Sweet boy, I drove one our favorite routes today.
The road has taken some damage over the years. So have I. The view, however, was ever the same.
Grandma and Aunt Dolly went to see a friend from church play at the Batesville Market. It isn’t the kind of place we would have taken you. The building is old and not accessible. I had to carry Aunt Dolly’s walker up a few stairs and then help guide her as she climbed.
It felt good to care for someone, even slightly, the way I did for you.
After leaving them settled, I went straight instead of turning around to get home. You loved our drives—especially that stretch of road. We would listen to music and on nights like this we would have rolled down the windows. I can still see you—mouth open smile and eyes squinting—as the wind hit your face. You would shake your head, flap your arms, and bounce with delight.
The road is long and winding with majestic mountain views. There are historic homes, gigantic mansions, and farmland with cows and horses. It is quintessential Virginia.
I sobbed.
Please God, give me something, anything.
Relieve this pain even a little.
Give me peace. Let me know You are here and I am not alone. A sign.
Anything?
He was the best part of me, my whole world, and you took Him. Why? Why would you do that to me?
I am here. Your daughter. Your child is alone and hurt and scared. Won’t you do anything at all to help me?
Please God. Please.
Sometimes He calms the storm.
Sometimes He calms the child.
Sometimes He does nothing.
Or so it feels.
Grief has revealed a depth of my soul I never knew existed—where tears and agony are abundant. Or perhaps she found the now empty place where you once were and settled right in.
When God took you back, sweet boy, your heart became infected with bacteria. It spread everywhere.
When God made me stay, my heart became infected with Grief. She invades everything.
At the end of the drive, I dried my tears and ended my lamentation with:
I am holding on to You anyway.
I was surprised Grandma and Aunt Dolly wanted to stay the entire time. It tickled my heart to envision two ladies in their eighties hanging out listening to jazz on a Friday night.
When I left a couple of hours later to pick up them up, I stood at the car and looked up at the beautiful spring sky. This time of year, every part of creation announces the new season—even the stars.
Okay, God. I am asking again for a sign. Would You show me a shooting star? At least let me know I am not alone.
Sweet boy, wouldn’t you know one appeared as soon as I finished asking?
It wasn’t particularly spectacular in brightness or length—just a whisper and had I not been looking at that exact spot in the sky I might have missed it.
The feeling might not last, but it came and that matters.
It is a lifeline I can grab on to when the abyss comes—and it assuredly does.
I miss you, sweet boy, more than I ever knew a heart could.
At this point, living captive by Grief for eight weeks, I will take promises yet to be.
For the first time I thought—
just maybe,
I am going to be all right.




