Sunday, August 23, 2009
Friday, August 21, 2009
Yes, sweetheart ...
And this year I'll try to not get the balloon bouquet stuck in a tree. OK?
Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Pride
Though I won't claim to have that kind of courage, I will say I understand what he meant.
Sure, Deb dying was the worst thing that has ever, and is likely ever, to happen to me. And I may never truly recover from it.
But for the briefest of moments, I knew I was exactly where I was supposed to be. I was supposed to be her husband, her friend, her caretaker, her patient, her lover, her love.
How many people can truly say they were in the right place at the right time? I can.
I'm a lucky bastard.
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Five years ago ...
What did I really know about the woman I was about to marry? I mean, sure, we had lived together for about two years, but so what? People got divorced after living together. What chance did we really have?
Then she stepped into the room, and she was the most beautiful woman I had ever seen. And for some reason, she was willing to get up in front of a bunch of my relatives and say that she wanted to spend the rest of her life with me.
We didn't know then that the rest of her life was only a little over two years. But that wouldn't have mattered.
Because when I saw her that day, I was certain I was doing the right thing, and five years later, I'm still certain it was.
I love you still, sweetie.
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
New Year, Old Habits
The tradition continues.
Sunday, December 07, 2008
Five years ago ...
It seems so strange to think it was only five. It's hard to believe so much could have happened between then and now. A wedding. A honeymoon. Moving to Florida. A whole marriage. Two cancer battles. A funeral. Mourning. Practically a whole lifetime.
Had I known what lay ahead, would I have still gotten on one knee and called her up the stairs back then?
Yup. Only a hell of a lot sooner.
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Checking in
On Thursday it will be two years since I lost you. How am I doing?
Eh. Let's talk about that later.
The cats are doing OK. I just gave them their monthly dose of flea medicine. It's harder to do that now that you're not here to hold them down. I have to be sneaky and hide the tubes in my pocket and catch them unawares. They resent me for a few minutes, but then I give them kitty treats and all is well again.
The house is still standing. I finally got around to putting up a shed in the back yard to replace the one we tore down. Yeah, I said "we." Even though I did all the work, I still give you credit for coming up with the plan to tie the support beam to the car and pull it down. You really missed your calling. You should've been a demolitions expert.
I had my appendix out in June. I really missed you then. I could've gotten some payback for all the times I filled your water bottles and brought you mac and cheese in bed. I guess I'll have to collect when I see you again someday.
Went to visit your grave a couple of weeks ago. The cousins are keeping it up nicely. Lots of mosquitoes, though. I suppose it keeps the tourists away, though.
OK, you want to know how am I doing? Well, I know I promised you I'd be OK, and I'd say most days I am. But there are times I'm not.
I went out on a date about a year ago, a little after the anniversary of your death. She was nice enough, but she wasn't you. No, that's not fair. It's not that she wasn't you. She just wasn't enough like you. She wasn't as sharp, or as whimsical, or as ..., well, it just wasn't right. I know I told you I'd keep my options open as far as getting involved with someone again, but the idea still seems as absurd to me today as it did when you suggested it. It's still too soon.
I still find myself setting aside time to talk to you. Well, I don't know if it's really you. It just may be the part of you that I carry around with me. We have some conversations, but it's getting harder to hear your voice when I do, so it may be getting to the point where I'm talking more to myself than to you, in which case I'll stop. I can talk to myself anytime.
The days I don't feel OK are mostly the ones where I stop to think about what could have been. I figured by now we would have gone to Ireland, would have gotten you that Mini Cooper, would have started talking about adopting ...
Instead, I'm here, and it's not quite where I planned to be.
But then again, neither are you.
In the grand karmic scale, somebody owes us both big time.
The important thing is I'm still here. Even if it's just to keep the cats fed, I'm still serving a purpose.
And I'm still keeping alive the memory that there once was a beautiful girl who for some crazy reason decided to love this weird guy.
Love you, Cutie.
Tim
Friday, June 13, 2008
4 years down the road
Friday, April 04, 2008
To sum it all up

Tuesday, February 26, 2008
The Lost Kitty

Thursday, February 14, 2008
I've got nothing
Nope.
We always said Valentine's Day is for amateurs, for those who can't say "I love you" the other 364.
That still goes.
That's all.
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Open my eyes
On my desk is a silly piece of paper. It was left on my pillow one of the first nights after Deb and I moved in together. It's a picture of a heart with the words "I love you" written over it.
I glanced at it every once in a while, but tonight was the first time that I looked at it in a long time and paid attention to it.
It was written in pencil, pretty quickly. The writing is crooked, the heart isn't perfect. I guess she just decided on the spur of the moment to surprise me with a little note just before bed, because she knew she'd be asleep when I got home.
I stuck it up on my desk and it's been there ever since, through two moves. She even mentioned it once, about how silly it looked.
It's been up so long I stopped paying attention to it. It was just part of the room.
Tonight I looked at it and realized what it is.
It's what I thought I lost when her last phone message to me got erased. It's a permanent symbol of her telling me she loves me. And I've still got it.
Yes, there are losses. But there are some things you never lose.
Tuesday, February 05, 2008
The story never ends
I was at the stern of the boat (that's the back end for you landlubbers), looking at the moon reflect off the water, and I missed Deb. She should have been there, and we should have been holding hands.
In an earlier post, you can read about how on last year's cruise I was missing her and somehow pictures of her turned up on my camera.
The next day, I was looking for my watch, which I stashed in the luggage after we got to the airport so I wouldn't have to worry about it going through security and I found this in the pocket of my suitcase:
It's the friendship ring I gave to her our second Christmas together to make up for the mood ring I gave her on the first.
Since she died, I have looked everywhere for it. I was going to put it with the engagement ring and wedding band in her ashes. Afterward, I presumed it got lost in one of the moves.
What are the odds it would turn up just when I needed to see it the most?
Even now, she amazes me.
Friday, January 25, 2008
I don't care who heard
I stopped the bike at the bottom of the hill, where the river runs, and started singing.
What day is it, and in what month
This clock never seemed so alive
I can't keep up, and I can't back down
I've been losing so much time
The song was popular when Deb was sick the last time, and despite my denial and hopes that she was going to get better, when I heard this song I realized that there could be only a short time left, and it made me try to appreciate every moment we had.
Cause it's you and me, and all other people
With nothing to do, nothing to lose
And it's you and me, and all other people
And I don't know why I can't keep my eyes off of you
I told her this song reminded me of her because it really was how I felt when I looked at her. She would enter my line of sight, and she was all I could look at. Sometimes she'd look at me and ask what I was doing. I'd tell her I was just checking out my girl. She would say that she loved the way I looked at her because it made her feel like the most beautiful woman in the world. I told her that's because she was.
What are things that I want to say, just aren't coming out right
I'm tripping on words, you've got my head spinning
I don't know where to go from here
I started singing louder. I didn't care if anyone was around. I was singing to the river, the sky, the face in my mind.
Cause it's you and me and all other people
With nothing to do, nothing to prove
And it's you and me and all other people
And I don't know why, I can't keep my eyes off of you
I think she only heard the song once. When it was on the radio all the time, she wasn't driving a lot because she was sick and she wasn't working. I remember we were on our way to a doctor's appointment and it came on. I told her this was the song that made me think of her. She listened and said noncommittally, "That's nice."
There's something about you now
I can't quite figure out
Everything she does is beautiful
Everything she does is right
What can I say? She had different musical tastes than me. Doesn't change what I think about the song. Besides, it gave us stuff to argue about.
Cause it's you and me and all other people
With nothing to do, nothing to lose
And it's you and me and all other people
And I don't know why, I can't keep my eyes off of you
As I was pulling into the funeral home to deliver the clothes for Deb's funeral service, this song came on the radio. Ever since then, when I hear it, I think it's her, telling me she's thinking of me.
What day is it, and in what month
This clock never seemed so alive
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
New Year's Eve
I promised her again that I would be OK and keep an open mind about falling in love again.
When the new year began, I gave her picture a kiss.
I'm writing this just in case anyone was afraid I didn't have anyone to kiss at midnight. Of course I did.
I had her.
Monday, December 24, 2007
What Christmas would've been like
We would have set a spending limit, and I would have gone over it. I probably would've gotten her a laptop this year; hers is getting way outdated. She would've bought the cats some toys (don't worry, I got them some for her).
We'd sit up for a while -- we'd be too tired to do anything physical -- watching whatever Christmas movie was on TV, then we'd go to bed.
Tomorrow, presuming she still did tech support for AOL, we'd have made a little holiday meal, watch "A Christmas Story" on TBS and played with our new toys before we went to work. She'd be commenting about expecting an extra dose of stupid callers because it being Christmas (so there'd be people trying to use AOL for the first time on their new computers) and it being a full moon (because it always brought out the loonies).
Like every Christmas I spent with her, it would've been the best one ever.
Merry Christmas, sweetie.
Monday, October 29, 2007
Addendum to the Engagement Story
Strangely enough, I don't remember Deb flashing the ring any more after that.
The Engagement Story
This was in 2003. We had been living together for a few months and I realized that I was enjoying coming home to Deb (and after getting enough hints that she wanted a wedding ring), I decided, what the hell, let's get engaged.
(Later, of course, the whole thing triggered a massive panic attack and nearly broke us up, but I didn't know that. At the moment, it seemed like a good idea.)
Like every man in the world, I knew nothing about jewelry, but lately Deb had been teasing me with jewelry ads, pointing to rings in them and saying, "That'd make a perfect engagement ring." I acted nervous whenever she did it, pretending to squirm. So I took one of the jewelry ads we had gotten in the mail and left it on the dining table. She picked it up, opened it and pointed to a ring with a heart-shaped diamond in it, to tease me. I remembered which one it was and went to the jewelers and got her that ring.
I was planning to take her to Olive Garden on my birthday, which was also the day we met and the day we celebrated as our anniversary. I figured I would wait til we got there, and when the waitress asked us if we knew what we wanted, I'd say something like, "Yes, I do," and get down on my knee with the ring.
The only problems were Deb had to work on my birthday, and I knew she'd hate a public spectacle. So we were going to go on Dec. 7, the day before my birthday. This is, of course, also Pearl Harbor Day, and I figured, OK, if the marriage didn't work out, I could always blame it on getting engaged on Pearl Harbor Day.
The 7th was a Sunday. I was still willing to do the public spectacle thing, but I finally decided I couldn't embarrass her. We were having a late morning. She was downstairs fixing coffee, and I was upstairs in the bedroom trying to compose a speech. I figured out what to say, and the time was as right as it was going to get, so I called down to her, telling her to get upstairs, there was something I needed to ask her. As she was climbing the stairs, I got on my knee in the doorway and held the ring box.
She rounded the corner and saw me. She realized what was happening. Before I could say anything, she came up to me, looked down and with tears beginning to form in her eyes, said, "Yes."
I sighed and told her, "I haven't asked the question yet!"
What I said exactly I can't remember because I was really nervous, but it was along the lines of her making me happier than I ever thought I would ever be or ever deserve to be, and I wanted the chance to make her happy for the rest of her life. She said yes again, and I gave her the ring.
We got dressed and went to Olive Garden, where she proceeded to flash the ring to everyone, from the person taking names for the waiting list, to the waitress, to the food servers, to the other guests.
And I was afraid she didn't want me to make a scene?
Frankly, I was getting embarrassed, if only because I had gotten her the half-carat ring. I told her so, but she told me she was so happy with it she didn't care how big it was, and she kept showing it off like it was as big as her fist.
At the time, I was cringing, but now it makes me happy that I was able to make her that happy. After that, she always liked to tell the story about how I tricked her into picking her engagement ring, and even when she got sick and the ring couldn't fit on her swollen hand, she put it on a chain and wore it.
I had the ring put in the box with her ashes.