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One Year at a Time
Grief Journey, Holidays, Losing a Child

One Year at a Time

Yesterday, December 18, was the 23rd anniversary of the worst day of my life—the day my daughter, Lydia, died.

What I wish I’d known back then was there would never come a time I’d be “over it.” I would never stop missing her, longing for her, searching for her.

These anniversaries are tricky. I used to take the day off work, not knowing what might set me off. I was afraid I might start screaming. I needed to be alone on that most terrible of days.

But yesterday was different. A neighbor called. He wasn’t feeling well and needed to go to the hospital. Driving him there didn’t take up much of my time. I was home within an hour. While I waited, I called another friend who was alone and invited her to have dinner with us. My husband had a roast in the crockpot. How hard could it be? By the time I got home, I was regretting the invitation. How would I manage? I wouldn’t have time for my annual meltdown. I wouldn’t have time for my tears.

Now my yahrzeit candle has almost burned out and this has been the least terrible December 18th since Lydia died. I stepped outside the wall of isolation I build every year and made room for others to come in. Neither of these friends knew the significance of the date and I didn’t mention it. I don’t feel as though I failed to honor my daughter on this day, in fact, just the opposite.

Lydia and HipHop

Twenty-three years, and I still miss her. I will always miss her. Always wonder what she’d have been like as an adult.

Today, I had a message from a dear friend still reeling from her granddaughter’s death one year ago. “How do you do it?” she asked. “How do you get through it?” When we talk, I will tell her the truth. “One year at a time,” I’ll say. “That’s how I do it. One year at a time, each one different, each one filled with longing and sadness, with new friends and old ones. Each year will bring tears but also laughter.”

Maybe not this year, maybe not the next. But when you’re ready, let others into your space. Make room for them. Make room for the laughter.

Eileen

About the Author

Eileen Vorbach Collins

A Baltimore native, Eileen has a degree in nursing from the University of Maryland and a masters in pastoral care from Loyola. After losing her fifteen-year-old daughter Lydia to suicide, Eileen read everything she could find on child loss and grief. Academic, self-help, religious, she read them all. But what she wanted were true stories from people who’d experienced such a loss and found their way back to the world. She finally decided to write her own and published this book: “Love in the Archives, a Patchwork of True Stories About Suicide Loss.” You can find more on her website: https://www.eileenvorbachcollins.com/Read More »