Everyone has a story - their story is just as important as your story. That's what I have told the kids for as long as they could understand. That's what I would tell Bryanna all the time.
kept sticking with me. After that song, I composed myself and I started working. I had a pop station on the radio - a pop station that normally ONLY plays pop. As I was working and I was starting to feel more calm, I realized that pop music was not actually playing. Piano music was playing. Not just any piano music...but the specific songs that she loved that would play every night when I put the kids to bed. The specific songs that were on a very different station. I have never had a time where the stations switched like that. I have had this happen before. Early on, when I was playing music at the cemetery and asking for a sign...anything to know that Bryanna was with me...the song I was playing suddenly stopped... suddenly without anything being clicked or in queue, fireworks started playing. There as no explanation...it just was. I know this sounds crazy, but I'm not the only one to have these stories happen. Bryanna is with us.
Today, Liam and I had an unexpected lunch date. He wasn't feeling the best, so he was quite. I told him how amazed I was that our plants were getting super tall because we planted them from bulbs. He says: "oh no, they are so big. What if they grow to the sky?!"I said, "well then bryanna would get to see them too". He responded "Bryanna already sees them". Let me remind you that Liam is 4. The power behind his words just blows me away.
The day before our trip to honor Bryanna and to celebrate Evey and Liam, Evey and I stopped by the cemetery to sit with puppy angel. We were so surprised to see that her headstone had been installed that day. We sat in front of it saying how beautiful it was. As we sat there, my arms around Evey while she sat on my lap - Evey says "Bryanna is happy now". Let me remind you that she is 7.
The questions at bed time in our home tend not to be about simple things like, will the weather allow us to be outside at camp tomorrow, or why do dogs sniff butts...you know the simple kid stuff. Rather, our questions are loaded and heavy and thought provoking. It's questions like - are there oceans in heaven? Does it hurt when you die? Did Bryanna want to be in heaven as much as she wanted to be here with us. Did Bryanna have a cold that led to her leukemia. Will I get it?
This is our story.
Before you judge a kid for having a melt down or not listening in public, before you judge a child for always being in their mom or dad's arms, even though they are old enough to run around on their own, before you judge a lady at the store for looking unapproachable, before you judge a man who seems inpatient, take a moment and ask what their story is. You never know, that kid may have lost a sister to a horrible cancer. That kid may be terrified of leaving their parent's side because they had to leave their sister's side and she died. That lady may be a mom who is trying to make sense of her daughter's death and is thinking what she could make for dinner that would make her kids smile and forget their pain even for just a moment. That man may be thinking about the last discussion he had with his daughter or may be thinking of how he had to rush to the hospital to be by her side as she passed away.
Everyone has a story - we can choose to have a bad day or choose to have a good day. What we do with our story is what defines us. How we get through the impossible days will give us strength to be present. It is with that presence that our story will keep growing. There is so much darkness in my story - but I believe that the sun will continue to shine bright and light our way. I believe that the days may be hard, but we can always find something good in it. We can always choose to do good. As I was reminded by a very wise man today, we need to remember to find three things we like every day. That's so important. Our story isn't all bad. We had 9 beautiful years with Bryanna. We have beautiful butterflies, animals and nature all around us. We are surrounded by people who love us. We are living each day feeling Bryanna's Love. We have each other.
We have to live our story, but we also have to make it count.
This is my story.
I have a story to tell as well. But my story is not one that many people are prepared to hear. I know that while I may be smiling and laughing at times, there are many times that I may seem unapproachable or reserved. I may look serious or even sad. But that's my story. I have three kids. Three beautiful kids - 9 year old Bryanna (who would have been 10 in two weeks), 7 year old Evey and 4 year old Liam. As my story goes - I have one daughter that blessed my life with her contagious laugh, her beautiful smile, her candid honesty, her sassy attitude, her love for dance, her struggle with math, her blue eyes, her love for fashion, her unbeatable love for animals, her love for my black heels, her sweet nurturing side, and her love for our special ice cream dates in the middle of the night. I have another daughter who has blessed my life with her quirky smile, her contagious laugh, her giggles in her sleep, her love for inventing amazing functional things, her love for dancing, her new found love of fashionable clothes and matching socks, her love for go carts and archery, her love for cheetahs and leopard print clothes, her nurturing nature, her fixer attitude, her strength and her candid honesty. I have a son who loves to dance, who makes most people smile, who loves hugs, who loves pink, princess Elena, costume dresses, who loves to quietly listen and says the most wise and unexpected things, who loves zooming cars around and who really loves his sisters.
I have three kids. One in heaven and two here with me. One in my heart and two in my arms.
Yesterday was one of those days that my story took over my day. It was an impossible day. We have been working with our health insurance provider and the Health exchange to get Bryanna's date of death correctly noted so that we can get reimbursed for the months that she was on our policy but no longer alive. This has been taking place since January. We have sent her death certificate to each company, made a min of 8 calls back and forth and was required to physically take her death certificate to a physical location to show proof of death. We followed up time after time and was told the matter was resolved and to call back in a month or so to apply the credit as it is updated in the system. So, I called yesterday. It was then that I found out that nothing had changed. That they wanted me to go through the entire thing again. Keep in mind, this is not taking a birth certificate or marriage certificate in to show proof of a happy time in your life. No, this is constantly having to prove that my 9 year old daughter, that my first born child died on October 24, 2016. She died in both Mike and my arms I might add. This just adds insult to injury. They have once again escalated the matter but this means that nothing is resolved, and yet again I have to wait for a call by a supervisor and discuss my daughters date of death to yet another person, to yet another stranger, to resolve a business matter. A cold business matter.
That was so difficult. So, naturally afterwards I was a mess. I tried to focus on my work (which when upset like that makes it quite difficult to focus on translations). Just when I thought the pain of not being able to hold Bryanna was impossible to get through, I realized that Fireworks started playing on my Pandora station. Fireworks - Bryanna's favorite song. Fireworks - the song that got her through her final really difficult days. After that Centuries from Fall out boy came on...the lyrics
"Some legends are told
Some turn to dust or to gold
But you will remember me
Remember me, for centuries"
Some turn to dust or to gold
But you will remember me
Remember me, for centuries"
Today, Liam and I had an unexpected lunch date. He wasn't feeling the best, so he was quite. I told him how amazed I was that our plants were getting super tall because we planted them from bulbs. He says: "oh no, they are so big. What if they grow to the sky?!"I said, "well then bryanna would get to see them too". He responded "Bryanna already sees them". Let me remind you that Liam is 4. The power behind his words just blows me away.
The day before our trip to honor Bryanna and to celebrate Evey and Liam, Evey and I stopped by the cemetery to sit with puppy angel. We were so surprised to see that her headstone had been installed that day. We sat in front of it saying how beautiful it was. As we sat there, my arms around Evey while she sat on my lap - Evey says "Bryanna is happy now". Let me remind you that she is 7.
The questions at bed time in our home tend not to be about simple things like, will the weather allow us to be outside at camp tomorrow, or why do dogs sniff butts...you know the simple kid stuff. Rather, our questions are loaded and heavy and thought provoking. It's questions like - are there oceans in heaven? Does it hurt when you die? Did Bryanna want to be in heaven as much as she wanted to be here with us. Did Bryanna have a cold that led to her leukemia. Will I get it?
This is our story.
Before you judge a kid for having a melt down or not listening in public, before you judge a child for always being in their mom or dad's arms, even though they are old enough to run around on their own, before you judge a lady at the store for looking unapproachable, before you judge a man who seems inpatient, take a moment and ask what their story is. You never know, that kid may have lost a sister to a horrible cancer. That kid may be terrified of leaving their parent's side because they had to leave their sister's side and she died. That lady may be a mom who is trying to make sense of her daughter's death and is thinking what she could make for dinner that would make her kids smile and forget their pain even for just a moment. That man may be thinking about the last discussion he had with his daughter or may be thinking of how he had to rush to the hospital to be by her side as she passed away.
Everyone has a story - we can choose to have a bad day or choose to have a good day. What we do with our story is what defines us. How we get through the impossible days will give us strength to be present. It is with that presence that our story will keep growing. There is so much darkness in my story - but I believe that the sun will continue to shine bright and light our way. I believe that the days may be hard, but we can always find something good in it. We can always choose to do good. As I was reminded by a very wise man today, we need to remember to find three things we like every day. That's so important. Our story isn't all bad. We had 9 beautiful years with Bryanna. We have beautiful butterflies, animals and nature all around us. We are surrounded by people who love us. We are living each day feeling Bryanna's Love. We have each other.
We have to live our story, but we also have to make it count.
This is my story.

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