The Loneliness of Being the One Who Remembers
As Garret’s 21st birthday approaches, I’ve found myself wrestling with something I don’t know how to explain to the people around me.
Not because they don’t care. Most of them do.
Not because they aren’t supportive. They are.
But because there are some experiences in life that can only be understood by the people who lived them beside you.
Twenty-one.
Twenty years gone.
Those numbers have been sitting heavily on my heart lately.
For most people, June is simply another month on the calendar. Summer plans are being made. Father’s Day is approaching. People are scheduling barbecues, vacations, and weekends at the lake. Life continues to move forward exactly as it should.
And yet, every year when June arrives, I find myself standing in two worlds at once.
There is the life I have now—the one I have worked hard to build after unimaginable loss. The life filled with new memories, new traditions, new relationships, and people who love me deeply.
Then there is the life that existed before.
The life where Garret was here.
The life where Jack was here.
The life where our future looked entirely different than the one that unfolded.
The older I get, the more I realize that one of the hardest parts of grief isn’t just missing the person who died.
It’s missing the people who remember them the way you do.
Lately, I’ve been missing Jack in a way that feels different than usual.
Not because I wish my current life were different.
Not because I haven’t found happiness again.
But because Jack was the only other person who knew exactly what these milestones meant.
He was Garret’s dad.
He was the only person who knew what it felt like to hold our son, dream about his future, and imagine the man he would become.
When Garret died, we carried that grief together.
We wondered together.
We remembered together.
We asked all the impossible questions together.
Would he have played sports?
Would he have gone to college?
Would he have been tall like his dad?
What would his laugh sound like today?
Now those questions belong mostly to me.
Graci was so young when Garret died. She knows his story. She loves her brother. She understands his importance in our family.
But she doesn’t carry the memories.
She couldn’t.
She was simply too little.
And so, as the years pass, I sometimes find myself feeling like the keeper of something precious that fewer and fewer people can truly see.
I carry memories that exist nowhere else.
I carry stories that only a handful of people remember.
I carry a version of our family that disappeared long ago.
There is a loneliness in that.
A quiet loneliness that has nothing to do with being surrounded by people.
I am surrounded by wonderful people.
The loneliness comes from knowing that nobody else feels June the way I do.
Nobody else’s heart begins counting the days to Garret’s birthday.
Nobody else automatically notices that this would have been his 20th year.
Nobody else feels the significance of twenty years gone and twenty-one years imagined.
And how could they?
Their lives kept moving.
Mine did too.
At least on the outside.
But grief has a strange relationship with time.
For those who have never experienced profound loss, time often feels linear. One year becomes five. Five becomes ten. Ten becomes twenty.
For those of us whose worlds stopped in an instant, time feels different.
Part of you moves forward.
Part of you stays behind.
Part of you learns how to laugh again.
Part of you remains forever connected to the moment everything changed.
Twenty years later, I can tell you that grief softens.
It changes shape.
It becomes more familiar.
But it never completely leaves.
Especially during milestone years.
Especially when your child should be turning twenty-one.
Especially when the person who would have understood your heartbreak isn’t here either.
What I find myself struggling with this year is figuring out how to honor Garret while also honoring the life I’ve built.
I don’t think people talk enough about this part.
The balancing act of loving the people who are gone while fully loving the people who are here.
The tension between remembering and living.
The challenge of wanting space for reflection when everyone else simply sees another date on the calendar.
Father’s Day falls on Garret’s birthday this year.
People want to celebrate.
People want to gather.
People want to make plans.
And I find myself wondering how to explain that I may not want to participate.
Or that I might participate differently.
That I might attend part of an event but not stay for the celebration afterward.
That I might need quiet instead of company.
Reflection instead of distraction.
Not because I’m sad.
Not because I’m ungrateful.
But because some days deserve space.
Some dates deserve to be felt.
Some memories deserve more than squeezing them into the margins of an already busy day.
The truth is, I am still figuring this out.
I am still learning how to integrate the mother I was, the wife I was, and the woman I am today.
I am still learning how to honor Garret’s life without feeling guilty for living mine.
I am still learning that I don’t need permission to step away, reflect, remember, or grieve.
Maybe that’s what this season is teaching me.
That I don’t have to choose between my past and my present.
I can love them both.
I can celebrate the life I’ve built while still honoring the life I lost.
I can show up when it feels right and step back when it doesn’t.
And perhaps most importantly, I can stop trying to explain the significance of these dates to people who have never lived them.
Because the people who understand won’t need an explanation.
And the people who don’t aren’t failing me.
They’re simply fortunate enough to have never watched their world stop turning.
Twenty years later, mine is moving again.
But some days, especially in June, I still feel the place where it broke.
And maybe that isn’t something to fix.
Maybe it’s simply another way of loving someone who should still be here.
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