Never Forget

Dear Luciana,

I’m about to tell you something about me that Mommy didn’t even know. It’s not something I hid from her. It just never came up.

A couple of days ago it was April 16th. On the 16th, 19 years ago, a student at Virginia Tech murdered 32 innocent people.

That was the year I graduated college.

I wasn’t awake when it happened. I was skipping class, which was weird for me. I very rarely skipped class.

If you’ve ever seen the video of the gunshots being recorded from outside, that was right in front of the building I was supposed to be in.

You would think that would have kept me up at night. It didn’t. I don’t think my brain comprehended how close I was to dying. It didn’t feel real.

Mommy dying felt real. Mommy dying felt like I died. Virginia Tech was my brain finding the nearest exit.

I woke up to a bunch of missed messages asking if I was okay. I didn’t know anyone who died, but it was impossible not to know people who knew people.

Everything about that time was surreal. The entire world descended upon Blacksburg. If that sounds familiar to how I describe what life was like after Mommy died, it’s because it was.

National news teams were everywhere. People I knew were being interviewed on different news channels. Helicopters in the sky, cameras set up everywhere. It gave me my first glimpse into what life was like when the whole world is staring at you and all you want is the opposite.

Months later a scene in a TV show triggered what I now know was probably a panic attack. That was new to me. Nothing that traumatic had ever happened to me before.

Afterwards there were memorials for those who died. The community even came up with a slogan within the next couple of days.

Never forget.

Why am I telling you this now?

Because I forgot.

Never forget was the promise. I broke it without noticing.

I obviously have been through a lot the past couple of years. But even if my mind wasn’t a bowl of leftover oatmeal from all the grief I’ve been dealing with, I still probably would have forgotten.

The only reason I remembered is because I logged onto Facebook and saw a post about it yesterday. I never would have remembered on my own.

Does this mean I’m one day going to forget about the day Mommy died?

No.

Unless I become senile or have some traumatic brain injury.

And I’d have to top having your wife die when your daughter is 9 months old. Good luck, universe.

The year after April 16th happened was such a big deal to those who were there when it happened.

Then two years.

Then five.

Then ten.

Now all of a sudden it’s two decades later, and while people remember, people also move on with their lives.

And it’s the same with Mommy.

I’m still going to be grieving a decade later, and other people who knew Mommy will grieve, but it won’t be the same.

I wonder what the friends and family members were thinking three days ago. Do they still have the same pain as when it happened?

Do they still have nightmares?

Do they still have panic attacks?

Do they get to move on?

Besitos,

Daddy

I’ll Give You My Credit Card

Dear Luciana,

A jackhammer was taking up residence in my brain when I picked you up from your Abuela. For the past three weeks I have been going into the office every single day. 45 minute commute each way all in traffic. I’m so tired.

But it was the day I always take you to the indoor playground with all the big slides. When I picked you up I asked you if you wanted to go. Hoping with all hope in the entire world that you would say no.

Of course you didn’t.

I want playgwound.

You sure? How about if I let you watch Mickey Mouse all night long?

Playgwound.

I’ll give you candy.

Playgwound.

I’ll let you stay up until midnight.

Playgwound.

I’ll give you my credit card.

PLLLAAAYGWWWWWOUND!!!!!!!!!!!

So we went to the playgwound. I mean playground. I thought I was going to hate myself for going.

But even with the migraine it was totally worth it.

While waiting in line you made friends with a 4 year old named Isabelle. You were obsessed with her. You followed her everywhere. Asked to hold her hand and play house. Made her hug all the teddy bears next to the slide.

I could barely keep my eyes open because the fluorescent lights were making me want to vomit.

It’s usually just us.

And only us.

Getting to see you play with someone in throwing distance of your age was so cute. After an hour I had to go. I was actually afraid I wasn’t even going to make it home before passing out.

You cried so much when I carried you out. I felt so bad.

The next morning I still had to go into the office. I was exhausted. I was tired, and normally I would just bitch and moan about my life sucking because Mommy is dead. But not this time.

This time I stayed present. I stayed off my phone. I stayed in the moment and watched you play.

It was amazing.

It was temporary.

But I did it.

Mommy would be proud.

Besitos,

Daddy.

Where Is the Stop Button

Dear Luciana,

So today I realized something. At the end of the book, I wrote about how when you were cranky, I would flip you upside down to get you to stop crying. I can’t do that anymore.

I don’t even remember the last time I did it. It must have been months ago. You still love being carried, that hasn’t changed. But I can no longer flip you upside down and let your legs dangle around my neck. You are too big.

Why are you doing that to me? Why are you growing so quickly? Do you know you cause me an existential crisis every time you do something like this? In about four months you are going from daycare to preschool. In the past two months you’ve gone from barely talking to talking nonstop. I need to take some Lorazepam.

Where is the stop button?

Besitos,

Daddy

Living in a Mausoleum

Dear Luciana,

I lived in that house for twelve years. I met Mommy right before I moved in, so by the time she died, every room was hers. The furniture she picked, the paint colors she argued for, the random Target finds she swore we needed. The whole place was a museum I never agreed to curate. I wanted out almost immediately. Every corner was a trigger. Walking past the kitchen felt like visiting a grave. But wanting to leave meant admitting I couldn’t handle being surrounded by her anymore, which felt like the first step toward forgetting her.

Except you can’t just leave a dead person’s house. You have to go through it. Every drawer, every shelf, every closet she stuffed with things I didn’t know we owned. Each item is a tiny decision: keep, donate, trash. And every single one feels like a betrayal no matter which pile it lands in. Throwing out her old magazines feels like throwing out a piece of her. Keeping a broken picture frame because she bought it feels insane. There’s no system for this. There’s no right answer. You just stand there holding a candle from HomeGoods and wonder if this is the one that matters.

The guilt is the part nobody warns you about. Not the packing, not the sorting, not the logistics. The guilt of wanting to leave the place where your life together happened. Like the house itself is watching you walk out. I needed to go because staying was killing me slowly, but going felt like I was the one doing the leaving this time. She didn’t get a choice. Now I’m making one for both of us, and I hate it.

Besitos,

Daddy

The Angriest I’ve Been Since Mommy Died

Dear Luciana,

We were at the indoor playground. You were playing with another kid, maybe five years old. I wanted you to have space to play without me hovering. Five minutes in, the kid hit you across the face. On purpose.

The kid said it was an accident. It wasn’t. I was watching. She lied. I got gaslit by a five year old.

You screamed. Not the whiny cry. The real one. I looked for the parents. Nobody. The place was packed and I couldn’t find them. I wanted to yell at that kid. I wanted to find her parents and tell them what I thought of them. I’ve never been that angry. Even in those first weeks after Mommy died when everything was rage and nothing and rage again.

I picked you up. You were still crying. Her parents never showed up. What am I supposed to do in that situation? Yell at some kid that should know better? I made her apologize. Mommy would have gone ballistic until she found the parents. Mommy probably wouldn’t have let you play that far away in the first place. I still haven’t figured out the balance between giving you independence and making sure you don’t get beat up by a bigger kid.

Besitos,

Daddy

The Night I Didn’t Care If You Cried

Dear Luciana,

Every night when Mommy and I went to sleep, I would turn on a fan and have it blast in my face while she slept under a pile of blankets. I’m never cold. In fact, Mommy always called me her personal heater. The night after Mommy died, I had never been so cold in my entire life. I buried myself under a mountain of blankets that felt like they weighed a thousand pounds, my teeth chattering so hard I thought they’d crack. One wrapped around each leg. Rocking back and forth. My body hanging half off the bed.

But that was only temporary. Every few minutes I would flip the pillow to the cool side, but there was no cool side left. I was sweating through the pillowcase, soaking through three different t-shirts. I put on the ceiling fan and the stand-up fan. Both blasted arctic air while my body burned like I didn’t even have skin.

I was surrounded by the entire world, suffocating in my room. Friends downstairs, family inside the hallway. Everyone on top of me, and I never felt so far away from a living soul.

My brother slept in my room that night, and a lot of the following nights. My siblings would switch off. Everyone made sure I was sleeping okay. I wasn’t. They made sure I ate. I didn’t.

The heat was from the rage of never seeing Mommy again; the cold was from the isolation I knew would be my life going forward. They took turns pummeling me into nothing. That spiral would continue, never as intense as that first night.

I slept in our bed, surrounded by her absence. The indent where Mommy should have been still held the shape of her body. Her nightstand with her Bible still open to the day before she died. It was one of those Bibles that had a prayer for every day of the year. Its thin pages had her fingerprints still on them. I couldn’t look at it. I couldn’t close it. The book stayed unmoved for weeks.

My phone pinged every few minutes.

Delete.

Delete.

Delete.

I put it on vibrate. I couldn’t handle whatever people thought they should say to make this better.

Bzzz.

Bzzz.

Bzzz.

The phone was getting dangerously close to being thrown into the toilet. I put it on silent and left it that way.

Time had no meaning. Hours went by, and the clock next to my bed would lie to me.

8:01.

8:14.

8:16.

7:52.

I slept and moved around, and talked and existed. But there was no order to it. It was just a blob of out-of-body existence. I was never there. I wasn’t with Mommy, either, in case you were wondering. I was alone.

I will always be alone.

Did I say anything to you that night? Did I notice if you were crying in your crib while I stared at ceiling fans? Did I even care?

At my darkest moment, was I strong and thinking of you and your needs?

No.

All that mattered was the next breath. Not for me, I didn’t care about me. I was staying alive for everyone watching. Your abuelos had lost their only child. My family circled me like worried guards. People were checking on me every hour. At that time, I didn’t want to survive. Not for me, or even, and this destroys me to write, for you.

I don’t know who I will be as a daddy when you read this. Will I be a good daddy? Did we get through the tough times? It didn’t start out that way. When you needed me the most. I was a black hole. But somewhere in the wreckage of my brain, there was a tiny smidgen of a glimmer that I needed to be healthy for you. I wasn’t. I didn’t. I couldn’t. I knew I needed to be.

Who checked on you that night? Who fed you when you were hungry? Who held you close when you needed attention? I don’t remember. But someone must have. The house overflowed with people making sure you stayed alive. You were somewhere in that house, nine months old, needing everything.

Everyone switched shifts, watching me evaporate while you played, while you cried, while you ate.

The house was never quiet. I became the center of the universe at the exact time I wanted the opposite. Someone was always awake, lurking in the hallway. Someone was always making sure the fridge was full. I had never had so much food in my house, none of which I could force down my throat. All of these loving people became my minimum-security prison.

That first night I was jealous of Mommy. If you had told me I could switch places with her, I would have agreed instantly. I would have done anything to feel nothing.

The ten-minute intervals of sleep were little help. At least during the nightmares my body stopped burning. Waking up meant the burning, and Mommy still being dead.

That first night wasn’t about being your daddy. It wasn’t about grief or loss or any of the words people use to make death sound manageable. It was about my body rejecting a world where Mommy didn’t exist. While everyone was making sure I didn’t follow her wherever she’d gone.

The next day, I would have to pretend to be human. That night, I just had to not disappear completely.

Besitos, 

Daddy