There's this thing that happens, more often lately than before. It's not a bad thing or a good thing, it's just...a thing.

As we've started focusing really hard on cleaning and sorting and shedding all of the *stuff* we collected over the years we're uncovering all sorts of things. Stuff that makes me say, "why on earth did we keep that!?" or, "oh wow, I've been wondering where that went."

We don't need this anymore, that was a stress purchase, this is from when they were toddlers, wow.

Those jeans haven't fit in ten years! Heh.

But the thing that happens as I pull boxes out and sift through the usual opened credit card applications I meant to shred, and the water bill from two years ago - the piles of paper that were covering the counter and you just don't have the energy to sort so you chuck it in a box and call it good.

There's a drawing with Gus written on the back. And all of the air leaves the room in a flash.

It's a box you put together purposely before he even died, of things that you knew you'd want later.

And it's just unexpected. You forget you'd been stashing those things since May of 2015.

You had his signature tattooed over your heart because you knew deep inside that one day you would let go of the papers he'd written on and it would never get any more advanced.

And now you were just going to shred all those old bills but without warning you have to decide whether to keep this piece of paper or put it in the recycling bin. It's easy with Charlie's. His will be replaced over and over again, only the really unique things are kept so that he can look back many years from now and see his history. Then decide if it's memories he wants to keep longer or let them go.

Memorializing your child changes your perspective on letting go. Some parents can never let go of anything again. Sometimes it gets easier. 

That thing cannot replace my child. How much of his memory does it hold, and does it bring me joy.

The seventeenth "weekly work" page is easy. No, jesus, chuck it.

But this drawing, do I know when he made it? Do I know what it is? Is it just his name that catches me?

Once the first page pops up and you breathe through the surprise and make the choice, you spend the rest of your sorting preparing to find more, to choose. The further you get the easier it is to smile and file it in the recycling.

It's a thing that happens that every parent goes through to some extent, usually at the end of the school year when everything comes home.

But it's just slightly different for us.

It's a thing.

Do I keep the last prescriptions he was given for the intense drugs we used to keep him comfortable while he died? 

Or not. 
Why yes, I am awake at 4:00 am, how kind of you to notice. Parked on the couch with Gus, waiting to see if he's going to throw up again, and Charlie who notice the commotion and insisted on joining us. We're watching Mickey Mouse Clubhouse. Thank god for 24/7 preschooler programming I guess. :/

I recorded our entire journey through our son's cancer diagnoses and eventual death, and the grief that followed. In an effort to make our story publicly accessible I am slowly transferring all of those posts here from Facebook - starting at the beginning. Some posts may be lacking greater context as a result, and the story may be incomplete for a long time. It is a very slow process, but I feel there is value in presenting the path as it unfolded

January 2022

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