When you break open, it happens by surprise

Nitro 2

This is what broke me open.

The heart attack didn’t do it. The complications from the heart cath and stent of a 90% blocked major artery didn’t do it. A hole in my femoral artery didn’t do it. My disbelief and anger at being told it was all in my head didn’t do it.

This tiny bottle did.

The moment I saw it today after John brought home all my new prescriptions, I could see my hands fly to my mouth as if in slow motion, and feel the sobs start.

This is what broke me open, a bottle of nitroglycerin pills that I will carry in my purse, my blue jeans pocket, my car, my suit jacket, my beautiful hand-painted silk tunic, for the rest of my life.

The tears were immediate, hot, unrelenting. I held my incision to reduce the pain from my sobs moving my abdomen up and down, causing paroxysms of hotness. John walked in, wondering, and I held up the bottle, and tried to speak:

“This is what Daddy had. This is what he had in his pocket when he died. I found it in the pocket of his blue jeans when we got home from the hospital after he was dead. And I kept it. I kept everything he had in his pockets that day, in a little box. With a tiny bottle of nitroglycerin just like this one.” My words rushed together, largely unintelligible because of the crying. John stood still.

I had been young when I carried his clothes home from that hospital, but old enough to recognize the lunging desire to capture mundane everyday life when it becomes so, so precious. So I smelled his clothes for months after he died, until the scent faded, and I would catch my mother doing the same sometimes. I hid away in my room the tiny box with the things he carried: nitroglycerin, a small pocket knife, loose change, his wallet, a receipt for a Mother’s Day card he had bought and signed early for my mom, which we found in the trunk of the car with a gift to her. He died on Mother’s Day.

I sobbed. I sobbed for the fact that if the technology that saved my life this week had existed then, he would have lived. I cried because of the vulnerability inherent in this good Southern family man tucking a tiny bottle of nitroglycerin into his jeans pocket, his dress suit pocket, his nightside table, his car; suddenly faced with my own bottle of it, I recognized him in a way I couldn’t when I was 19, and couldn’t since.

This feels like resurrection, like being able to fully identify with his pain at leaving so young, younger than me now. It feels like a reunion, like a nudge from him to carry on and do my best work now, my best living now. There is no doubt it feels like a beautiful, poignant, hotly difficult and beautifully circular camaraderie of two people who have been having a conversation for all these years, and finally meet up in a hospital operating room.

This little bottle is what broke me open. We can never really be sure what will do that breaking open, can we? Or when.

Because we suspect it will be something big, something we have been broken open by before, or an anniversary when breaking open is expected and even demanded, but it surprises us and confounds us when the breaking appears in a pharmacy bag or in a receipt for a Mother’s Day card he would never be able to give her.

When I was in college, just after Daddy died, Mama sold a prized collection of “First Ladies” by Madame Alexander, a set of dolls of Presidential wives that were housed in their collectible blue boxes. Daddy had bought them for her, but she sold them to pay for me to study in Munich for a semester before graduating. She used the same proceeds to visit me there at the end of the semester, a sheer miracle for someone who had never flown or left the United States until she boarded a plane alone to come to me.

When I had first arrived in Munich, I went on a class hike with a German hiking club, not understanding that this is a national sport in Germany, and that Germans three times my age would kick my butt on those mountains. Finally we reached the monastery at the top of a long uphill hike, and commenced with the drinking of the German bier, which by any measure is approximately 10 times more volatile than any American beer I had ever tasted. Suddenly, my pidgin German seemed fluent to me. I was charming and fluent! And I felt drunk from the hot sun, the drink, the hike. As we left that mountaintop and started down to the buses far away, a man twice my age from the hiking club asked if I would like to hike down a different way with him and see the most beautiful lake.

Of course I did. Only later when friends expressed shock that I would hike for 5 hours to a lake with an unknown German while drunk did I realize that I might have been in danger of being chopped up into tiny pieces in the Black Forest. My naiveté is charming, isn’t it? Let us assume that “trust” is another word for naiveté.

Nothing untoward happened. We hiked. And hiked. That damn lake was very far away, like hiking from Memphis, Tennessee, to York, Pennsylvania, or so it seemed. But it was as beautiful as he said. And so, at last, the lake, and a coffee in the brisk, beautiful day. He asked if I had a photograph of my father. Surprised by the request, I slid the one I carry with me across the table to him.

He looked at the photo for a long time. Among many other things he said to me, he said this: “Your father was a man far larger than his circumstance, He was a man with the heart and soul of a world traveler. He had an understanding of the world that was far larger and deeper than who he was and where he was.”

I sat, exhausted by the hike, sunburned, looking at him as he spoke truths I thought only I knew about my father.

All of this is what broke me open today.

Be prepared to be broken open. Let it happen. Meaning will emerge. And healing.

See also: Break Open By Surprise

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

46 comments to " When you break open, it happens by surprise "
  • Larainne Deal

    amazing . . . and touching . . . tears flowing . . . thank you so much for sharing . . .

  • Julie bridges

    Thank you for your words that broke me open.

  • Ruth Cutting

    Thank you

  • Welcome, my friend. Welcome back to now, to how all you have lived which informs now, to your clear expression of what you see, now. Love, love, love.

  • Cheryl

    I read this very early this morning while the Pandora station was playing James Taylor’s “Shower the People” in the background. I became mindful of the song while reading the paragraph about being “nudged” to live your best life, and it really brought it into the meaningful presence. Thank you for this beautiful writing. I am wishing you well as you continue to heal and move forward.

  • It seems we’re never really prepared to be broken open. To me, it feels like the ground opening beneath my feet. Love this post. Hate that you had to go through this.

  • Beth Patterson

    I knew when I saw your image of the nitro bottle that this was about the larger joining of your Heart with your father’s.
    This is so beautiful Patti. Thank you.
    Rest please. There’s time.

  • Jenn C

    Your ability to put your feelings and thoughts into words is incomparable! I’ve shared your story this week several times with friends in the medical community and all are horrified! I will follow up with this beautiful article so they can be inspired! Good luck on your recovery!

    • Davielle Huffman

      Raw, poignant, heart-breaking … no pun intended. Patti, you are a treasure: a complex, articulate, intelligent, “evolved”, compassionate, witty, loving, beautiful, talented, honest, gracious, Southern girl TREASURE. Thank you for sharing yourself with the world. Please, rest a lot. A LOT. You have much healing to do, dear one. Take excellent care of YOU, ya hear? Prayers, always, that you’ll never need that bottle of “vulnerable pills”, the same ones your Daddy carried in his pocket. Prayers, and love.

  • I’m grateful for your dutiful recording and generous sharing of your wisdom journey with us. I’m also glad you broke open and the old grief can pour out so your heart can heal. Much love and many blessings to you, Patti. You are held.

  • Jean

    Thank you for sharing such intimate memories and feelings. I can picture things when you describe them. I sense that the man you hiked to the lake with and sat across the table from was a messenger from your father. In that moment he asked you to hike with him, something in you must have known to trust. You have done such amazing work in the world already. I sense your best is yet to come though! Looking forward to it! So thankful you are here to continue sharing your best self with the world!

  • Janey Davis

    As always , you touch the core of life, grief , hope and love!

  • Maridee Ryan

    Beautifully stated.

  • This is very close to home for me…..the heart thing…..the breaking open in such a way……and you bring beauty out of the moments of unexpected concern/fear and we learn through people like you that the breaking open experiences are to be cherished. Wishing you an exceptionally good recovery.

  • Carol Sanders

    Dear Patti, as always you bring tears to my eyes and open my heart with your powerful observations and sharings. Thank you so much for being willing to share your deepest feelings and hurts. Prayers and healing thoughts for you.

  • Nadeja

    Your story is so beautiful and very touching Patti. Your dad’s spirit is alive and well through his daughter. Bless your beautiful heart and thank you for opening it to us. Much love to you Patti Digh.

  • Kim mailhot

    Oh sweet Patti, your broken open self is so beautiful. You are so alive. Thank you for how you always share that big shiny heart with us.
    Heal well and with peace of heart. ❤️❤️❤️

  • A stunning and significant capture of what it means to be brought to our knees, connected and informed by loss, and reminded of life’s urgency.

  • Patti Hayes

    I am in awe of this post. Thank you so much for sharing this incredible journey. Everything that happens is indeed connected to something else. We are sometimes unaware until something “breaks us open” . There are so many blessings in this life and you being able to write this and me being able to read it is truly one of them. Rest Well Patti and thank you.

  • Sydney Wellman

    Patti, you never cease to move me…now more than ever. Thank you my friend. Sending healing vibes and love.

  • Deb

    Oh Patti. No words.

  • Thank you Patti. Thank you for being vulnerable and sharing a deep opening. You are a bright star.

  • Lorie

    “We can never really be sure what will do that breaking open, can we? Or when.” Oh, how I do understand, Patti. Thank you for your beautiful words. xo

  • Laura Bradley

    A pulmonary embolism cracked me wide open 5 years ago at 45 years old. I was in the hospital a week and the doctor at one point said to me ” you realize you almost died ??”… I, 5 years later, still feel the fragility of life that only people who have had a brush with death have. Like walking on egg shells.. Like being afraid of breaking. Life is fragile. That is frightening.

  • Deb Ford

    Thank you. This became my morning quiet time and I am so grateful for you, for life, love, and resurrection. Love.

  • Elizabeth mcentee

    I cry. It was the small things that gutted me when we went to my dad’s apartment after he died, the dishes washed and left to try dry even though he had to have been in pain, the water glass filled with water, settling and waiting for him to return to drink it, the envelopes with bills and checks stamped waiting to be mailed. His wanting to believe that he would be back to attend to all of his life once the VA patched him back together.

  • Sarita

    Beautiful. xoxo

  • PureJade

    Tears, more tears and more tears for all the truth, love, pain, fear and hope you’ve written. I can’t see to type well throufpgh these tears. I can connect and relate remembering my sisters cancer, her death, Nd then a few years later receiving my own cancer diagnosis. Yes, ther comes a moment and then, this. Damn it all, Patti, rest fiercely, live on, and stay with us. I need you, we all need you.

  • What a wonderful understanding of the deep connection between your father and you. One that this incident deepened and made more meaningful. How wise you were to move beyond the “it’s all in your head” part, past the anger, to healing. That is a gift we are all deeply thankful for.

  • Janellle

    You are amazing Patti. I love what you wrote and it just seems exactly the way things happen when we are going through horrible experience, that one detail, the solid fact of years ago coming around synchronous your depth of understanding because you have worked to see how the small details matter, how that fact breaks you open. You will have to live with all of this healing that will continue to have waves that take you and I don’t mean the physical healing but the emotional. I can’t predict that. I can, however, say how much I admire you for still sharing, for not sparing yourself from being honest with us.

  • Terry Hartley

    Your journey is truly an amazing one. Takes you to destinations unplanned, doesn’t it? I am so happy to be a fellow traveler.

    Resting, healing and understanding are your verbs for the present.

    Thank you for writing this. Sending love xoxo

  • Franky

    I was broken open by my dog’s hedgehog toy held in my lap earlier this week. She’s gone, and the fur on that toy feels just like hers. Oh how the tears did flow. I love this Patti.

  • Sometimes, when I have no words, I just leave a piece of my heart behind.

    <3

  • Jill

    You are simply a gift, a treasure. Xo

  • Bridget Pilloud

    Wishing the best for you as you heal.

  • Oh-so-beautiful. I love your father from afar. I love your words. Love who you are. How you see things. How you express them.

    When I carry the little beaded purse my father-in-law bought me in Mexico, a couple years before he died, my heart aches in a joyful sad way. Each time I receive a package with my mother’s unique handwriting + the 47 individual stamps she sticks on, I break open. When my son walks out the door to go to high school, I break a little, imagining him as a young man living his own life someplace not in my home.

    May we all allow ourselves to be broken open, over + over again. We’re like chocolate truffles, with all that yummy goo inside.

    Thank you for sharing your father and your heart with us today.

  • Sara

    Thanks for sharing yourself again. Now…. How do you know York, Pennsylvania!!!! I work in York and live in Spring Grove! It is not everyday ….week or year that you see that town in a blog.
    Be well.

  • Jodi moo moo head cohen

    Oh Moo. Oh Moo. Such important tears. The repair work they did on your full heart means you are able to keep feeling all of the things that make the world go round. I am grateful for the outcome of this intrepid journey. You are here, as the maps always point out, on planet earth. In your house, writing, sobbing, healing, looking out the windows towards the light and the trees with all of your might. Blessings as you recover from this big life event where you were broken open, and keep breaking open. Moment to moment. I love you faster than I can run.

  • Tina

    You have a way with words that breaks my heart. I have been there so many times. Thank you for sharing.

  • Donna

    Beautifully written. I’ve carried a bottle of this with me for many years now; eventually you learn to live and laugh outside of the circumstances, however it is a sobering reminder. I too have shared this unwanted kind of camaraderie with my father, though his heart attack came in his 50’s and he survived (by the grace of God) long enough to get a heart transplant. It is a strange but special kinship, isn’t it? All the best to you, Patti.

  • Chris McBride

    Awww. A beautiful reflection. It is the little things; they surprise us and transport us to another time and place….and when we return to the here & now, we are more whole/holy. I am grateful for being able to share in your reflection.

  • […] At nearly the same time that Laurie moved into hospice, our dear friend, the writer Patti Digh, had a heart attack. She wrote brilliantly about it on her blog, and that piece was picked up by the Huffington Post where it’s gone viral. See, Patti was told her heart attack symptoms were simply anxiety. When, in reality, she had a 90 percent blockage in a key artery. The piece she wrote – the one that Arianna Huffington read and directed be posted – it’s real. It’s raw. It’s true. You can read it here.  Her follow-up piece was as beautiful a piece of writing as I’ve ever seen her do. Read that one here. […]

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