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INTRODUCTION TO GRIEVING CREATIVELY BLOG

Sunday, July 3, 2022

THE BEN GARDEN



The crabapple tree was raining fruit on our vehicles.  It had to go.  We had two trees in the yard and the decision was made to terminate the one closest to the driveway.  I asked my nephew Ben to come and help with the demo process.  

Ben brought his girlfriend and his chainsaw in the summer of 2014 and we all worked to process the tree.  I remember him asking me how much of a stump he was to leave.  I told him to leave it around four feet.  My thought was... 'I'll think of something to do with it.'  

That stump was a bird feeder for a couple of years after it was cut. 

In the summer of 2017 it found a different purpose.  I needed a place to honour Ben who had died in January in a tragic vehicle accident.  Ben wasn't a gardener or a flower child of any kind.  The garden was my expression, my need, my space to dwell.  I needed to wrap that stump that Ben had given me with an array of beauty and fragrance.  So I created the Ben Garden.  

The second year, I was chopping down another tree in my yard and used part of that cut to fashion an identifier for him in the garden.  

Every year, the floral array changes.  The video at the beginning of the post shows the various selection of blooms that made their way into the garden.  I still used the post as a bird feeder the first year and I had some volunteer sunflowers show up adding some great sunshine to the collection.  

It took a few years before there was an official resting place, and so this garden became that place for me to go and dwell.  

NOT A GRAVE TO GRIEVE

(the poem I wrote about the Ben Garden) 


 “The pain passes, but the beauty remains.” — Pierre Auguste Renoir


THE BOY, THE BIKE AND THE BOOK




Clinton Wade Giesbrecht was just a toddler when he was found by his mom, face down floating in the dugout.  He was a happy and high energy child.  His mom had only taken her eyes off of him for a brief moment.  One moment...she saw her boy playing contented in the sandbox, and the next he was in the water.  


I was around twelve at the time of Clinton’s death.  I sat in the back of the church during the funeral and cried.  I felt grief at the loss of this little boy.  He had just been over to our farm with his mom a week before and two of us were playing together.  His death was an event I couldn’t wrap my head around. 

(The writeup taken from the photo stories for my book "Still Broken")

* * * 

When I was choosing pictures for my "Still Broken" book, the chapter" Still Grief" could have had a plethora of options for an gravestone but this little boy had one major significance in my life that made it the choice for the chapter photo.  Clinton's death was the first tragic death that happened that mattered to me. 

Up until my twelfth birthday, I hadn't known insensible pain like this.  My grandmother died when I was seven from cancer, but grandmothers are old and they die.  (My grandmother died at the age of 64... now I would say that's not old) 

I remember Clinton's funeral.  I was sitting in the back watching the family enter down the aisle of Flatrock Mennonite Church.  Clinton's two brother's bounced down the aisle.  For some reason I remember the bouncing.  It seemed to not fit with the next scene that caught my eye.  Clinton's parents were carried in on shoulders of friends and family.  They couldn't walk down the aisle they were so torn with grief and sorrow.  Clinton's dad was a big man, a farmer, and I remember watching him and his tears, his pain soaked into my soul.  I had never seen a man cry like that before.  

Decades later, I found myself at that Flatrock Mennonite church  cemetery where Clinton was buried.  I took the picture of his head stone and spent a moment there reliving the story.  I still have the vivid memory of our last visit together.  There was a little yellow toddler's bike that my sister and I had since we were little.  Clinton was playing with it.  He liked it so much, Mom said I could give it to him to take home.  That visit happened the week before his death.  I remember the first visit we had to Clinton's farm after the funeral.  I saw that yellow bike.  Another moment of grief washed over me.  

I wrote no poems for Clinton.  I wasn't a poet when that loss happened.  But his place in the grief story of my life mattered, so the picture of his gravestone opened up the grief chapter of my book.  It was a coming around to a healing for me.  I still couldn't make any sense of it, but maybe it's not a story that needs any sense.  It just needed telling.  


"There is a sacredness in tears. They are not the mark of weakness, but of power. They speak more eloquently than ten thousand tongues. They are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition, and of unspeakable love." — Washington Irving


Saturday, July 2, 2022

REMEMBERING BOB AT BRAZEAU


 I was surrounded by my favourite wildflowers, a ditch filled with  Indian Paintbrush. I  had already picked a good bouquet when the email came through.  My dad's cousin Bob had passed away.  Bob was a special cousin to me.  He was a dairy farmer and a musician.  I remember connecting with him on many an occasion.  Our dairy farming connection was an extra special bond.    

My hubby and I were just heading out for a few days in Alberta the wilderness.  My heart felt heavy and I didn't want to burden him with the sadness of the moment.  So I stayed in the ditch and picked flowers and thought of Bob.  I dedicated the bouquet to him and kept the news of his passing to myself.  

We moved a little farther down the road  to the next stop in our journey, Brazeau Dam.  I got a chance to go walking on the beach and I found myself wanting to do something more to commemorate Bob and his memory.  I found a piece of driftwood and carved his name in it.  Then I threw driftwood out into the reservoir and let the waves of the water dance with it.  I felt like my time in nature would have met with Bob's approval.  

I have a big family and every once in a while I get a notification via email that someone has died.  I don't always have the opportunity to do something special, but that day I did.  I ended up sending the pictures of the flowers to Bob's family and his wife emailed me back.  

Hi Ruby, Thanks for the beautiful flowers and pictures!

Thanks for thinking of us.

Marion and family.

Maybe sometimes that is all it takes.  Sympathy cards are nice, but when you are surrounded by wildflowers and they are there to soak up the sadness of the moment, then let that be the card.  Let that moment  be the one you pass along to those who are hurting.  


“Life seems sometimes like nothing more than a series of losses, from beginning to end. That's the given. How you respond to those losses, what you make of what's left, that's the part you have to make up as you go.” ― Katharine Weber