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

The Arm Never Grows Back

Dear Vanessa,

Last month was two years.

I didn’t do anything special for it. I don’t even know how to mark the day. It’s kind of weird we don’t have a word for the anniversary of someone’s death.

Or do we?

Jewish people have a word. It’s called Yahrzeit. But that’s it. I googled. No actual universal word for it. That’s weird.

I was going to post something sappy and upload it to Instagram because when I upload stuff to Instagram people buy the book. But in the end I didn’t do that. Not out of shame or anything like that. I just didn’t want to.

I was thinking about it though. I have said in the book multiple times that people don’t get to grieve the way they want.

For example. If I wanted to live stream myself crying at your gravestone and upload that to Instagram, I should be able to do that without being judged.

But people would judge it. They would think it’s cringe. Or self-absorbed. Or maybe even a little bit gross because in the end I’m posting so people will buy my book.

I think those people should go fuck themselves.

You are dead. If I want to be self-absorbed I should get to do that as long as I’m not hurting myself or anybody else.

But that’s not how it works.

So am I doing better after two years?

What does better mean?

If I chop off my arm, the arm never grows back. I’m never happy that I’m missing an arm. But I do get used to it.

Like, I’m not taking seven lorazepams a day. It would be disingenuous to say I’m in the same place I was when you died.

I’m taking things “day by day.” “One step at a time.” All of that cliche bullshit.

However, they are cliche for a reason.

They are cliche because those sayings work.

I know this because I’m still here.

Besitos,

Michael


When Mommy Means I Miss You

Dear Vanessa,

I wrote a letter in the book about how when Luciana called your mother Mommy, I felt a certain way about it. Well, that was over six months ago at this point. Although it feels like yesterday. Time has no meaning after you died.

Luciana says Mommy all the time now. She has called me Mommy. She has called your mother Mommy. Even random people get called Mommy.

I finally figured out what she is saying.

When she calls someone Mommy, it is usually when she is upset. It is usually what happens when someone is leaving. When she calls someone Mommy, it means I miss you.

I hate it.

Before you call me a Grinch, I am allowed to hate it. I know it might seem cute. I know some people might think it is a connection to you.

Nope.

I hate it.

I want you to be Mommy. I do not want Mommy to mean me, or your mother, or some sweet little toddler translation into something meaningful and profound.

I want Mommy to mean you. And only you.

Does that make me cranky? Probably.

I am not going to correct her. I have learned that lesson. But I will nudge her in the right direction. I will continuously give her positive reinforcement when you are called Mommy.

You will always be Mommy. No matter how cute the alternative is.

Besitos,

Michael