Excerpt Chapter from Married to the SEAL Teams: Lessons in Love
Love is a constant trying and reaching and failing and falling and trying all over again. ~LB
I am sitting on an antique chintz sofa at Blaylock’s Funeral Home waiting to receive your ashes. The lighting is soft and the artwork lovely and it reminds me of the Priest’s rectory and the disaster of marriage counseling and how beautifully that day ended for both of us. No thanks to the Priest.
When Bobby walks into the room and sits down next to me, my heart begins to race. I don’t know the rules or what words to say and out of the corner of my eye I see your image leaning against the doorframe with your arms crossed over your chest, chin up. Your lips are pressed together just enough to let me know you approve. My eyes blur with tears. It is impossible and morbid to think that your strong, chiseled body now fits into an urn.
“The engraving is beautiful,” Bobby says.
I wonder if there is a return policy – an undo – a please return his body to me because I cannot stand this for one more minute – clause.
“It is,” I say.
I reach out and trace the Trident with my fingertips. It is engraved with such detail and care that I feel you move through me and I take this as confirmation I’ve done this one thing right. The beloved “Budweiser” defines you, our life together and the ethos by which we lived, far better than the inadequate words I chose. To be fair, though, I would have had to use infinitesimal small print on all four sides and every square inch of the urn and even then, there are not enough words in all of history to describe you. I glance at your image in the doorway and think, “Don’t let that go to your head.”
I feel you smile and my memory reaches back to that sunset in Del Mar and our second beginning.
I watch you gather words; arrange them in your mind as you stir cream into your coffee. I can read your face like a sweet braille on the tip of my tongue. You love and hate this about me, but it doesn’t matter. I’ve always been at home in your silence.
When you look up and stare at me a hush falls over the world. You say, “I get mad and yell. It’s who I am. You know that. But no more fists through the wall. The furniture will stay intact. And you and our babies…always were and always will be safe.”
“I fear the rage, Steve. Not you.”
Your eyes are so tired. I want to kiss your eyelids, soothe away every pain of the last eight months, but I am not your savior and I am barely your wife. I keep my hands to myself.
You say, “I fear you…”
“That’s a lie.”
“It’s not a lie.” You reach across the table; place your thumb on the inside of my wrist and say, “I fear you will leave me forever. It scares me more than anything I’ve ever been or done or will do. Can we skip the counseling bullshit and just do… you and me again?”
The steam from our coffee rises between us in the shape of a promise.
Bobby touches my arm and asks, “Are you okay, Lynn?”
I blink; feel each beat of my heart as it drains the blood from my head. I fight the dizzy because I am desperate to answer you.
“Yes,” I say.
Bobby knows I am not talking to him.
He helps me to the truck and waits while I decide where to place your urn. The floorboard seems disrespectful and the backseat too far away from me. There should be some goddamn guidelines: How to transport your lover’s remains. I can actually feel your impatience and his unnerving calm. I decide on the passenger seat, buckle you in and climb behind the wheel, but my hands shake so badly I cannot put the key in the ignition. I’m angry. So angry I want to grab the urn, throw it in the bed of the truck and scream, “There you go, badass… that’s what you get for dying.”
The minutiae of death are stirring my crazy.
More than anything I want to drive three thousand miles to the hotel in Del Mar, book our room with the ocean view, and stay there for the rest of my life.
Instead, I drive to the only place I can think of where I won’t have to explain.
Your urn is heavy – or perhaps death is – but the heaviness soothes me, like a weight that holds me in place. I use both hands, back through the glass door and find a table in the corner where I place you just so – the back of the urn to the wall; the entrance and entire room in view. Habits die hard.
Mary-Beth weaves through the tables with a coffee pot and two cups. This week her hair is red and spun high on top of her head and her blue eye shadow matches her sweater. She puts both cups on the table, pours coffee into one and asks, “How ya’ holdin’ up, darlin’?”
We both glance at your urn. I say, “I know this is odd.”
“Nothin’ odd about it. That’s a fine looking urn. You just pick him up?”
I nod.
“Well then, seems just right to me. We’ve missed ya’. The gals and I was just talkin’ about the two of you. Always whisperin’ over coffee… and that man’s eyes… I’ll tell you what! Had a look meaner than a caged coon, but always polite and tipped nice. We notice those things.” She looks straight at your urn and says, “Just so ya’ know.”
I nod. Perhaps part of the sweetness of moving to a small town where nobody really knows us is this acceptance of how out of place we are and how quickly we blend in.
She fusses with napkins, leans in and says, “Deet’s and me, we barely have a civil word to say to each other after all these years. Gotta love the man, though. Works himself to death.” She clamps a hand over her mouth, “Oh, honey, that’s just a figure of speech, now. I’m not thinkin’ right.” She pats my shoulder, “I bet you two never had cross words.”
Our worst fight lasted eight months and grew to epic proportions, so out of control that I packed up half the house, both children and drove across country to figure it out. I say, “Yes, we did,” and the tears begin to fall.
“Oh now, I’ve gone and made ya’ cry.” She hands me a tissue from her apron pocket, “It’s fresh; just wrinkled. I’ll leave you be, Miss Lynn. Y’all enjoy your coffee and holler if you need somethin’.”
I take a deep breath as she walks away, tear open a Sweet n’ Low and hear you say, “Stop using that crap!” so clearly it brings a smile through the tears. All three waitresses and the scattering of customers stare at me.
It’s not like I didn’t do bizarre things while you were alive. I’m damn near famous for some, but bringing your remains in an urn to a small town café to have coffee with me probably tops the list. I don’t care.
I want to sit here and believe you are with me. I want the clink of dishes and random chatter and sounds of life because the silence at home is deafening. I want to remember every single word we said and all we did right, after how badly we went wrong.
You leave a twenty dollar bill on the table, pick up both coffee cups and say, “Follow me.”
I do. Down corridors and around corners until you open the door to an ocean front room and the sound of crashing waves rolls over me. I want to disappear, just here, with you. It’s been so long.
I step out of my shoes, remove my sweater; suddenly determined.
“Later,” you say, “Talk to me.”
I shake my head.
“Use words,” you say.
“I can’t.”
“Then tell me what you can’t say.”
I watch you sit down in the chair, coffee in hand. You cross your legs, perfect a smug posture and try to hide a smile.
I won’t win this one. I know it and you know it. I drop down on the bed; stare at the ceiling and exhale, “Fine. Here’s what I cannot say! It frightens me when you disappear right in front of me. When whatever it is takes over your body and pulls at my strength. I cannot say that in seven short years I’ve mastered hiding my own desires and wants and needs in my emotional closet so as not to disrupt your life when you’re home.”
I turn my head and look over at you. You do not look up. Your hands are on your knees and your head is bowed and I want to crawl into your lap, but I stay where I am.
I take a soft breath and continue, quietly, “I cannot say that I feel insignificant and unworthy because I can never find the perfect balm to soothe you or the exact words to pull from you the seed of your angst. That without reason, I began to believe I am that seed and I want to deny my own thirst so as not to grow the weed. I cannot say… that I have enough love for both of us if you would just trust that enough to let me crawl in to the place where you need comfort.”
I hear you cross the room, feel you lie down beside me. You take my hand and in a voice so soft I can barely hear your words, you begin, “I cannot say to you that I am scared to death and fear nothing. That I want my own things and my own time and my own space and need to be with my own thoughts until I know what I’ve seen and what I’ve done and who I am is all one and I am solid again. I need sex for my hunger and food for strength and I don’t want to talk or think or be and I can’t love and I can’t feel and I never know if any of that will come back and I need you to wait.”
You wrap yourself around me and whisper, “I cannot give you up or let you go or leave you behind. And I love you beyond all reason and I cannot stand your tenderness or your tears when I’m like this and I cannot make you understand the difference. I cannot say I am afraid of your love.”
I say, “I wonder, if you lock anger in a box, does it stay there forever? Does it stay there long after your gone? And who opens it in the end?”
You roll over and stare at the ceiling for a long moment and say, “You do. And you bury it in the sand.”
The ocean took the rest of our words and drowned our hurt well into the night.
Mary-Beth stands at the edge of the table and studies me, biting her lip. When I look up at her she asks, “Are you hungry, honey?”
I shake my head.
Silently, she refills my cup, pats me on the shoulder and walks away.
“I don’t know how to deal with his intense and unexplained anger,” I say.
The priest considers me, steeples his fingers, sighs deeply, “And what is it you do to make him angry?”
“I… Perhaps I’m not being clear…” I look over at you, at the hint of an ‘I told you this wouldn’t work’ on your lips. I sit forward, “He. Wakes. Up. Angry…. He. Comes. Through. The. Door. Angry!”
“Entirely true,” you say.
The priest nods at you, looks at me and says, “I see. And so, it must be something you’ve done. Come now. Think hard.”
I want the secret code from God to unlock your soul and calm the fire inside you. I want guidance and help. I’m entirely sure I do something every three minutes to make you mad, but that’s not why we’re here. There is anger and there is this… this furious rage. How do I battle an unknown terror that eats away at your soul, puts your fist through walls, and frightens our babies?
“I’m done here,” I say.
From the hallway I hear, “Go with God, Son.”
I think: God better have a separate car.
You come out smiling, take my hand, and say, “To be fair, the Monsignor doesn’t have a clue what it’s like being married to me.”
“He doesn’t have a clue what it’s like being married. Period!”
“Point,” you laugh.
I let go of your hand. “There’s not one damn thing funny about this. Is it me, Steve? Is all that rage, all of this because of something I did?”
“No. I told you that when you left. I’ve told you that every week since. It’s gone, over, locked down.”
I want to believe you.
You take my elbow, open the car door and say, “Buckle up, I have an idea…”
The words remind me of us before the fury; before life became wrapped in anger, before I bolted like a frightened child. I am so lost without you. I close my eyes while you drive and silently ask God to skip over the middle man and just give me the key to your peace.
He does, but He makes me wait until we’re at a hotel coffee shop in Del Mar.
I wonder now if death would be easier on us – the living – if we knew the answers to all the questions we can never ask. Was life enough? Did you feel loved? Were you relieved when the angels came and said, ‘Well done, Son, let’s go home now.’ But more than anything, I want to know in your last moments, did you think of me?
Lynnette Bukowski © 2014 All Rights Reserved
*sniffle* You always manage to make my cry. Not that this is a bad thing. 🙂
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That last question, you don’t need to ask. You know he did. “Will she be all right, Lord? Will You keep her safe? Will You comfort her? Will You let her know I’m still right there, watching over her, loving her, missing her like crazy?” And I can hear the Lord reply, “Steve, I saw her through everything else, I’ll see her through this. You’re welcome to stand guard. It will only be for a small moment.”
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Well… your beautiful words and gentle reminder brought a beautiful rush of morning tears. Thank you.
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Judy – so
intuitive & wonderful.
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I know that unknowable rage… That look of the “caged coon” (that made me smile) … Is it just what makes them able to do what they do? Or a result of what they do? Or both? And I have feared the rage too, but never my man. You capture all of these intricacies so well, Lynn, and your writing ALWAYS move me to tears. I can’t wait for your book. What a beautiful life you and Steve have shared, in all its tumultuous, passionate glory. Much love!
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JoAnne… such precious lives we lead. I had a difficult time writing this chapter because part of me does not want to remember that rage or portray Steve as anything less than the loving soul he was. The truth is, we lived through it and came out better the other end. So many of us do… and for those “in it now” … perhaps it will provide a small hope that they too can walk through fire. We are all coming together and falling apart… I’m very glad you are in my life with your kind words and ways… and your indomitable strength. Thank you.
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Lynn – I can’t believe what I’m reading – it’s so raw & wonderful at the same time. I want one of your very 1st books printed – I want more of you & your journey.
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It’s been a year now. It’s getting less painful most days. But you’re right about the questions at the end. You have captured it perfectly. Nice to know it’s not just me that feels that way. Thank you.
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Thank you. My husband of 30 years passed over 27 Oct 2011. Although our journeys were totally different, there was much in your writing that I could take and hold close. Neither of us know the other nor our grief roads, but know this – between my husband and my Father, I’ve gotten this far…so forward and onward. May God bless you in your grief and in your endeavors. Again, thank you.
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He is with you where ever you go. He your guardian angel!
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Wow. This is sad. And beautiful.
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Hard to read because it’s so raw and so real…and so hopeful, because although I didn’t know you or your husband, I know how much you loved each other. And the love does live on. HUGS.
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Has “Married to the Navy Seals” book been published yet? I’ve been unable to find it on Amazon. Thanks so much. I so enjoy your blog.
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The book is not yet published, JK. I’m anticipating late 2014 now. I’ll be sure to announce it far and wide when I know. Thank you so much for your kindness.
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