"Between
me and the other world there is ever an unasked question: unasked by some
through feelings of delicacy, by others through the difficulty of rightly
framing it. All, nevertheless, flutter
around it. They approach me in a
half-hesitant sort of way, eye me curiously or compassionately, and then
instead of saying directly, How does it feel to be a problem? they say, I know
an excellent colored man in my town, or I fought at Mechanicsville, or Do not
these Southern outrages make your blood boil?
At these I smile, or am interested, or reduce the boiling to a simmer,
as the occasion may require. To the real
question, How does it feel to be a problem?
I answer seldom a word."
DuBois
captures so elegantly the experience of being "other," of being a
trigger for the discomfort of others.
I
have many experiences in my life of being the "other," of feeling
myself the outsider. But never more than
in the nearly four months that have passed since I lost my life partner, Stan
Thornburg.
As I
have written ( http://opinionatedjudge.blogspot.com/2014/05/complicated-grief.html ),
Stan and I loved each other deeply for 30 years, and for the last 19 years we privately
related to each other as life partners.
Stan remained in his marriage for complicated reasons (though he was
long separated and nearly divorced from his wife when he died), but we
functioned as partners. Most people who
knew us knew we shared some kind of special connection, but the true extent of
it was closeted while Stan was alive.
The
morning after Stan died, I realized that I had no more will to keep our
relationship in the closet. I had never
wanted that to begin with, and I was facing not only the loss of him but the
loss of our hopes to finally live together in a marriage. The chasm of my grief was deep, and I could
not bear the thought of facing it alone and in secret. The closet is no place for joy, and it is
definitely no place for a grief this big.
It
came to me as an insight that it was up to me to model for people how to think
about our relationship. Stan had done
some work to lay the groundwork too (though not as much as I wish he had): he had left specific instructions that I should
have the place of prominence at his memorial, and he had spoken to varying
degrees to family members and others close to him about my importance to him. He had been living with me for a
year-and-a-half during which I supported him and cared for him under extremely
difficult circumstances.
So I
was very clear from the beginning of my grief journey that I had lost my life
partner. I have persisted in speaking
from that experience.
And I
have been met mostly with silence so absolute that it can only be described as
shunning.
Not
from Stan's daughter or from my own circle of friends. Though my family of origin does not function
as a haven for me, I do have many people out there who care for me and who
express their concern with love. I am
grateful for that. But very few of those
who have reached out to me are part of the community that Stan and I served
together and for whose sake we sacrificed our desire to be together as a
couple. Actually, the closer people are
to Stan and the church community, the less likely it is that I have heard from
them AT ALL in the nearly four months since Stan died. Even people that I would typically hear from,
who previously often commented on things I post on Facebook or communicated
with me in other casual ways, have stopped communicating with me even in those
ways.
I am
left to speculate about the reasons, since I am so cut-off. But my strong instinct is that I am a problem
for that community. And I am the kind of
problem that people would prefer to ignore.
There
is no box in which to put my relationship with Stan. He was a pastor whom they respected, and he
was in a marriage. I expect that it is
difficult for some to understand how it can be okay that Stan and I were
partners. I imagine many of these people
deeply wish I would shut up about my relationship with him. (In fact, a couple of people have anonymously
written to me telling me so.) It is
simpler to just ignore me--in fact, often that happened in terms of my role in
Stan's ministry while Stan was alive. I
actually have a lot of experience with being overlooked on that score.
The
lurking question that DuBois identifies--How does it feel to be a problem?--
isn't actually being asked in my case.
No one evinces curiosity about how it feels to me to be a problem. Their silence tells me they just wish I would
go away.
Nevertheless,
I undertake to describe what is like to be a problem. As I have all along, I describe my experience because I need to, but also because it feels important to do so.
It is
like being erased. I have just lost the
person I talked to every day, the person who knew me so well that every
conversation was a continuation of a longer and ongoing conversation. We shared a long history of working together
on each other's projects. We talked
through Stan's sermons and articles, and my speeches and articles. I edited his work. He helped me strategize about my work with
minority lawyers and law students. I
understood more deeply than anyone the things he was proud of, the writing
projects he still wanted to do, the hopes he still carried. And hardly anyone wants to know. Hardly anyone even acknowledges that I have
lost anything at all.
I
worked alongside Stan as a minister for 19 years. We knew and worked with many of the same
families. We spent evenings at their
homes, or played cards with them at church retreats. I played music with them and took their kids
on trips to Ashland. And now these same
people, the ones who have the best basis for appreciating what we meant to each
other and the depth of loss that I must be carrying, don't communicate with me
at all. If they see me in person or my
name on a Facebook dialogue, they may not acknowledge me, or they may say an
awkward hello but not acknowledge that I am grieving.
I
know that my very existence is a problem.
It would be easier for the community if I had never spoken up about the
depth of my relationship with Stan.
Perhaps many feel ready to judge that there was something wrong with what
occurred between us. Perhaps some think
I am lying. I don't know because they
are not asking me. And I don't know how
they can judge without hearing my story--or really, without walking in my
shoes.
I
don't have any regrets, nor any shame. I
do walk in my shoes, and I know that the deep connection that Stan and I shared
saved both our lives. I knew then and I
know now that the community that we served (and for whose sake we sacrificed)
benefitted a great deal from the love that grew between us. As time went on, nearly every sermon or speech
that either of us gave and every moment either of us spent listening and caring
and being deeply present with others reflected work we did together.
So, I
am suffering more than the terrible loss of the one I loved most. I am suffering the pain of being erased.
I
realize there are lots of possible reasons for silence. Perhaps you feel awkward. Perhaps you are angry with me, or with
Stan. Perhaps you feel guilty for not
saying something sooner.
My
guess, though, is that if you decide now or at any future moment to express
sincere concern for me, you will be met with the gratitude and relief that most
grieving people express when someone acknowledges and expresses sorrow about
the fact that the lonely journey they are making must indeed be a painful
one. As I understand better than I ever
did before, grief is a lonely journey for everyone. Just not this profoundly
lonely.
5 comments:
You are brave and strong. Don't ever let yourself be silenced. People being a "problem" is the only way change has ever happened in our world. Love is a beautiful and complicated thing, but it should be celebrated purely for existing.
I see you.
You are an exquisite writer, a woman of surpassing depth and beauty, and a brave spiritual explorer. Your thoughts always open my mind a little wider than it was before. Pain, loss and love are the hardest experiences to put into words... I marvel that you express them so masterfully. I wish I had heard Stan's sermons, and yours. I wish I could soften your sadness.
I'm sorry for what you are going through, Darleen. You are a person. I would like to reconnect. Would that be possible?
You are a very inspiring person to me, and most certainly not "a problem," but I think you're brave and deep to quote duBois in this way and share the story of the similarities.
I continue to send love and support in your grieving and loss.
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