I am no longer what I once was. For years I was the parent of a son with cerebral palsy, the parent of a son that I pushed day in and day out in a wheel chair. I was a man gutting out life, playing the cards he was dealt… scratch that, embracing the cards he was dealt. I am not that man anymore, I’m not going through life like that anymore. I see the parents pushing their child in a wheel chair, and I emotionally take a hit as I think of myself in that same position. Yet I know that’s no longer my journey. The news cycle ticks on, day by day getting further from those fateful hours. Life has taken a new rhythm, but the wounds are still fresh and raw refusing to become scars of a battle once waged.
I march forward cloaked in countless memories, I was shaped by those years, and I was broken in that moment when those last breaths were taken. Which leads to the molding process that takes place today. Death takes its time until suddenly it doesn’t. The emotional wreckage scattered and strewn about, and the cleanup brings a man looking into the darkness. Into the darkness of anger and the internal hollowness such loss surely brings. I was most scared of losing myself in the darkness, falling in so far that retreat became impossible. Alas so far so good, as I believe I have kept from losing myself through this chapter of my story.