reading back over Mike’s two precious blog posts yesterday was a reminder of how fully he engaged his faith
and love and intellect in an effort to understand how God can will terrible
things. How evil and cancer and suffering can be part of God’s intention. O
happy fault! proclaims that God brings ultimate good from evil; salvific faith
from harrowing suffering. A sin can be necessary in order to bring about
something far greater. This line is part of the Easter Vigil service, one of
Mike’s (and Frances’s) very favorite liturgical moments of the year.
We didn’t go to the Vigil this year. Too late for my
underslept five year old. Easter Sunday with its triumph and lilies and
insistent joy was a draining endeavor for me, despite good friends visiting and
holding me and the children up throughout the day. I simply felt exhausted,
empty, and sad.
Though it isn’t exactly the same gesture, the same
narrative, I associate O happy fault now with
another shift that opened up for me in the last months and weeks of Mike’s
life. This change in my heart was heightened during the two weeks he spent in
the hospital before he died. All of our past struggles no longer pained me
because I understood that they were the necessary sins of our greater love;
because Mike was Mike, in all his brilliance and particularity and irreducible
Mike-ness, and because I was me, we had to
have those struggles. It was all part of our path, and thus precious.
I love the whole glorious person of Mike, and his
vulnerabilities and challenges and past experiences are intimately tied up with
his strengths, his faith, his soulful presence. Mike wouldn’t be Mike without
the shadow side of his sensitivity, intelligence, empathy, love. I realized
with surprise and gratitude that I held tenderly to the painful moments of our
relationship alongside the joyful and romantic and transcendent ones. It no longer hurt to consider the hard times. We had to have them all, because we were us. Being us was a treasure.
I fell in love with Mike when I was twenty years old. We
shared the rocky passage from late adolescence into adulthood. We had to find
our way together, growing up, struggling with how to honor ourselves and each
other and our love and God. That isn’t easy for any two people to do.
O happy faults – Mike’s faults, my faults, our fumbling
mistakes, our failures to take up our responsibility to one another – because
without them, we wouldn’t be us. We wouldn’t have grown into accepting and
loving each other more deeply, as we did. Aeschylus says “wisdom comes alone
through suffering.” We had to suffer to grow in wisdom.
Both before and after Mike’s illness I would often note how
incredible it was that I could nurse hurt feelings and hang onto anger all day
long, avoiding him as best I could, but as soon as we looked each other in the
eye and spoke a few honest words – words that had to have love anchoring them,
if they were indeed honest – it all melted away. It was almost annoying, how
hard it was to stay mad at Mike. It was affirming too. No matter how messed up
things were, it was all rooted in love and thus suffused with hope.
Loving him, I told Mike, wasn’t really up to me. It wasn’t
something I willed. It just was. It
was an insistent force, and even when I would have wished to turn it off, or at
least turn down the intensity so that I could stay mad or separate in some way,
I simply couldn’t.
So I don’t want to lose our faults. I don’t want to smooth
over the difficulties, the sadness, the annoyance. I don’t want to edit the
stories. I cherish all of it.
In the ICU one day Mike mouthed something that I didn’t
understand. He wanted me to pass him the tissues or something simple like that,
but I was and am a miserable lip reader. I apologized and passed him the iPad,
asking him to type it for me. He refused, violently gesturing forget it with obvious irritation.
Be patient with me Mike, I said. Don’t treat me like that.
This is hard for me too.
He looked at me, so depleted, and now upset with himself for
being short. Which I could barely stand, adding to his burdens like that,
though I had promised him – and myself – that I would be honest with him about
my feelings even in those terrible times. I had to. I couldn’t bear any chasms,
even small ones, to grow between us.
Are you angry with me about anything? I asked.
I thought he might cry. No, he said. You’re perfect. And
then: I hate how intimacy erodes courtesy. I have always struggled with that.
Before Mike’s tracheostomy, I sat with him in the pre-op
area, holding his hand and crying and saying goodbye to his perfect elegant
throat. We both cried during those long quiet waiting minutes, on the cusp of a
procedure that dramatically marked the transition from treatment to palliative
care.
In the past, during our hardest moments, Mike had
articulated a fear that he wasn’t the husband I deserved. That perhaps I wished
for someone, or something, better. Suddenly, as we were waiting, I had to make
sure he knew that that never was and never could be the case. So I told him, sitting
in the plastic chair pulled up as close as it could be to the gurney, wedged
between the IV pole and the nurse’s rolling computer, that he was the best
husband in the world for me. I loved every part of him. I loved his whole
being. I wanted for nothing. There is nowhere in the world I would rather have
been than right there, at his side, holding his hand, sharing that grief.
I knew that was true, true as true as true. And so did he.
The pains of our past had all slid away in those days, though I had not
forgotten them. They were now simply part of who we were. Mike could drive me
crazy. He could escape into a book of theology or philosophy and disappear for
hours. He could make me laugh harder than anyone, he could never resist
correcting my grammar, he could recite hip hop lyrics with surprising imitative
skill, he could melt me with the graze of his hand on my shoulder. He loved and
sought after God with a singlemindedness that I sometimes found exasperating,
though it was the part of him that called to me most powerfully, and shaped so
much of our great love.
He was the best husband in the world for me, and he died.
It hurts so much.
6 comments:
What a beautiful expression of true love.
You always leave me speechless. So beautiful and so honest. Loving can be so hard. Marriage is hard. But Love is real. The rest will melt away but that will always be forever - you and Mike.
Hold on hard to that completeness of MIke. The world wants to turn the departed into saints or demons...he certainly CANNOT be put in the demon class, so the danger is in beatification. Your children deserve the whole story...they deserve the valorization of Mike as a whole, real, vibrant and always imperfect human being. That is the man they know in their hearts (each at her or his own developmental level) and that is the man they would have known better and continued to love if the years had been destined to grow long. You do keep the flame alive for them and your wisdom at this very moment about the complexity, the imperfection that is still so glorious, the real human being that you have loved so deeply and so well is precious beyond rubies. God blesses you because you are courageous, honest, insightful, and filled with love for this life we are living.
I am ever amazed by the candor of your posts and your willingness to share and be vulnerable. Love is certainly forever and surpasses all things. I pray that the love from your marriage along with the love of God continue to sustain you. You have been and will continue to be in my thoughts and prayers.
A loving tribute to your life together... forever treasured ❤️
Oh dear friend...my heart is with you. This is so tender and beautiful a post, as all of your writing is.
I too know the patterns you describe so well. Still I think that the love you and Mike shared was extra special...
anyone looking from the outside in could see it. May that love, your unique and amazing through the ups and downs love, endure.
And may all of your cherished memories bring you extra comfort at this sad time.
Hoping to give you a big, in-person hug soon.
❤️❤️❤️
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