last year i was still dense in the fog of grief so the holidays didn't even register. as i approached this year i had hopes of engaging in the celebrations and the traditions. i wanted to enjoy my last christmas in my house, as i prepare to sell it this spring. i longed to reclaimed and maybe reinvent the holidays so they held some semblance of joy for me. and while some of these attempts have provided me with more enjoyment of the holidays, the absence of mike is just as severe. maybe a bit harder because we're so accustomed that with time things heal and get better. but no amount of healing or the many blessings i've received after losing mike can fully replace the ache i have for him. yes, i can say that there have been dozens of moments of grace where I know God has cared for me, where family and friends have loved me through this season. but he's still gone. with time, the reality of his death becomes more stark, more raw. and with a new year approaching (and my birthday) i continue to resent the fact that mike won't experience 2010 with me, that i continue to grow older without him.
so this christmas continues to be a longing for God to come...to come and bring peace to our world that is riddled with pain, loss, injustice, poverty, hate, loneliness, sickness. i continue to find hope in this sentiment from walter brueggemann: advent "is the voice of those who know profound grief, who articulate it and do not cover it over...And because the hurt is expressed to the One whose rule is not in doubt, this community of hurt is profoundly a community of hope."
so i'll end with one of my favorite christmas hymns..."o come, o come emmanuel" by rosie thomas.
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