257

Today is day 257. 257 days of feeling lost, untethered, disconnected. 257 days of waking up to the same thought. She’s gone. Emery died. She’s never coming back. 257 days of not being able to text her or call her, but mostly text her because she hated talking on the phone. 257 days of a missing that is so deep I feel it in my bones, and they hurt. 257 days of holding my breath when family members don’t immediately return my call or text. My mind goes to the dark side because now I know that terrible and unpredictable things not only can happen, but do. 257 nights of either sleeping twelve hours and still not feeling ready to get up, or not sleeping at all. 257 days of wondering where I went and if I’ll ever be back. 217 days of counting days, starting on day 40, which is a significant day in many religions, but only became significant to me because there was a gathering of some of Emery’s friends on day 40, and I wrote about it in my journal of letters to her. The next day, I wrote 41 next to the date, and I’ve been writing the day ever since.

I remember day 100. I was in Manzanita, Oregon, staying in a cottage on the beach that I had rented the year before. This year was a much different stay. My walks on the beach were tearful and sad, and didn’t hold the wonder and awe they held the previous year. I was marking time until my sons and their families’ arrival for a visit. When I wasn’t walking on the beach, I was sleeping on the blue couch, the one that faced the ocean, and held me during the afternoons when everything else felt too hard. Napping was an easy escape.

That morning, on day 100, I was walking down the beach when my son-in-law, Miles, called me. We exchanged grief stories: What do your days look like? How’s your sleep? How are Arlo and Muna? How are you? Then he told me he needed to talk to me about something, words that had me finding a place to sit down. He was considering a move to Costa Rica with the children…for a year. It was something he and Emery had discussed after their second trip there, and something Emery had also mentioned to me. My first reaction was panic, thinking he couldn’t possibly take Arlo and Muna, or himself, away from their support systems. Or me, which is really where I landed. It would be more loss on top of the loss I was still buried under. He told me he was struggling with living in the house, surrounded by Emery’s things. Nosara, Costa Rica, would be a start fresh, where they would feel Emery’s energy, but not be inundated by her things. It made sense. How could they possibly heal while navigating around the massive crater that the loss of Emery had left? Maneuvering around the hole in their lives while doing the things that Emery had always been a part of — school drop off and pick up, going to the store, friends’ houses for play dates, excursions for ice cream, the park, and all the other places that everyday life took them, but without their anchor.

Arlo and Muna were following in their Dad’s lead…tiptoeing around the places, the feelings and the things that were Emery, while attempting to find as much normalcy as possible. Leaving made sense, and moving to Nosara, even more so, as they had dreamed of living there for a year to raise bilingual and multicultural children. By the time we hung up, I had given Miles my full approval. Then, with the Pacific Ocean in front of me, I wept. It would be another goodbye. Another loss. I started wondering where I belonged. Emery was the one who brought me to Boulder, and now she was gone. And soon, Miles and the children would be gone as well.

I felt a similar disconnect with Boulder that Miles was experiencing. So many places had become emotional triggers. I couldn’t go into shops where Emery and I frequented, or where the owners knew her, or restaurants where we often ate. I have left my home more than I’ve stayed.

Since January 4, 2025, I’ve been on 16 flights, mainly to LA and Portland, Oregon, and have slept in 18 different beds, as well as one night in a chair in the ICU at Foothills Hospital in Boulder. I’ve driven from Boulder to Portland and back, from Boulder to Kansas City and back three times, and from Boulder to LA, where I’m currently staying for the month of September. Boulder has become a difficult place for me to be, but at the same time, it is where so much of Emery was, and I don’t want to lose that.

Recently, I visited her house and walked through her wildflower spiral garden, a spiral I had often walked with Arlo and Muna in the summer. One particular day, while Arlo and Muna were trying to find their “pet” toad, who lived among the flowers, I glanced over and saw Emery standing at the side of the garden, smiling —something she often did while watching me play with Arlo and Muna. I returned her smile, a gesture deep with emotion and understood by both of us: love, for each other and love for Arlo and Muna. Afterwards, I gave her some suggestions on how she could control the weeds the following year, and she smiled and nodded her head, but we both knew she wouldn’t do it. Any of it, because she liked a wild garden, but knew I’d make the suggestions as I did every summer. Being there without her or the children was one of the loneliest moments I’ve felt since she died. It was more confirmation to me that Miles had made the right decision by moving to Costa Rica for the year, even though I missed them dearly.

Over the last 257 days, my writing has shifted to pieces about Emery and grief because I write about what life shows me and what I feel, and that is my current life loop. My routine remains unchanged and I still get up every morning at 7:00, make my coffee, and sit down at my computer to write for at least two hours.

Shortly before the Costa Rica move, Muna came over for a sleepover. While she was carefully taking her things out of the toiletry bag that had once belonged to Emery and organizing them on my bathroom counter (her toothbrush, toothpaste, a plastic unicorn, a tube of lipstick and two of Emery’s hair clips), she spotted my robe hanging next to my bathtub. My grandchildren are curious about things they don’t usually see of mine, like pajamas and robes, as well as what I look like when I brush my teeth, what I read before I go to sleep and if I sleep with a nightlight on. Muna told me my robe was beautiful. I agreed and told her that her Mama had given it to me last Christmas because she thought I needed to look nice when I got up in the morning to write. I’ve worn it every morning since she gave it to me, except when it’s in the laundry, and I love that my morning writing routine came to mind in the shop where she purchased it. Muna liked her Mama’s suggestion that I look nice when I write, and told me, “Well, I don’t drink coffee in the morning, or ever, and I don’t write, except for my name, but I would wear a robe if I had one.” Before I could respond, she added, “Especially if it had dogs on it! Then I would wear it EVERY morning!”

I’ll be going to Costa Rica in October for Muna’s sixth birthday, and there will be a pink robe in my suitcase with dogs and hearts all over it. We will wear our robes together while I drink coffee and she doesn’t. And we will look nice, and Emery would have loved it.

For 257 days, and often without warning, I’ve cried. Sometimes, it hits me with the same fervency as it did at 11:38 am on the morning of January 4th. No one should ever have to relive those feelings of anguish that present themselves, frequently and at unexpected moments…while walking up my stairs to go to bed, or getting into my car after grocery shopping, or on a hiking trail or a neighborhood walk. It usually passes quickly, but leaves a feeling that wants to hang on.

I often return to the memory of telling Emery goodbye, while machines kept her alive in a hospital in Denver, her time on this earth being left in her family’s hands, who told the doctors when to turn the machines off. A tiny part of me thinks there might be a different outcome when I go through that last day in my mind. Much in the same way, I would call my Dad’s phone after he died, thinking maybe, just maybe, he’ll answer. Of course, he never did, but what if he had? Joan Didion called it magical thinking. I call it misplaced hopefulness or not being able to accept reality. But the ending doesn’t change. Miles still gives the doctor a nod, indicating that we’re ready, and she still shuts down the machines. The doctor still gives Emery her final physical exam, and she still pulls out her phone to do what I’ve seen so many times in the movies, yet I still brace myself, knowing what’s next. “Time of death, 11:38 am.” The nurse still writes it down.

The room goes quiet. So quiet I think I can hear every one of our hearts beating, but the one that stopped beating is the one that is the loudest. My heart hovers in the space between where I’m standing and Emery, who is now referred to as a body, is lying. Maybe it’s not sure where it belongs. Maybe it still doesn’t know, 257 days later.

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