IF YOU NEED HELP

IF YOU NEED HELP: If you are reading this and feeling depressed or worse, please reach out to these organizations: Crisis line: 1-800-273-TALK (8255) , Crisis text line: text HOME to 741741. You are worthy of love, and there are people like me who genuinely understand what you are feeling and want you to get through this. With love, Victoria

Saturday, October 31, 2020

Musical Notes

This morning, I was talking with my oldest son (I will not be “naming” my sons or family out of respect for their privacy. I do not feel this same respect for her rapist, Eric, though.). The song Careless Whisper came up, I don’t know why the conversation went in the direction it did, but we were talking about the lyrics, then the singer. George Michael. *BOOM*  The invasion of sounds and images and smells and feelings that last day. The strangeness to me of her very strong reaction to the images in the video for the song Freedom and how low her energy was when she made the half-humorous comment (apologizing for that reaction?).

I think there's something you should know

I think it's time I stopped the show
There's something deep inside of me
There's someone I forgot to be
Take back your picture in a frame
Don't think that I'll be back again-Freedom 90,George Michael

Hannah was a talented musician, though the world did not get to see enough of her music. She had her own appetite and tastes in music, but also held some of the songs and musicians that I cherished close to her. Music was a force for creation for her, for putting out a voice that she felt was not being heard and communicating what she felt, especially after she felt not believed by people that she trusted after she was hurt by Eric.  I believe that it often held some ability to reduce the pain inside her when the memories or hurts swept up towards her, until it no longer did.


There are songs that will always hold memories for me:  some sweet, some bittersweet.  When she was in high school, she was enamored with a song called Shut Up and Dance by Walk the Moon. iI has been her calling card in my ear every time I’ve heard it for 7 years.  It makes me smile with tears in my eyes now. It still lifts my spirits as well.  I imagine that in her mind as a 15 year old, it rang as a love song that she could fully dive into, and I can see my sparkling, lively daughter dancing in the family room or kitchen while she helped cook or baked one of her creative baked goodies, singing to Walk the Moon, Neon Trees (Ho He) Owl City, Pink, especially the early music, Mumford and Sons, Imagine Dragons. 


As she got older, Nicki Minaj and Jesse J and the women who sang about spoke up for the rights of women and all people as well as became part of her repertory. Janelle Monae, Lizzo, Princess Nokia, other names that I wish I could remember now were significant inspirations to her music and her intersectional feminist philosophy (an phrase and concept that I had not heard of before her introducing it to me). There seemed to be a supportiveness among females in these online and musical worlds that she was lacking in the physical world.  She would tell me stories of betrayals and unkindness among people who she went to school with, until finally, online she became part of a group that accepted and understood. I don’t know how the group came together, but they were all over the world; Hannah’s passing, the group slowly drifted away.


Over the spring, while the coronavirus encapsulated her into her small, cluttered apartment with the boy who had broken up with her but stayed to sponge, she spent time working on her music, honing her skills through the constant pain in her wrists from tendonitis.  There are a number of different styles and pieces that she experimented with, sharing with her friends and the world on instagram: blues, rock, a little jazz. There is a song that she recorded during this time, but she only publicly put into the world about a minute of it. It is Wild World, by an artist that I grew up knowing as Cat Stevens, who is now known as Yusef Islam.  I have searched for the original video among her recordings, but that scrap of her singing, a little unsure for her, is all I have of it.  The song seems almost intentional, though I would guess it was not. At the time it was just a too-short piece that I was enamored of from a song I love.


Now that I’ve lost everything to you,

You say you want to start something new, 

It’s breaking my heart, your leaving,

Baby I’m grieving…”-Wild World, Yusef Islam


I have a playlist on youtube of her songs, speeches, art pieces, including this song. I listen to it, try to hold onto the details.


Here is the link to the song: https://youtu.be/FjqhcsYT12Q .


Thursday, October 29, 2020

Sneezing in the Sunlight

It's been a sunny day today, warm for late October. It's the one of the last warm ones here for a while. I left work, sunlight on my face, and remembered something that made me smile. Sunlight made her sneeze. The last week or two have been memories and realizations that have stopped me in my tracks but this one felt...good.
There are a lot of sweet, beautiful things to remember:  
-A fairy birthday party where we made dresses and wands. I wish I could remember more of it but when I try to remember anything else, I can't.
-Multiple visits to beaches, her floating and playing in the sand, our silly river beach with them "surfing the waves" from the ships, and the trips to Tahoe. 
-Berry picking and jam making
-Shakespeare-Taming of the Shrew on a cool lawn after dark in July.
-Her as Puck in Midsummer Night's Dream. She was so good. 
She was a summer baby, and a lot of the best of my memories are in sunshine.
-The canal du midi, where we read Howls Moving Castle and had a hundred crazy adventures. 
-Venice, which she told us she wanted to live in when she grew up.
-Her cupcake obsession and vanilla obsession which led to delicious experiments in baking.
-Her introduction to eating east coast Chinese food outside of Boston.
-Touring UMass Amherst and Hampshire College and Smith college. At Amherst, we ditched the tour being given by the athlete who had little interest in academics instead, exploring the parts of the campus she was interested in.  Hampshire College. That would have been such a good place for her...she thought about transferring, in part staying you take care of her fragile, emotionally manipulative boyfriend.
-Her 21st birthday at a drag show with my elderly parents, drinking champagne and cheering loudly.

The Velvet bag with the box of her ashes sits on the mantle. Below it, photos she took. To the left and right, other art that she had created. 
I am supposed to be calling another mom who lost a child, so I should stop writing. I am uncomfortable about this, suddenly don't know why I am doing it.
I like this silence, this distance from the realities of cooking and cleaning and work and  family. But the sun is going down, and I  made a promise. 
(Edit: she did not answer the phone)

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Tuesday Night,11 pm. No rest tonight.

 Content warning: rape and suicide.



It is 10:55, according the the glowing red digital clock across the room.  I don't want to feel what I am feeling right now: this electrical pulsation of rage through my body. I don't want this anger towards my father for what happened.  There is a taste of metal in my mouth. This has a power of its own and it courses through me in an uncomfortable, foreign way. The lessons that I have learned in dbt, of Buddhism are hard to reach right now. I want balance and calm, but find myself poised for an invisible battle instead.
I read an email from him as I was getting ready for bed. Communicating is hard for me at this point. I don't check email as often as I should, I hate talking on the phone when I am not at work. I call my parents because I love them, because I feel like even though Hannah is dead and my parents are directly connected to  that, I want them in my life and don't want to lose them.
The email from my father was a short one, with a dig at the fact that I hadn't jumped at an opportunity that he gave me to employ my sons, to instill in them a work ethic. My sons, whose sister is dead. My sons, who are battling  darkness,  grief, depression, self blame and confusion. One of them has been very sick, the other on the edge of hospitalization for depression.
The edge of guilt in that message has me lying here in the dark, shaken at the level of emotion that this raised in me. My muscles are tensed and I want to rail. 
I don't want to hate him. She told him that she had been raped that evening at dinner. He told her that lots of people are hurt by others and to get past ìt. She swore at him. She said ,"why do you hate me?" That was the last thing she said to anyone.
We can't ever see her again, hug her, tell her we love her. She will never be an aunt, a mother, have a career. What's left of her ìs ashes, objects and memories.
11:32 Sleep will not come tonight. I will lie here in the room next to where she died, in the room that was full of paramedics trying to bring back my dead daughter. Tomorrow I will be tired and I will ache from the clutching tension, but I will get up and go to work before the sun is up. My father will sleep peacefully in his house on the hill, get up when he wants, have a leisurely morning and go work out. Hannah will be more memory, less person. Time will go on, the red numbers changing in the dark. Each one of those changes in number is a second farther away from that angel baby with the strawberry, the girl on the skates. 11:49 I want to avenge her for my failure to protect her, the girl who went to Boston with me, the wounded girl that Eric raped, the valedictorian and feminist, the believer in good. I know that  punishing the people who hurt her won't help. I want to forgive, to have peace, to help us all heal, but it's hard and this anger needs to be dealt with but I don't know how. I am afraid if I begin to let it out, it will hurt everyone. 12:04.

Thursday, October 1, 2020

After

Content Warning: Suicide

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I read a description of the loss of a daughter as "It was as if I grew magical gills so that I could breathe underwater."(Steven Levine, Unattended Sorrow)  Such clarity in those words.  I am not sure that what I envision is what he intended, but it rang of truth through me:  the intense pain of gills opening up tender flesh, the gripping pressure of trying to inhale something that feels foreign and thick and utterly wrong. Learning how to breathe when it feels like labor and there is no will to do so. This is my experience of loss.

All the things that I remember from that night - that horrendous, never ending night - and those first days make me fold in on myself, clutching at breath, feeling like I will start to drown in it. I want to ignore it, watch television, eat until I am numb, ignore the ever-present lurking pain. I see it in my sons: my beautiful, aching sons, whose blue eyes mirror the changes in their father's and mine, a tenor of constant, quiet despair, even on the occasions that they smile or laugh. Hannah is the first person that either of them have really lost; I worry that this sadness will drown them some days. The idea that I could lose one of them as well is terrifying.

I see her in my mind sometimes, running upstairs to William's screams. The door to her room was jammed, but I didn't know why. I pushed, and pushed, trying to get in there, finally squeezing through the door;  seeing her in his arms. Her legs were what had barred the door.  I didn't understand at first. I wondered if she had passed out, if he had hurt her somehow, then all at once I realized what was happening. Who called 911?  I don't remember. William laid her down so that I could do CPR, staring into her face and trying to make her live, bargaining with a god I don't know to exchange her life with mine while the stranger's voice on the phone told me what to do. Her small face was not afraid. Still shaking with fear I pushed on her chest, tipped her neck, breathed in her mouth, pushed on her chest, "stayin' alive, stayin' alive,"(how fucking ironic), tipped her neck,  breathed in her mouth - pushed on her chest "stayin' alive, stayin' alive" over and over again. A policeman showed up and offered to take over. I wouldn't let him. I had to keep trying. I kept going, the gurgling as I breathed into her mouth not abating, a wheeze at each compression as I pressed on her delicate chest. In full PPE, a paramedic came in, and another - not enough space to work on her in her room, where should they take her? They carried her into my room, shoved the furniture away so they could have more room. Now three, four, five? of them. I was told to go downstairs and wait with William, then told to go outside. Was that a kindness so I wouldn't hear what happened next?  They worked on her for over 2 hours, while William and I sat on the curb, crying, then numb, then crying, then angry, then numb, trying to call her father. The phone rang and again and again I had to hang up, explain to my parents, my brothers, that she had hung herself and to leave William and I alone. People are watching us, watching the firetrucks and police cars in the street. More and more and more calls to her father, whose phone was off. A PPE clad man came downstairs and said that they couldn't bring her back. She was gone. 

There is nothing that I can say about what happened next. There are only feelings and sounds muffled like I am underwater - a scream, mine? William's?; holding each other; people talking with us; her father showing up, I don't know when, finding out that my son in Seattle already knew (because my mother had told her). Hard sidewalk, gravel digging into calves and wrists and knees. A chaplain arriving, gently guiding us through the next things we need to do, who to call to pick her up, the next decisions we need to make. 

In the days after Hannah's death, people came forward in ways that I can never repay.  My brothers, who live almost 700 miles away, immediately drove up here, alternating between being at our house and my parents' house, just sitting with us, talking.  I can't remember any of what was said, but I am forever grateful to them for just being there for us for my parents, whose suffering is also deep.

Neighbors who I barely knew left notes and food and flowers, while we numbly accepted them and the words of compassion. My oldest childhood friend set up a fundraiser. The outpouring of love and donations was overwhelming. Friends came by with groceries and meals, which were gratefully accepted and choked down, tasting like ash and sitting heavily.

When her friends found out about her death, I received message after message telling me how much they cared about her, how smart and wonderful she was, and all I can remember from this now is thinking "Why the hell didn't she know that? Why didn't they stay in touch with her?" There were professors, high school teachers and employers sharing their affection for her, and I felt no warmth from it. I felt angry at them, at myself, at Hannah for not saying enough or the right things to make her want to live.