I’ve been thinking a lot about detours and why I decided to call my blog “sudden detour.” This is tied up with how I’ve begun to think about my life without my love and best friend.
Doug died at 2:51 a.m. My God daughter was by my side and we stayed at the hospital until about 3:30. We were both exhausted. When we got in the car to drive home, I remember distinctly telling her “well, my life is effectively over.” I sincerely felt that way then and still feel that way from time to time. Certainly the life I had. The life I had with a full time cheerleader, a fun companion. a confidant, a partner, a love. Over. What am I going to do with the next (perhaps) 20+ years? It was a desolate feeling then and remains so now.
I began, over the past month or so, to re-frame things. I began to think of my life as a journey and this as a big detour from the journey I had planned. Much like our trip to Oregon that I wrote about in the first post. That detour took us into some beautiful country in Oregon that we wouldn’t have seen without having taken the wrong path.
Who am I now? Who do I want to be and what do I want my life to look like? I realized that I had a choice, unique perhaps to someone my age. The choice to regroup and reform my life in a new way. I don’t like it. I don’t really want to do it. I don’t want to think about where to go and I don’t want to work that hard. But, I have no choice. It’s either do the work or be miserable and as much as the work is hard, being miserable is harder.
I really like what reader Karen said in her comment regarding detours: “They can take us down the wrong path, or set us back on track, sometimes they open up new possibilities.” I want to explore those possibilities while remembering Doug and our life together.