In our relationship, Mike is the pessimist and I’m the optimist. Some of it is our personalities, some is life experiences. When Mike is down about something, I pump him up. When I am overly excited, he brings me back to earth. For ten years, we’ve filled those roles, and it’s worked for us.
I used to believe that all my dreams would come true. I wasn’t naive enough to think that everything would go the way I planned, but I was young and thought that if I worked hard and lived right, I could achieve everything I wanted. Setbacks were temporary. I was annoyingly confident. I was always able to come back from whatever life threw at me, because I believed everything would work out.
And you know, I think after Maddie died, I bounced back because it was habit – almost reflex. I also had Annie coming, and frankly, I was too numb to do anything else but bounce back. My optimism eventually returned, although not like it was before. And that would have been fine. But then my friend died, my aunt died, I miscarried, and Jackie died, and now my optimism is a shell of what it was.
I sometimes wonder what it would be like to completely give in and lose the shards of optimism I have left. Would it be easier? I am so bruised from all the bouncing back. I don’t want to do it anymore – don’t want to have to do it anymore, more precisely. But I know more bad things are waiting for me down the road, that’s how life works. And the old me is in there somewhere, saying, “You can do this. It’s just a setback. You’ll recover.”
The old me is exhausting. The current me is exhausted. The future me…I don’t know. I hope she can keep bouncing.
Mrs Woog says:
Like a basketball Heather. BOUNCE! If you can be fucked…. Today?. Or tomorrow. One day, whenever. Xx
Mijke says:
It will come back. Eventually. But you don’t have to go out of your way to find it just yet… It’s okay to give in for a while.
Yes, life has a way of throwing bad things around, and most people bounce back not too long after. But the things that have been thrown YOUR way in the past couple of years have been so many and so frequent that no one will blame you if you tell your optimism to go chase it’s tail for a while. Let someone else be the optimist for now. It’s okay.
Tracey says:
it’s ok to be sad. I don’t think we ever let go of all the sadness. Just make sure that you have a lifeline to hold on to so you don’t get stuck in the abyss.
Editdebs says:
I wish I had wiser words to give you, but just know we are there for you whether you’re an optimist, pessimist, or somewhere in between. Hugs and love being sent via internet.
Lanie says:
“Exhausted Optimist” is such a perfect description. After Jake died and I was pregnant with the twins I would tell people I was cautiously optimistic. Since Sawyer died I am searching for that glimpse of optimism – as you wrote it gets harder to bounce back. If I find any secret shortcuts to finding the bounce I will let you know right away. Sending hugs and hope. Take care. xo
Krista says:
You have been through more than anyone should have to. I’m sorry for that. I marvel at your strength and appreciate how open you are with us! I think of you and your sweet family often and hope you are doing well. Sorry if that’s weird coming from a stranger.
Lyndsey says:
These things seem to always come in waves. In a relatively short period of time when I was a child we lost three grandparents, a great grandparent, and two of my uncles. Most of them unexpectedly. As a kid, it was hard on me, but I’m sure it was harder on my parents (especially my mom because they included both her parents and her brother). It just seemed like it would never stop and the phone ringing was always going to be bad news. But for the past decade+, we haven’t lost anyone and life has continued to get better with different milestones. Graduations, weddings, births. I think you just need some solid non-tragic years, honestly. It will come back.
Krissa says:
Thinking good thoughts for you.
Jenn says:
Life can be so cruel and certainly does have a way to bring us down but I believe no matter what happens, it’s our core that stays the same. Your core is strong, positive and is inspirational. You may be cracked Heather, but you are FAR from BROKEN. Take one small step at time with the promise “This Too Shall Pass” and when it does, slowly but surely you will find that positve, fun loving, kind hearted woman reappeaer with that BEAUTIFUL Smile & AMAZING Spirit we’ve ALL come to adore!!!
o
Melli says:
Keep bouncing heather
TamaraL says:
You will keep bouncing…for your family…for your ANNIE…and eventually for you.
nicol says:
You’re amazingly strong. I wish you didn’t have to be. Much love to you and yours.
Meg says:
I know (to some degree) how you feel, Heather… I have always, always been the optimist, the hopeless romantic, the thumbs-up “things are great!” friend. However, I lost a very close friend suddenly and violently (and in front of me) last year. I dealt with the grief and loss through counseling, and like you said it’s almost like when you’re numb enough you can bounce back. Months later I unexpectedly met someone and fell in love (I thought maybe my friend “sent” him to me…) only to have him break up with me very suddenly and unexpectedly last week. I feel like I’m right back to where I started, the day my friend died. It’s hard to see the light at the end of the tunnel. A few of my friends have kept saying things like “You’re the strong one, you’ll be fine!” and “You always pull through the tough times!” but lately I wonder if I can continue to be that person… and where I signed up to be on the “strong” list to begin with. It’s honestly hard to imagine trusting that good things will happen to me again; I’ve started wondering if happiness is just something that happens to other people. Anyway I guess I’m writing just to let you know that you’re not alone in feeling that way. Hopefully our old optimistic selves will return someday…
Kim Wencl says:
You WILL find joy again Heather … you just have to take it slowly. Start a gratitude journal. Every day sit down and write down all the things that you are thankful for. You have 2 beautiful daughters — and a great husband! They all love you beyond measure and Annie and Mike need you. You WILL bounce back because you OWE it to all of them to do so.
Ashley Hast says:
Hope your ‘bouncer’ is fixed soon. Thoughts and prayers.
Jenn says:
It’s harder to bounce back from giving up completely. Everyone constantly creeping around on eggshells so that they don’t do or say the wrong thing. My own mother at one point wanted to have me committed to a psychiatric facility because I just couldn’t function outside of sleep and tears.
As exhausting as it definitely is, it’s so much easier to put on the face and push through. Don’t forget to take time for you, even if it’s just a solo trip to the grocery store or post office.
xxoo
Kathy says:
I unfortunately know how you feel. To much loss already in my life and now 5 people diagnosed with cancer in a 6 month time frame. It really get’s tiring having to put on the everything is fine face some days. I to lost a best friend – suddenly. I understand where you are coming from and I do not blame you for your feelings….BUT…we do need to get up and put one foot in front of the other every day and before we know it we will be genuinely smiling again. I have told my friends and family that I am on One Day at a Time mode for now. No long terms plans etc. that just stresses me out more! Hang in there. I will, if you do!
Ninabi says:
You have had the awful sorrow of losing a child. Combined with losing other people you loved dearly, it’s understandable that it would be difficult to bounce back. Bouncing- it sounds like such a jolly word, something Tigger would do and if life isn’t very happy, bouncing may not be appropriate.
What is? Perhaps slow, quiet steps forward. I lost three family members within a year- a beloved cousin, my uncle and my wonderful dad. Within months, a terrible trauma befell my son. I thought I was at the end of my coping. I couldn’t even be alone in the house or I’d be overwhelmed with sadness and fear, crying.
In all of this, I wondered, as you do, how do you move forward? “Moving on” sounds cold, as if loved ones were to be forgotten.
Being kind to yourself is so important- it is too easy to blame yourself or think back on some small detail (“if only I had thought to call that day!”) with regret.
Be good to yourself, and continue to talk and write and share about the people who you love so much and dearly miss. I found time and long talks to be the most soothing. At the worst, lowest point, a trip helped immensely- it was a distraction and I made sure to spend hours walking and walking past new scenery, which took away the stress and gave my shattered soul something else to focus on for a bit.
Hugs to you. You have had a lot of loss.
Angela says:
It sounds like your optimist batteries are drained.
As others have said, it will take time and being gentle with yourself to get recharged. May I also suggest playing panda bears?
Glenda says:
With time… You will bounce back. It’s hard but don’t give up. Do it for you, Mike, Annie but especially for Maddie & Jackie because they can’t !!!
Fight on!!!
XO
Lisa says:
I have similar feelings. I am the ultimate optimist. The husband the ultimate pessimist. But after 10 years of infertility, followed by a surprise pregnancy that ended in miscarriage, the deaths of my closets grandparents, being over 40 and riding this incredibly difficult roller coaster of trying to adopt….I am bitter and cynical…yeah optimism is still there…but it gets laughed at by the rest of me now.
MAnne says:
You have endured more than anyone should……and for that my heart breaks for you. Use us, your “stranger-friends” as some blogs call them as the bounce this time……..feel the support from all of us who come to read and SUPPORT you as the bounce you need this time. Sometimes when we are exhausted we just need a little help and support to rebound………let us be that for you. All the best.
Stephanie Moore says:
Exhaustion has a way of weakening the bounce but it will come back. All we can do in life is keep on keepin’ on because change is gonna happen…you have Annie who depends on your bounce. Don’t expect so much from yourself so soon but giving up is not an option. You will find your spirit again and although bad things will happenin the future for all of us, so will so many good and wonderful things…((hugs))
Tammy M. says:
The deaths you are dealing with were not supposed to happen yet – the people that died were too young, vibrant and had too much life yet to live. That makes it exponentially worse than if when people live a long, fullfilling life and then die. It’s too soon, there was too much left to do, it’s all unfinished.
kate says:
It IS exhausting trying to see the good things in life when there is so much unfairness and grief. I have taken to trying to see life as a collection of moments – some great, some terrible – that hopefully shakes itself into some kind of life worth living at the end of it all. I have come to realize through my own crazy stuff, that happiness is definitely not a guarantee in this weird world. You have been through things that have me in complete awe of your strength. You also have some seriously awesome amazingness going on. I hope your next moments are wonderful (just like you.)
Tara says:
I feel the same way Heather. I don’t think we have to keep bouncing back. Back to what exactly? After going through anything in life, especially the really hard stuff, we change. We grow, we mature, we learn life isn’t always fair. It’s okay to just be where you are right now. Being an eternal optimist is reserved for the young and innocent who haven’t had to go through life’s suckiness yet.
Me says:
Why does Tigger bounce on his tail?
Me says:
So he doesn’t step on Pooh.
jackie says:
Thinking of you and your family. Everytime I see a purple sky I think of Maddie, and I think of Jackie! a lot too since we have the same name. I read somewhere once something about it being amazing to think about some of the best days of your life haven’t even happened yet. The pessimist in me automatically thought”some of the worst days haven’t happened yet either!” I think in your case a lot of your worst days are behind you, sure you will have more but there are amazing days ahead of you too! Life is easier when you try to see the glass half full, Negativity is just as exhausting as constantly being thrown 10 steps back. When you are negative YOU are the one throwing yourself back, holding yourself back and holding on to things you would be lighter without. I’m so glad for your blog and getting to know you and all your loved ones throughout the years. I hope I’m not too preachy but I just wanted to encourage you the way you encourage others. Lots of love.
Julia says:
Heather, You are dealt a hand of cards. Some good, some bad…some wonderful, some horrible. Keep playing. Just when you feel you’re losing, the game turns around. Life.
You were dealt a very horrible card…Maddie’s untimely birth and death. You were dealt a wonderful card…Annie. It’s the game of life.
My best advice: Stay in the moment. The. Moment. Do not look back. Do not look forward. Do not regret. Do not look for trouble. Just. Stay.
In. The. Moment. Washing dishes, washing dishes.
xoxo, Julia
Ashlee says:
Its so hard to feel like that. There is a Pixar short video called boundin’ that I absolutely love. You should find it and watch it. I know iTunes has it.
Mommy says:
Love to you, always!!
When you are too exhausted to bounce, let your loved ones lift you up.
I wish I could take some of that pain away. You have had more than your fair share.
Hugs to you, Mama Spohr.
Anna says:
I lost my friend unexpectedly 1.5 weeks ago and have since replayed this song hundreds and hundreds of times because I think it described him perfectly, and it seems like Jackie! was the same sort of person-pure and beautiful.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i41qWJ6QjPI
I saw the most beautiful double rainbow I’ve ever seen in my life a few hours following his funeral yesterday, and couldn’t help but smile as I knew his was smiling his big smile from heaven
Jessie says:
I symptathize more than you could know, and emotionally I’m right there with you. You will find some of that optimism again, it may not be the same feeling, and you won’t be the same person, but you’ll find it, and believe again — although life always throws the bad stuff at us it will also throw the wonderful stuff that helps to build up that belief.
Margaret says:
Heather, i know how you feel in this post. I used to keep count of all the bad things, losing my closest friends,family, battling thru serious illness, trying support those I loved. I’m 51, I stopped counting a long time ago. Its been so hard, too hard. I feel like I wasn’t the mother I wanted to be, the wife I wanted to be because of all the devastating things we went thru. Is that life? Is that what we do, just get thru? I wanted to be myself, the active,happy outgoing, have no fear person. But she’s been gone a long time, and I’m mad, sad, but I feel bad because I should be grateful. Grateful that things aren’t worse? If my loved ones were here, what would they think of me now? I’m just so lost. I’ve lost those who know my past, and I feel like the future is just going to be so small and sad.
racheal says:
Oh Heather, this hurt my heart to read.
I’m not sure what to say, but felt like I needed to say something. Just so you know that there are so many rallying for you. I want to encourage you to find your light, but at the same time, I want to acknowledge your grief. This devastating losses that feels so surreal and so overwhelming and so exhausting. I have had a glimpse of what you have been through, tragic in my own little world but different, and the whole time, I thought to myself, please don’t let me lose me yet wanting so badly to just shove it all in to a hole somewhere and just not try anymore.
There are good days and there are bad days. There are days where you are irrationally fearful of all the what-ifs, the could-bes that you are painfully aware that can happen. I don’t have the answers, but I wanted you to know that we’re in your corner. Whoever you need to be.
willikat says:
It’s a lot of grief. A lot. Don’t rush. You will have an easier time “bouncing back” because you are an optimist, but it won’t happen overnight. It takes time to process, even though that sucks. Just keep swimming … you will be forever changed, but it will return.