Sunday, May 11, 2014

Un-Mother's Day




Logan digging for marine fossils at Somis, CA 
Mother's Day weekend 2010

 Logan's selfie when I took over digging so he could catch & name bugs and lizards.


I’m bitter today. I’ve been anxiously anticipating how I would have to maturely handle my first Mother’s Day as a post-mother. I will always have been his mom, but in order to not be trapped in my grief I have to accept and incorporate into my identity that I am not anymore.  Instead of following every instinct that says I should run away from my feelings, I am dealing with them head-on today because I don't want to be defined by my loss.

Some of this below is going to be surprising to people- but it is all naked, raw truth. If anything, I've underplayed how challenging it was to maintain my relationship with Logan.

Logan and I didn’t spend that many Mother’s Days together and I was usually denied getting to talk to him on this day by his dad (one of his simple pleasures in life was making mine miserable.) Mother’s Day has been a bitter holiday for me for many years. In 2010, I did get to spend Mother’s Day weekend with him and we had a wonderful time. We dug for fossils with the Ventura Gem and Mineral Society at Somis, went to the Port Hueneme Maritime Museum, went ghost hunting at a purported haunted stream but ended up with a bucket of frogs instead, and visited Mission San Gabriel. It was a pretty typical range of activities for a weekend for us with the added bonus of Mother's Day together.

I’m at the point in the process of grieving that I have to examine who I’m going to be because I had structured and planned my life around making Logan my priority. Mother’s Day is a reminder of the feelings I have that I “set my star” on something that will not be. It is also a searingly painful reminder of my feelings of having failed to do what we do as moms- protect our children and keep them safe. I know I couldn’t have physically prevented him from stepping in front of that train that day. My sense of failure comes from all of the moments leading up to that day where I gave him my best and it wasn’t enough to save him.

I planned our visits so carefully to make sure we were “connected” and that I was both someone he felt he could talk to and someone he knew would give him a carefully-thought and honest response.  It was a hard role to balance at times, but it was deeply important to me that I was a resource for him. Logan and I had deep conversations about our innermost thoughts all of the time. I knew things no one else did about his true heart.

I have run the snipplets in my memory of our last weekend together hundreds of times, looking for something I missed that should have clued me in to his inner turmoil (I would’ve made so much more effort to remember things better if I had know at the time these would be our “lasts.”) The sad thing I have to admit is I didn’t miss them—I heard his frustration and sadness. I failed to understand where his mind was going with the feelings he was having. I didn’t draw the connection that his inner conflicts had become unbearable and he was being sucked into a vortex of despair.

He told me during heart-to-hearts in the last several weekends we had together how he didn’t "care about people" and there were only a few people he did feel anything for. One of those was his girlfriend and he was animated when he talked about her- it was his first time truly feeling romantic love that was more than a crush.  I was so excited to hear his deep caring for her and see he was making mature decisions about the relationship. I didn't believe he really didn't care about people- he was irritated by how people continued to disappoint him and talked about his frustrations with his family and friends. We talked about him feeling disconnected and I never made a connection that his feelings had sucked the hope out of him. 
 I tried to give him coping skills and offer solutions many times when he talked about how unhappy he was at home. He felt a great sense of responsibility for his siblings and towards his friends. He hated the living situation, his home environment, and that his dad didn’t spend enough quality time with just him. To be fair, his dad had two other children whereas Logan never had to share me. He felt he was never accepted as an equal member of the family by his stepmom and her family. He felt rejected for things completely out of his control.
At 13 and 14, he had talked seriously about running away several times (even doing research on his own to find shelters where he could stay) and I was able to talk him out of it rationally. He had told all of us multiple times over the last two years he felt he had something to do there in California and that once it was done he would be able to come live with us. It was a very strange thing for a kid to say, but I took it as wisdom beyond his years.

One of the last conversations we had was about his plans for the future. Logan had decided he wanted to be a fighter pilot at 9 and was going to the Air Force Academy to get there. His plan was to do well in football and keep going with his AP classes so he could get into the Academy. We discussed how essential it was to keep his GPA as high as possible in challenging Advanced or AP classes, do well in extracurricular activities, and most importantly to make wise choices to avoid getting in trouble. This is what he told me of graduating high school: on the day of his graduation, he knew his dad and stepmom would have a big party. He planned to stand up at it to speak and tell them they got no credit for his success and he didn’t want to see them again. From that conversation, I understood he felt very alone and needed out of that environment. I thought I saw a grit and resolve to follow through on his plans for the future, not that this would be one of the last things he ever told me.

His dad and I had no relationship in trying to work together for Logan; almost every encounter with him was adversarial, so I couldn’t just approach him to try and get Logan help. His dad tried to cut me out of Logan’s life at every turn and gave me less than the minimum he was supposed to. Sometimes we fought back but it inevitably resulted in trouble for us with little results. Any time I made a request it resulted in hostility and making things more difficult for my child. 
In September, Logan asked to spend more time with me and his dad not only denied the request but then took some of our scheduled time away as a punishment for asking. This was the most recent in a long string of attempts to alienate me, which included moving Logan and changing their phone numbers multiple times without telling me. Logan and I made a plan: who he would need to talk to and let them know what was going on at home so we could start the process of trying to get custody back.

Because he was so insightful and smart, I allocated coping skills to him he didn’t actually possess. I’m guilty of what many parents do: we magnify how amazing our kids are in our mind. This can be great for pushing kids to succeed and building their self-esteem. But for a kid who is struggling with depression it is dangerous. For my son, it was deadly. 

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Tattooed Memories


 Logan meets George Washington, Marching Thru History 2009 


Doing is life. Memories are associated with experiences-- therefore, the more experiences you have the more goes in your memory cache. For twelve years, I traveled to see Logan with a full itinerary to create memory opportunities. I had an agenda: make our time together meaningful and purposeful to keep me present in his life. Because of it, my own memories of the past sixteen years are filled primarily with what we did together.
If I didn't have all of these memories of Logan, I would have nothing to hold on to now. They remind me he was real and I feel linked to him because our experiences together are permanently etched on my heart, as the finality of death has a way of tricking you to feel your mind is confused about them having really been in your life.
I did things I would never have done if I were planning it for myself. It was important to always find new and enriching experiences for my time with my son. I created a booklet of sorts. It grew to ten pages of fun things for us to go do within a few hours of his home in California. It took a lot of time to build over the years but planning our fun was one of my favorite things. I didn't do it to be cool or a good parent-- I did it because he deserved no less from me than my best. But being a cool mom was definitely a fringe benefit.
Logan knew me in ways no else does because of the experiences we had together. I lost someone who really got me. As he grew older and expressed interest in different subjects or areas I added subjects and things he didn't like so much fell off the list. We had a similar list for his trips to Washington.
There were many times I was sad to take different activities off the list as they became too much for "kids" or something I had grown to love became not as exciting anymore for him. I was sad when he outgrew wanting to wade in streams and catch bugs and small animals to study. I was pretty heartbroken when he decided rockhounding was "a lot of work" when we could go buy the rocks or see them at a rock show. I laughed but felt bittersweet when he didn't want to go to historical museums as often because his know-it-all mom often knew more than the tour guide and he came to also know more than they did as well. I was genuinely disappointed when he didn't want to go ghost hunting every month- it was a time I had looked forward to that we spent together without any distractions from the outside world.
His dad said to Logan more than once (according to Logan) that he didn't know how I could have found so much for us to do. His friends thought I was the coolest mom ever when he went back an reported what he had gotten to do during his time with me. That admittedly made me inordinately happy- my love and dedication to Logan was being reflected to others by his sharing our fun with others. I felt more a part of his life that way. I was happy to be touching his heart.
I got a card in the mail from a friend I've had since I was 13 years old recently. She had been going on an extended work trip to Southern California a few years ago and stopped in Tacoma on her way down from Alaska. I gave her a copy of my precious list to give her stuff to do there off the beaten path. She had recently re-found the list and cared enough to let me know that what I had done for my son MATTERED. I cried for hours when I read the card and in each tear was a precious memory of my son from that list. Her card reminded me of how valuable my memories are in providing a connection to my son.
I tried so hard to show Logan love and how deep my commitment was to his well-being. When he ended his own life, I had an identity crisis on several levels. One of the hardest continuing conflicts is the nagging feeling that all of the good experiences I gave him weren't enough to let him see how much life is worth living for the adventure it offers. I gave Logan my best self and it is so hard to not feel that my best wasn't good enough to save him.
I miss our memory-making opportunities. We had hundreds of wonderful times together; our goal was to do at least one new thing from the list every single visit. I have a hard time pulling myself to do new things because I don't have him to plan them for. Guilt is a constant companion; I have new life experiences and he never will. I have gotten past the feeling I am outright betraying his memory by making new memories, but I resent getting there. I resent making a new life for myself and feel so much bitterness towards what I know has to happen as time marches relentlessly on.
I haven't looked at the list since he died. It sits in a purple folder that used to go in my carryon with every trip. At some point, I will go through it and I hope I can focus on the things we DID on the list and not all of the things that remained to be saved for "another trip."
This summer was supposed to be the year we took him to Painted Hills in Oregon and to see Henry the Bear in Mitchell. I am punished with thoughts of things we had yet to do all of the time and don't see that changing.The "somedays" that will never be are one of the hardest things to accept.