23 March 2018… The day we gained the fussiest of angels, affectionately known as Bra Paul. This was an icy cold day for us.
29 September 2018… The day my remaining earth angel came out of mourning, after we lost my dad, her husband, 6 months prior. I should say it is when OUR mourning period ended, but this symbolised the opposite, at least for me.
As part of culture and tradition, when a family member passes on, we mourn by observing certain decorum. My dad was not a big fan of widows wearing all black and not being allowed in certain spaces while mourning, so when he transitioned I found myself questioning if we would mourn him the traditional way, or do it our own way. My dad was a traditionalist but he was also a bit of a rebel at heart so he did not always follow “rules”.
My mom, affectionately known as Sis B, decided to honour tradition and observed 6 months of mourning. Over these 6 months, she wore only brown (instead of black), covered her hair 24/7, rarely left the house, and when she did, she was home before sunset. Over these 6 months, she could not set foot in other people’s homes. This is the norm when one loses a husband. Over this period, I struggled with the fact that we both lived in the same house, she had lost a husband and I had lost a father, but our everyday experience was different because she was the only one whose clothes announced her loss and heartbreak, and she wore her heartbreak, every day, for 6 months. I, on the other hand, only had to cover my hair, and be home before sunset, and that was only for 2 months. My mom made it a point of telling me that it was bad enough to have lost my dad; she did not want my social life to be yet another thing I no longer had. She encouraged me to leave the house and spend time people I loved, but I had anxiety about leaving my mom alone so I mainly stayed indoors. That obviously led to a bit of cabin fever because we had both been homebound long before my dad even left us. There were months, before he was hospitalised, when we both rarely left the house because my dad could not move much on his own. We were both not physically strong enough to move him alone, so we needed to be home together, to share the load. In those months, if I did leave the house, it was mainly around 8pm, after my dad had eaten and was asleep. Once he was asleep, “normal” life could resume, although there was very little that felt normal over that period.
10 April 2018… My good friend Lloyd’s birthday.
At the time, Lloyd lived 5 minutes from our house and my mom said I should go celebrate with him because he was hosting an intimate birthday dinner at his house. I arrived and 2 minutes later, his mom left the house. What I did not know in that moment was that she decided to go to my house to keep my mom company while I was at her house celebrating with her son. One day I will write about the angels God placed in our lives and how they (sometimes silently) cushioned our blow (in BIG ways). I had lost my dad two weeks prior but I was able to enjoy a night of laughter as we celebrated Lloyd’s birthday.
The surprising thing is after my dad transitioned, I was not as grief-stricken as I had expected I would be. I could still laugh and find joy in simple things. Someone commented on how I seemed to have more life and energy after burying my dad. He was comparing the low energy I had when my dad was in hospital to how my energy registered after we had buried my dad. He expected this heaviness in me but was surprised that my energy was different. I explained that I had cried myself to sleep for so many nights while my dad was in hospital that I was convinced I had used up all my tears over that period.
I was convinced that I had mourned my dad’s passing, even before he left us. There is a particular week that was extremely hard for us as a family while my dad was still in hospital. My mom and I arrived at the hospital for the 11 AM visit and the nurses had a different energy about them. I left my dad’s room to go to the coffee shop to order food and one of the nurses pulled me into one of the other rooms. She looked scared and sad so I knew this was not good. She explained that my dad had deteriorated at a rate she had never experienced before so she wanted to encourage me to spend as much time with him as possible because we did not have much time left with him. I called my brother and as soon as he answered, I broke down while trying to relay the nurse’s message. He was at work at the time and he applied for leave, starting from that same day, so he left work early. We were all a mess over the days that followed. My dad could not speak, smile, or eat. All he did was moan from the pain and stare at us. He was shivering but was running a hectic fever and the doctors and nurses said he could not be under blankets because it would make his temperate spike even further. His fever forced them to stop his treatment because they now had to stabilise him before pumping him with heavy meds. On one of the days, I told my mom that I understood what the nurses said. I really did… HOWEVER, he was MY dad, NOT THEIRS! It was breaking my heart to watch him shiver, so I covered him up! He could not speak, nor smile, but I saw him thank me with his eyes. My dad’s eyes always expressed how he was feeling; he had always spoken mostly with his eyes, even before he was sick. I already understood this language, so I also smiled back with my eyes. We left and I cried all night. I had many nights like this one over the time he was in hospital but this week was particularly hard! After this, and many other difficult days I watched my dad endure heart-breaking pain in hospital. Weighing in the ocean of the tears I cried the night before we buried him, I thought I had cried enough for the coming few years.
01 June 2018… Dinner with cupcake.
I was officially free to be out at night and wear my hair out. I had lived in a cocoon for longer than the period my dad had been gone for, so it felt liberating to go out for dinner and not have my hair covered. However, this dinner date was about more than just being able to wear my hair out and be out at night. I was relieved that, at least for a few hours, I was not “Neo who had recently lost her dad”. I was out at a place I had never been to and the only person who knew of my heartache was cupcake, no one else. You see, before this night, I was always surrounded by people who knew my pain. As comforting as it is to be surrounded by people who lovingly want to cushion your heart, I was also exhausted from all the conversations about my loss and heartache. I had turned into “the chick who lost her dad” and not (plain) “Neo”. On this night, my 1st proper night out, I met the person who would officially ask me to be his girlfriend a month and a bit later. The interesting part is one of the first conversations we had after he joined our table was about losing a loved one (I did not start that conversation), and he shared that he had lost his dad many years ago. I kept quiet about my very recent loss because I was out for dinner to escape my pain, not to revisit it over cocktails. The conversation got lighter and when we parted ways, he took my number. Although this piece is not about a love interest who is no longer in my life, I would do my journey a great injustice if I did not mention him.
We all have a formula we follow in romantic relationships. My dating formula has always been that if I do not get excited from the first one on one conversation we have, I do not bother giving you a chance. If I had followed the same formula I have always applied to choosing a boyfriend, this person would not have scored my number, or a first (…even second) date. In fact, he would not have made it to boyfriend status! He looked nothing like anyone I had dated (or even liked) before; sounded like nobody I had dated before, and was the first bad first date to end up becoming a boyfriend! His energy was also very different to what I usually go for but I was pleasantly surprised at how “present” he was in all my interactions with him so; he won me over and I eventually agreed to be his girlfriend.
Fast forward to 29 September 2018… The day my mom would officially come out of mourning.
I was super anxious in the week leading up to this big day but I did not understand why I was feeling anxious instead of excited. The end of mourning requires a cleansing and because I am my mom’s only daughter, we had to be cleansed together. It was an emotionally overwhelming day. I remember so much detail about a certain moment I shared with my mom, so much so that it feels as though it happened just the other day.
My mom and I are in the bedroom at her home (where she grew up). We are each standing in a plastic bathtub next to each other and we need to cleanse ourselves. The bathtubs are tiny so we cannot sit down. We have to do this standing up. I cannot wash my back standing up; neither can my mom, so we decide to wash each other’s back to “remove the pain and darkness”. I hear and feel my mom exhale the pain as I wash her back. The weight is being lifted off (not just) her shoulders (but her spirit too). When it is her turn to wash my back, I feel the opposite. I hear and feel myself inhale the pain as she washes my back. The weight is being piled on (not just) my shoulders (but my spirit too). With each wipe, I am now filling up with grief.
I did not process it in that instant but my spirit knew I was now officially in mourning.
My soul was weeping!
The thing about Sis B and I is we are overly protective of each other. In the 6 months of her official mourning, my focus had (unconsciously) been on making sure she was Ok. That is what my brother and I focused on the entire time. In one of my sessions with my therapist, she pointed out that I was too worried about my mom’s wellbeing to mourn my dad fully. I did not realize I had parked my own emotions, until that therapy session when I explained to her that I was not crying and it was not because I was actively trying not to. My tear ducts seemed to have dried up long before the 6 months were up. She explained that my mourning would be a very personal journey and my spirit would embark on that painful journey when it was ready to.
The day of our cleansing was full of many emotions. I felt drained, anxious, happy, relieved, excited, sad and disconnected, all in one day. I felt drained because the preparations took a lot out of us. I felt anxious because I did not know how I would feel at the end of the cleansing. There is almost an expectation that everything should feel better after this day, but I suspect a big part of me knew that would not be my experience. I felt happy and relieved for my mom because she could finally wear colour again, show her hair again, not rush home from the shops anymore, she could visit her friends again and not be restricted to the four walls of her house. Most importantly, she could just breathe without her all brown outfit announcing that she had recently lost her husband. She no longer needed to wear her heartache for everyone to see. I was sad because it felt as though my dad’s passing was now a thing of the past when in truth it was and still is our daily reality. I felt disconnected from everything and everyone. Family and friends were there to celebrate the day but this was actually a sad day for me.
We had made it to month 6 since losing my dad yet it felt like we had lost my dad the day before. I was in a bit of a daze for most of the day. Sure, I was laughing with family and friends but my spirit was quickly discovering how disconnected I was from the day’s events. It felt as though the real Neo was standing on the sidelines, watching this imposter interact with people. I was not faking the laughter, but it was coming from the surface and not my core. I kept hearing this ringing sound in my ear the whole day yet I had not been around any loud noises. It did not make sense, yet it made perfect sense: my dad’s absence was so loud that day that it left my ears ringing!
Traditionally, with the death of a family member, especially a parent, we cut our hair. I did not cut my hair when my dad passed away in March. I had a big afro that had been thriving and I loved it. I am not my hair, but my hair is a big part of who I am 😉. On the day of the cleansing, I no longer identified with my hair because when I looked at it, it felt as though nothing in my world had changed. I suddenly had an issue with the image in the mirror. I did not hate my face, or my hair, but I realized that nothing about my image represented my dad’s absence yet my mom had gone through 6 months of wearing her heartache in an all brown outfit. It was as if I had lost nothing but I knew that was not the case because I had lost the one-half of my heart and was bleeding on the inside. In that moment, standing in front of the mirror, it became clear: I NEEDED TO CUT MY HAIR! That night, I asked my brother if he would cut my hair the next day and he agreed. I did not care how he would cut it: I just needed it gone! The same way my dad was gone! We were all too exhausted the next day so we slept all day. The next day was a Monday. My brother was still recovering from Saturday’s events and I was having an identity crisis. I needed the hair gone so I made an appointment at the salon.
My boyfriend and I met less than three months after my dad’s passing so the wound was still open when we started getting to know each other, but it took me a while to tell him I had recently lost my dad. I generally tend to overshare, but losing my dad made me not share as much about myself, especially with new people. It almost felt as though if you did not know me before I lost my dad, that you could not fully understand who I now was without him. As soon as I shared that I had recently lost my dad, his focus shifted to regularly checking if I was crying only in his absence or not crying at all. He could not understand how he was in a relationship with someone who had recently lost her dad but was not crying when we were together. He had expressed that he felt I had not cried enough for my dad. He knew how anxious I was feeling before the cleansing and he had been trying to get me to be less anxious. After the cleansing, I explained to him how I needed to cut my hair because I no longer identified with it so I was going to the salon to have it removed.
01 October 2018. The big chop.
It was a Monday, and my boyfriend decided not to go into the office but come to the salon with me instead. One thing that had been consistent about him from when we met was how seriously he took his work. So having him opt not to work on that day to accompany me to the salon meant the world to me. I told him he was free to roam around the mall and come back when I was done, but he insisted on staying with me at the salon. To anybody who does not know how much I analyse and connect things, this was just a salon visit. He understood this was a significant event in my life, without me having to say anything. We left the salon and he “took my new hair out for lunch”, as he put it. While out for lunch, I thanked him for driving me to the salon, without explaining what a big moment that salon visit was for me. He replied saying, “Babes… did you really think I would go to work today and leave you to go through this alone?” He explained that in the short space of time he had known me he realised I carry both my mom and my dad in everything I do. That when I said I no longer identified with my hair (which he knew me to love) he realised this salon visit was not about my hair but about my dad. In this moment, it was impossible for me not to cry because I had not spoken too much about my heartache but he seemed to understand even the little things that were motivated by my loss. He said I did not need to speak much about my pain because it was always in my eyes even though I had not been crying over the loss since we had met.
What followed the big chop were days and weeks of sobbing. I stayed in bed A LOT! He would call me in the morning and give me a pep talk to convince me to get out of bed, eat and work. I hated having to work! Taking a bath was so much of a mission that I would run a bath and have to convince myself to get into the water. Once inside the bath water, I would go into a daze and the bath water would go cold, so I would have to fill up the bath with hot water again. I struggled to eat. Chewing took too much effort so I would just not do it. I could not do it, so I would go days without eating. I was either too full of grief to eat, or I was too tired to eat. My dear mother had a horrible time with my not-eating phase. She would put a pot on the stove at midnight because she had prepared two different meals prior to midnight and I could not eat anything. Because I would switch between not sleeping at all and sleeping all day, she would insist I at least eat something before she leaves me. She would stay up with me on nights when I could not sleep and would fall asleep while my eyes remained wide open until the morning. I watched her almost lose her mind trying to figure out how to make me eat and I hated that I could not make myself eat.
I remember this one night where everything just erupted. I had worked all morning and spent quality time with my mom in the afternoon. I had plans with my boyfriend that night so I told my mom I would be back from his place the following day. I left the house excited to see him and used a route that my mom and I used to use to get to the hospital to visit my dad. I had been on that road a few times since my dad passed on so I thought nothing of it. As soon as I joined Weirda road, it felt like it was my first time on that road since losing my dad. That road suddenly served as a reminder of the hospital visits and the fact that I could no longer pay my dad a visit. I cried all the way from Weirda road to Garsfontein. I am not sure how I did not cause an accident on my way to Garsfontein but I made it there, still sobbing. The tears did not stop, even after I had arrived. We stayed up until 2am. I was in tears the whole time and he was comforting me and encouraging me to let it all out. He was waking up for work at 4am so I felt bad for keeping him up, but he was happy I was finally crying for my dad. He shared that it had taken him 10 years to cry after his own father passed on and that he realised only when he allowed himself to let it out that he had carried so much pain with him, unnecessarily, for all those years and was happy that would not be my reality.
I had finally had the biggest cry since losing my dad and after that night, I started feeling less disconnected to the pain, but also realised the pain was not the enemy but it helped me process the loss. I was finally mourning and healing at the same time. Yes, I still cried after that night but the tears were less like the ocean and more like a peaceful stream. The crying was therapeutic because after each crying session I realised how much pain I had shed so my heart felt less shattered. I was now dating someone who loved food from his home country more than any other food, and he was a good cook so he made it a thing to cook for me and introduce me to dishes he grew up on in his home country. I started eating more when I was with him so he insisted on making more time for each other so he could make sure I kept eating. He made it his mission to get me chewing and swallowing again, and he succeeded.
Before the night of the big cry, I hated going to the cemetery to visit my dad. I would go and not want to say anything so my mom would do the talking for both of us. After the night of the big cry, I started being able to speak at the gravesite. Now the visits are therapeutic and I am able to laugh (with my dad) when I kneel by his gravesite and tell him things I would have told him in person if he had not transitioned.
Has the crying stopped? Nope! Am I able to laugh from my core? Yep !Have I completely healed? Nope!
I still cry for my dad, but I also find myself remembering jokes he used to tell and laughing as if he has just told the joke right now. I feel his absence in the small and the big moments and it sucks that I will have to live with this loud silence for the rest of my life and carry on in a world where his voice no longer exists. I have always loved my dad’s laugh and now I am limited to imagining it so I mourn the fact that his laughter is muted from my world.
I am learning to make friends with the silence and to add soul-soothing sounds to it because I realise I was never meant to exist in a world devoid of Bra Paul’s voice, even if it’s an imagined voice.
Is mourning ever really over? I suspect not… As much as I have started celebrating my dad in different ways, I know I will forever miss having him physically present…There are future moments that I cannot have with him that I am already mourning.
…The day I become a mom and realise my child will never know what it feels like to have my dad give him/her a nickname that (s)he will start off hating, then grow to love it…
I suspect I will continue to cry for him, especially when I become a parent myself. `I suspect my soul will weep because my kids will not meet their grandfather in person, and it will also rejoice knowing that he in fact would have met them long before I would have the pleasure of calling them my own.
