I was a widow . . . but I wasn't alone
I thought I had been
through a lot in my short life. A teenage pregnancy, a young marriage,
infidelity..., but nothing, nothing could have prepared me for this. How
did we end up here? That thought kept racing through my head as I stood over
his freshly installed headstone. His car accident seemed like years ago, yet
sometimes it seemed just as fresh as if it happened yesterday. Truth was, it
really had only been months. I wanted to scream, I wanted to shout my questions
of “Why?” high to the heavens and make him hear me. “Why me? Why did this
happen?” I fell to my knees with my head in my hands. I was sobbing and
pleading for anyone to hear me. I felt broken and shattered to my very core.
How could I continue on with life? Without him, what was life to me
anymore? I was 21. He was 21. We had a 3 year old. We had a
new baby. We just bought a starter crappy house together. “Why?” My
thoughts raced and my memory started to take me where I dreaded to go. A memory
of months ago, standing by his hospital bed, holding his grey hand and watching
the blinking lights of the life sustaining machines producing little beeps and
numbers on a monitor. Numbers I didn’t understand. In that moment I pled with
my husband, I yelled at him inside my head. “How dare you just lay there. Get
up. Don’t you leave me. Colton, please get up.” I see the artificial
rise and fall of the ventilator pumping oxygen into his lungs. Tears were
falling down my cheeks and landing softly on the clean white hospital sheets. I
heard the heavy door open and I turned to see familiar scuffed sneakers coming
through the doorway. They belong to the intensive care unit doctor who was
desperately trying to help us. His presence should have been a comforting sight
and one that yielded hope, but I knew better. I could see it in even the
nurse’s eyes, this situation we were in, was not good. I looked up to
meet the doctor’s eyes, dreading what they will reveal. They’re sad, almost
hopeless. They mirrored my own. He held my future in his next breath. His shaky
voice tells me Colton’s kidneys were continuing to fail and the results of the
brain flow tests were in. I drew in a breath. I watched his lips form the word
“Negative.” And I thought I heard him say “He’s gone..” A rush of emotion hit
me as if someone was kicking me in the stomach and my knees buckled. I buried
my head in my hands and from the very depths of my soul I wailed. With my head
spinning, I crumbled to the hospital floor. It was so cold. Suddenly, the crisp
air bites at my hands and nose and now standing over his stone, I’m actually
cold. Here is my new reality. “How, oh how did we end up here?”
My heart hurt, it felt as if a vice was squeezing it tighter and tighter with
each new beat and I wasn’t sure how much longer I could take the sting. I
was now a broken person and bore the title I never wanted. I was now a widow. I
felt like a vessel with a gaping hole, vulnerable and abandoned. How would I
rise? This weight was too much to bear. I was sinking. I fell on my knees and
pleaded a prayer of comfort, just enough to help me stand. Just then, I felt as
if some force was helping me get up, and with a power greater than my own
current physical state, I was able to stand. I felt a warmth wash over me. It
was a feeling of love and peace and my soul recognized it. I heard the word
“Savior” in my mind and I knew it was Him. He heard me. Through tears I smiled
for the first time since I couldn’t even remember. In that moment of unbearable
grief, I felt such a strong impression that even though Colton was removed from
me and taken from this earthly life, I could still feel him near me. In the
soft whisper of the wind through the tree's, or the beautiful sunset casting a
warm orange glow on my skin. In the sweet laughter of my children, that was
him. He was near me. I just knew it. These beautiful, gentle reminders of
Colton’s existence were proof to me of God’s existence, and his infinite grace
and love. I could rise from the depths, a broken vessel, yes, but a strong one.
One that would sail these rough waters because I knew that no matter how much
the waves thrashed against me, or not matter how hard the wind howled, my
Savior was near me, always, and the end destination was worth one hundred
journeys with broken vessels. I kept that heavenly message close to my heart
and the days, months, and years passed. And here I am, 5 years out. It still
hurts; I’d be lying if I said it didn’t. I don’t think the sting of death ever
fully goes away, but through the thorns of this path, I was granted a new life
and perspective, and if I turn to look back on my journey, I now see a
beautiful rose garden. Through faith I have been able to heal and my healing
has yielded hope. I was able to rise, and now I proudly stand.
By: Stacie Haycock
To find out more about Stacie visit her instagram:
@staciehay
4 comments:
God's Grace and presence is so very real. I am so sorry for your loss. When I am weak, then I am strong, His power is made perfect in my weakness!!!!
That was beautiful Stacey. How tender and poignant and powerful testimony of the healing power of the Savior. You are incredible.
That was beautiful Stacey. How tender and poignant and powerful testimony of the healing power of the Savior. You are incredible.
Stacey your beautiful are inspiring. The sting of death never goes away the Savior truly heals our hearts and gives us strength to do on.
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