I am waiting for someone I love, to die.

I am waiting for someone I love, to die. It is an extraordinarily difficult liminal space in which to be living these last weeks, in part because it takes place in the context of life going on – my cardiac rehab has begun, Felix is deciding to go back to school, my psychiatrist has given me the homework of zero self-criticisms – and these are all things I would call and tell Laurie, but can’t. She is beyond language now, and I am so thankful for our last conversation a week or so ago that lasted for 2 hours. I kept trying to say my goodbyes, thinking she must be tired, and she kept talking. Let us not short circuit what is happening for the sake of what we believe others feel. Lesson learned, and what a beautifully rich, real, funny, and meaning full conversation that was, our last. We covered a lot of grounds (yes, plural). There were a lot of “I love you’s” in that call, enough—one can only hope—to last a lifetime.

I can remember the sound of her voice from that call, like a caress. She cried, I cried, we both laughed. She wept at one point, her voice squeaky in trying to talk as she cried, “I just really appreciate that both you and John have always pronounced my name correctly. It may seem like a little thing, but it’s not.”

When I got home from the hospital, she was newly in Hospice, and I started lighting candles every morning for her, burning through a box of tall white candles I had purchased for a retreat I never got to, because I had a heart attack instead. They have burned all day every day since then, for Laurie, the flame a constant reminder that I am waiting for someone I love, to die.

Several weeks ago, I commissioned a painting of her spirit to help ease me into this new reality, one that, frankly, seems surreal at the moment. While it isn’t finished in this photo, the painting above is what it looks like in mid-progress. The intuitive artist sent me these notes she had made while painting it:

Cartographer of Panoptic Experience

Her released radiant pure spark of volcanic lifting energy sails around the moon.

Further Beyond. Collecting Artifacts of Joy and Meaning, Colour and Love

Alighting here and there in beats of present time, she shimmers with a vibrant stillness just ahead of impending full on joy rush.

Next, her nomadic soul goes dancing whimsically along chortling brook, returning with skirts full of violets. Hanging her light on the face of a glittering ice cliff, she goes exploring deeply into glacial crevices, plumbing the depths of that ancient moving water for luminous green ice marbles.

Rooted deeply and loftily limbed, she stitches and sways in eternal skies connecting it all.

Forever fascinated with applied symbolism she’s recording every vector onto a wildly entangled magical map. Each glancing spark, every meaningful seed, stone, feather, bone lovingly observed and curated into vectors. The whole glorious web arcs out; creating a profoundly connected matrix.

Revered humble leader, infused with lush intention, she invites all to the full well.

Come to the gathering place in the centre of the celestial village to unpack your bits of beauty and wisdom and wonderment. Share your stories, witness this kaleidoscope with others, and contribute to the transcript for How It Will All Go, but Not Certainly.

Releasing Spirit lovingly bears witness to your white feather, ruby red pomegranate seeds, pop rocks and beautiful, sacred tear polished marbles.

As the artist painted this, a shaman she had never communicated with sent her a link to a video she said she felt compelled to send. Watch it, then look at the painting. And in the video, I cannot un-see the woman in the video coming from the ground into the clouds above. And the colors, and the energy. It all set my hair on end.

Sometimes when you are known for being wise and kind, it is hard to find friends who won’t leave when they find out that while you are often wise and kind, sometimes you are also stupid and angry. I’ve lost a number of friends that way, people who started in my life as fans, became friends, became disillusioned at what we all have even in some small measure—a seeming disconnect between in and out us, between our writing and our humanity that shows up fully sometimes, in all its ugliness. Not Laurie. She loved it all unconditionally. And that is a rare friend indeed. She will no longer be here to talk to, ask advice of, tell her things I tell no one else, but I will tell her anyway.

I am waiting for someone I love, to die. It makes me angry that she will go and others will live on, that she will go and leave behind a son the age I was when my father died, that she will go and leave me here, bereft, wanting to call and explore her wisdom, laugh with her until we both pee in our pants. It makes me angry.

It makes me terribly sad. Bereft.

It makes me feel sorry for myself at the loss I will feel, which cannot approximate her loss, her desire to remain, her wanting to be here with us.

When she dies, there is no doubt that she will soon be at work, clipboard and yellow highlighter in hand, assessing the new place and figuring out how it works and how she can help. She is a helper. How will I ever understand Excel spreadsheets without her? She will soon be creating that map of which the artist speaks. I have asked her to send me signs. I cannot wait to see what they are.

I know that death ends a life, not a relationship. This is true for all of us who love Laurie. I will be “calling” her many times for advice in the years to come, I know. But damn it, I want her voice, her humor, her wisdom here.

When she called me to tell me she was moving to Hospice, I was in the hospital recovering from my heart attack, watching the sun rise. I said the first thing that came to mind, “Oh, Laurie, this is not the outcome I wanted. This is not the outcome I wanted for you.”

But it is the outcome she got – and we got. And I, and we, can best honor her by choosing to transform this grief at this heart-wrenching outcome into molecule-rearranging love.

Laurie died on the morning of March 3, 2016.

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.

30 comments to " I am waiting for someone I love, to die. "
  • In sitting in the ICU with my dad. Listening to him breathe. Appreciate this post.

  • Susan Magee

    Patti,
    “…..tell her things I tell no one else, but I will tell her anyway.” A therapist once said to me, “You need to find someone you can be totally honest with, a soul mate.” How fortunate you both are to have found one in each other. Susan

    PS) You write like a motherfucker…in a good way! :)

  • Chris Butterworth

    Having just gone through the death of my Mom and grief a lens through which I look, I found your words cathartic…. Blessing to you and Laurie.

  • A giant hug to you. And what a lovely tribute to your friend.

  • elaine parrish

    I lost my twin sister 7 years ago. We had that ESP that twins have.
    I talk to her all the time. She will always be at my side.

  • Today I lit a candle for you, Patti. I never knew Laurie Foley, but I know you. And you, too, need a light in the face of darkness. Here’s a few lines from Theordore Roethke’s “Journey to the Interior”:
    As a blind man, lifting a curtain, knows it is morning,
    I know this change:
    On one side of silence there is no smile;
    But when I breathe with the birds,
    The spirit of wrath becomes the spirit of blessing,
    And the dead begin from their dark to sing in my sleep.

  • Let us not short circuit what is happening for the sake of what we believe others feel. — so profound I am getting chill bumps.

  • Heidi

    Patti,

    No words, but many blessings and much light.

  • Norma Lundy

    There are those who touch our hearts and our lives like no other! How blessed the two of you were able to be that to one another! I am deeply touched by your words!

  • Marietta

    Although I do not know you or Laurie personally…I’m a “fan” of you both. I was sitting at my desk at work reading this and burst into tears. I’m so sorry you are losing a good friend Patti. I think I’m going to eat a cupcake to soothe myself. Sending you and Laurie love, peace and comfort ❤️

  • Pam

    Like fans of a rock star we keep vigil at the gate. She will leave and her life will be like one bright green beautiful shooting star, brilliant, illuminating and gone too soon.

    I give thanks for her life and what she gave me. Gave others. Gave you.

  • Mary Nations

    I feel your pain…maybe Kristel will greet Laurie and take her dancing with David Bowie. I am sorry for this loss in your life.

  • Lynda-Ross Vega

    With your words you have captured the essence of the experience of the death vigil and woven in a beautiful and tender and raw tribute to a wonderful person. Thank you.

  • I can think of no other words than to tell you that I’m sending you love — for your healing, for Laurie, for life well lived. I am holding you all within the circle of my love.

  • Bridget Pilloud

    I am sitting in my truck listening to bad country music and eating a good chicken sandwich. I feel like I am doing everything with the knowledge that there is someone who would love to be doing what I am doing. I have been feeling that every day since I heard Laurie went into hospice. This consciousness, I appreciate it, and I feel sad about it.
    I am so sorry, Patti.

  • What an incredible painting Patti. Your words are so moving and touching. I have an uncle who is in his last days too, his spirit and fight gone, exhausted by unmanageable pain. My heart goes out to you, loosing a close and dear friend is so hard.

  • I am privileged to be going through an end of life time with my dad. We don’t know when, except that he’s close. You are right, death ends a life, not a relationship.

  • and in that moment, in person and from afar, so much is in each minute and then almost without imagining how that moment the spirit leaves the body…and the release, the moment, is one I will never forget…last year I was gifted that more times than I want to share…but in those moments, in that precious silence…again I was gifted with the knowledge and presence of life changing into the very air we breath….and so we take the all with us, in heart, in thought, in the moments we carry our love to and through others…and receive again their love back to us.

  • Lailey

    Sometimes opening to the loss Is so great ….abyss like… Your willingness to put words to our loss helps us all .Thank you for sharing Patti… It feels soothing to read this in tribe…. I love the image of Laurie with a highlighter and clipboard …. And I treasure you heal gently with ease and love

  • Cathryn

    “I know that death ends a life, not a relationship.”

    Brilliant.

    I am sorry for your pain. And Laurie’s.
    Thank you for sharing. I am grateful.

  • Patti. Wow. Yes. Raw. Real. Sobbing. Remembering My Cherished Soul Sistah who died last Summer leaving her 5 kids and Me to Only Imagine her here on the Bed with Me. Your Magnificent Friendship with Laurie. There are No Words. Just Love. So Much. For Every Morsel of All of Your Beings. XOXO Ali ????

  • Jodi Crane

    I’m giving you a big hug right now!

  • Allowing your words to settle in, to pause and reflect, to listen to my heart and feel the wave of compassion emerging. It’s a wave filled with so much sadness, gratitude and yes, beauty.

  • Kath Comber

    She has touched lives worldwide – a life surrounded by love – thank you for sharing her with us. Oh Patti –

  • Kim

    Sounds like a beautiful relationship. May you continue to heal and be accepting of yourself and the joys and pains the universe brings.

    • Brittany Shulla

      pAtti. This was stunning and heart wrenching and so many things simultaneously . “And I, and we, can best honor her by choosing to transform this grief at this heart-wrenching outcome into molecule-rearranging love.” Some of the best words I have ever heard. I can’t express how they touched me only to say… I “get it.” Thank you for sharing and sending you and Laurie so much love. Always, Brittany

  • Alison Miyake

    I’m lighting a candle for Laurie and her family again tonight. I’m so sorry for your loss. I’m thinking of all of you….

  • I have just met two most amazing women, you and Laurie, through your magnificent writing and hers. I just somehow stumbled upon this today and know the Universe sent it to me. I am holding you in your grief although I am a stranger to you right now. Someday I hope we will meet.

  • Julie

    Thank you for this post. I, too, am waiting for a friend to die. My heart is broken; bereft is a perfect word. Your line: I know that death ends a life, not a relationship. I know it is true but it makes me cry. This is a relationship with someone I have known for 20 years but just in the past 1.5 years we have become much closer, recognized our “soul-mate” status as friends. I will see this friend in 2 days and am loving and terrified at the same time. Reading this helps.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *