Loving and Learning Out Loud

The fumbling, passion, excitement, and awkwardness of my romantic life since becoming a widower has been largely a secret. I’ve been searching for a balance between privacy and sharing an important part of my healing journey.

In Pinar I have found a soul who wants something greater out of our relationship: to not only help heal each other, but show others how happiness and meaning can be achieved after great loss. We fell in love hard and fast and have barred our wounds to each other. We’ve shared our experiences through death and divorce and how those losses have compounded through the loss of relationships with friends and family.

We’ve begun a new chapter of learning and loving in one another.

In sharing here and at astropinar.com we aim to model for other couples and honestly explore the myriad difficulties associated with partnering after loss.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason

Agree to Disagree

I think about the people Jesus called “friend” and how they oppressed his ethnic family, would kill his intellectual and spiritual family, and would deny the truth he was speaking and hang him from a cross.

And he knew the hearts of men, we do not. He knew the Hell on Earth he was inviting and walking into willingly. None of us knows the Hell that someone else is living or has lived through.

Politics is a set of categories designed to divide us into armies instead of individuals. Jesus would not have spoken to the woman at the well if he assumed she would not listen. Why would a Samaritan ever listen to a Jew? Ridiculous at the time. If he had maintained the tribe (politics is voluntary tribalism) mentality, he never would have uttered a word, for Jews did not think the way he did, no one did.

Jesus acted and spoke out of love. That’s why he could break all the rules of his tribe and the world at large. That’s how he changed the world with the ultimate #LoveWins moment.

In an age when we have the ability to express our individuality like no other human has, it pains me to see people choose groups over individuals.

You voted for Trump? Tell me about it and I’ll tell you why I can’t support sexual predators having a say in my life. You voted for Clinton? Tell me about it and I’ll tell you why I can’t support sexual predators having a say in my life.

“Agree to disagree” is a polite “shut up now.” A bumper sticker that has no use. We have to ask each other questions and look deeper at our own brokenness than the brokenness in others. Only when you listen and take lessons from the answers can you hunt down your own demons and heal your own soul. Once you start healing, you will find others on similar paths who are ready to learn from you and teach you.

I’ve seen this in my life, I don’t have to avoid political conversations because those people have disappeared from my life. My path is a lot scarier and a lot more work than turning on the TV or reading the newspaper. Not too many people want a piece of it. It turns out that the right people do want to be a part of it and I am blessed by the people I have attracted into my life.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason

Memories of Mary: Halloween 2014

My life with Mary was full of adventure. Whether it was going to a new place or handing sharp tools to our three-year-old, we were always exploring possibilities.

Each year, as Halloween approached, we would gather around the dining room table with friends and family to carve pumpkins. As with all holidays, Mary was queen. Vintage decorations, bins of costume elements, and carving kits were at the ready.

Knives and gooey guts, the boys were always in their glory and Mary loved every minute of it. I think of us team working and juggling the prep, execution, and clean-up. We both came from team sports backgrounds and it was our greatest skill.

Happy Halloween!

“If only you could be as lucky as Romeo.”

Romeo and Juliet has never been my favorite Shakespeare. Perhaps that was why God gave me two opportunities to see it performed in the last few months. It hit me so hard each time that I played with the plot to find out what was bothering me.

I wonder how it would be different if it was set on All Hallow’s Eve and a mischievous child entered the Capulet mausoleum to interrupt Romeo’s planned suicide. In a jester’s costume the child could tease Romeo for loving Death on such a night, for wearing its mask in lieu of a proper costume. Or accuse him of being a grave robber, valuing Death over Life. The child dances and duels an invisible Death with a fool’s scepter, “For I would cleave Death thusly!” Romeo leaves with the child, who admits he needs help getting out of the labyrinthine graveyard. Juliet wakes in the pitch black, she panics and her hands search about, finding the poison that Romeo has left behind. She’s convinced she’s already half dead and takes the poison to complete the journey.

Romeo lives. Juliet dies.

Earlier in the play, Juliet fakes her death, but no one present knows it. Her father:

Ha! let me see her: out, alas! she’s cold:
Her blood is settled, and her joints are stiff;
Life and these lips have long been separated:
Death lies on her like an untimely frost
Upon the sweetest flower of all the field.

These words. A pretty, dark haired, too young woman lies lifeless on a bed. A father wailing like my grandfather did and like I did so many times in my wife’s hospital room. I’m back in all those moments again: sharing the news of her impending death, watching it come, then leaving that room, no longer hers, now belonging to Death. They are not memories, I am there again.

Romeo lives. Juliet dies.

What of Romeo then? Does fair Rosaline finally appear on stage to console him, encasing him in teenage woe for the rest of his days? Does he stoke the fires of conflict with the Capulets, his secret in-laws, and wage war on human frailty, on himself? Or does he embrace his banishment, go into the world as a man who has faced Death and chosen life? No longer a boy, now a man armed with the strength of a blazing star of love and an intimate encounter with vulnerability.

“If only you could be as lucky as Romeo.”

Twice this week I heard variations of, “We can’t all be as lucky as you, Jason.” Both times it brought a comical smile to my face, “Oh yeah, let me tell you how lucky I am…”

I’m in love and most certainly deserve to be teased for being a 40-year-old Romeo. At least the Romeo from my rewrite. I’ve laid my heart open to the world like a fearless child. I’ve let disappointment, anger, heartache, and confusion climb into the ring and try their best to kill the love. Like a man, I’ve faced these emotions and let them take their shots. I’ve been scared, knocked off my feet, unsure of standing up for the next round. I’ve seen myself hanging from a rope in my bedroom, in the back of a police car for a drunken rampage…I’ve seen myself running away. I’ve seen death and pain and powerlessness and I’ve chosen another path. I’ve consciously chosen life and love more times than I could count.

I am one who has seen affliction
under the rod of God’s wrath;
he has driven and brought me
into darkness without any light;
against me alone he turns his hand
again and again, all day long…

But this I call to mind,
and therefore I have hope:
The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases,
his mercies never come to an end;
they are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.
“The Lord is my portion,” says my soul,
therefore I will hope in him.”

Lamentations 3:1-3…12-24

Mary left me with a glimpse of God’s infinite Love. Sometimes it is a pinprick of light in a starless sky. Sometimes it is as bright and beautiful as Asgard’s Rainbow Bridge, with edges into the abyss, but wide bands of color to light my journey. That’s when I know I’m in the right place, going the right way.

My soul has been reunited with a long lost traveler on that bridge. Her name is Pinar, “source” or “well spring” in Turkish. In her eyes I see centuries of longing and searching. Our souls have been on separate paths for generations, seeking a return to a love that never waned in that distance.

Even in this life it seemed we needed to learn a few more lessons and face a few more tragedies before we would be ready to meet again. I am humbled that God has entrusted me with this ancient love once again. I am humbled that He blessed me with a lifetime of memories in 13 short years with Mary. I am blessed by the riches of growth that have been made available to me in this life. I am blessed by the love I share with Pinar.

“We can’t all be as lucky as you, Jason.”

Yes, you can. It is a choice. Life is beyond your control and will do what it can to crush you and kill you. Life will take everything away from you, except your power to choose. Look at what you are choosing. What is your highest ideal? What is the one example or principle you turn to when you are at the bottom of a muddy ditch and the sides seem too slippery to ascend? That’s what you worship and that is your choice. When I feel out of power, overwhelmed by heartache, or in over my head, I choose Love and Jesus Christ. You don’t have to chose as I have, but think about how high your sight can stretch. Are you looking at the stars, or a fancy car? What’s going to last longer? What’s going to be there when a tornado has ripped through your town and your heart? Everything on this Earth will die and be less than dust. Even Pinar, whom I love with all my heart will cease to exist in her presently exquisite form. That is why I target my gaze at an eternal and infinite God. He is in the stars, the leaves on the ground, the darkest nights, Pinar’s smile, and everywhere when I’m looking in the right direction.

Figure out what you are going to choose, just for today. No conversion, no commitment, no bravery required (not yet anyhow). See if you can aim at something higher.

God bless you and thank you for reading,
Jason

Enormous thanks to Alessandra Nicole for use of her photo of Delaware Shakespeare’s current production of Romeo and Juliet, touring the state now through November 17, 2019.

Lie: Not A Widower

I wore Mary’s “Happy Happy Happy” t-shirt to yoga today. I got a couple compliments. I didn’t say, “Yeah, it was my wife’s.” I smiled, the words came to my lips, and I stopped. I would have been happy to share the guilty pleasure of watching Duck Dynasty with Mary and the boys and how she got all four of us Happy Happy Happy shirts. But these folks don’t know my story, or at least they don’t let on.

I don’t want to be a widower everywhere I go, or maybe not every damn day. But I am. I don’t always know how to communicate that. I’m not always ready to darken the mood and possibly ambush myself with memories.

I’ve met so many people and gone to so many new places this year that one would think I could have developed some kind of script. But it feels different each time. It gets me rambling (verbally or mentally) about the strange feelings of today set against the strange feelings of yesterday.

I don’t know if I have to get better at having secrets or more comfortable with sharing my story.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason

Love Is All You Need?

I’ve boiled my home education philosophy down to something like this. It wasn’t long ago that I consciously separated Love and Academics in my mind and life. Subconsciously, I always loved learning, yet didn’t recognize Love as a primary motivation for learning. The things I’ve become most skilled at have been due to love or the indirect/direct pursuit of love. As I discover more love for myself, I find it to be an infinite well from which I can deepen my motivation to learn.

Sharing this with my children is my central concern as a learning lifestyle facilitator.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason

#Repost from @onefitwidow:

I’m the first to tell you to live a fit life.

I’m the first to urge you to workout and eat well.

I’m also the first to tell you to LOVE yourself completely as you are NOW while you work on improving yourself.

It is possible to enjoy this life, your current place in it AND work on making improvements.

Don’t wait for some far off day to start loving life. Do it now.

Don’t wait.

You are so worth it.

Good morning world,

Michelle ❤️

Raising Rebels

One of the scariest thoughts as a parent is to guide your children to be suspicious of authority and confident enough to defy it when appropriate. Well, that doesn’t get scary until they figure out you’ve been the primary authoritarian in their lives.

They’re natural rebels. They exert their individuality before they can speak. We spend much of their early years bringing them under our control. There are a lot of good, loving reasons to do that. It takes a braver love to make room for their wings to form.

My sons are quickly becoming men. Not hardened by tragedy, but strengthened by it. They’re troublemakers and I love it, at least I try to.

Today Isaac found the Rage Against the Machine shirt I gave Mary years ago when we saw them at Lollapalooza.

Bombs. I was the bombastic one and Mary focused that energy in constructive directions. She listened to my wild ravings and ideas, honestly heard me like no one had before. Together we fashioned a life neither of us had envisioned, one based on love and support for each other and our children. A life that stopped asking for approval from the “norm.” We started rejecting the conventional concepts we had absorbed and taken for granted, thereby deschooling ourselves. It’s a continuing process. It’s fundamental to my self-improvement journey, rejecting assumptions and reevaluating what is helpful in my life and what is hurtful.

The journey feeds the rebel within me as I feed my little rebels.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason

p.s. – Twenty-six years on this still reads fresh:

“Bullet in the Head”

This time the bullet cold rocked ya
A yellow ribbon instead of a swastika
Nothin’ proper about ya propaganda
Fools follow rules when the set commands ya
Said it was blue
When ya blood was red
That’s how ya got a bullet blasted through ya head

Blasted through ya head
Blasted through ya head

I give a shout out to the living dead
Who stood and watched as the feds cold centralized
So serene on the screen
You were mesmerised
Cellular phones soundin’ a death tone
Corporations cold
Turn ya to stone before ya realise
They load the clip in omnicolour
Said they pack the 9, they fire it at prime time
Sleeping gas, every home was like Alcatraz
And mutha fuckas lost their minds

Just victims of the in-house drive-by
They say jump, you say how high
Just victims of the in-house drive-by
They say jump, you say how high

Run it!

Just victims of the in-house drive-by
They say jump, you say how high
Just victims of the in-house drive-by
They say jump, you say how high

Checka, checka, check it out
They load the clip in omnicolour
Said they pack the 9, they fire it at prime time
Sleeping gas, every home was like Alcatraz
And mutha fuckas lost their minds

No escape from the mass mind rape
Play it again jack and then rewind the tape
And then play it again and again and again
Until ya mind is locked in
Believin’ all the lies that they’re tellin’ ya
Buyin’ all the products that they’re sellin’ ya
They say jump and ya say how high
Ya brain-dead
Ya gotta fuckin’ bullet in ya head

Just victims of the in-house drive-by
They say jump, you say how high
Just victims of the in-house drive-by
They say jump, you say how high

Uggh! Yeah! Yea!

Ya standin’ in line
Believin’ the lies
Ya bowin’ down to the flag
Ya gotta bullet in ya head

Ya standin’ in line
Believin’ the lies
Ya bowin’ down to the flag
Ya gotta bullet in ya head

A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head
A bullet in ya head!
A bullet in ya head!
A bullet in ya head!
A bullet in ya head!
A bullet in ya head!
A bullet in ya head!
A bullet in ya head!
Ya gotta bullet in ya fuckin’ head!

Yeah!

Yeah!

Bad Poop Happens, But Good Poop Happens Too

I’m not sure if I’d seen this picture before yesterday. I am sure I didn’t see Isaac’s arms wrapped as far around Michael Franti as he could manage. I didn’t see Franti’s hand pulling him in to soak up the love. Nor Franti’s smile as he reached out to share more love with our new friends.

My late wife, Mary, adored Franti. She was there in that moment. The hat was from her costume box and Isaac’s arms are full of her love. Now I see Franti’s bandana, a favorite Mary accessory on cleaning or camping days, in her favorite color.

Just a couple hours earlier I had channelled Mary’s bravada to sneak us into a VIP performance by Franti. We “owned it,” as she would say, and sat right in front of a small stage as credentials were checked and folks were ushered out. Franti talked about how his father had healed after years, likely generations, of trauma. We shared in the healing. These joyous, adventurous, wild moments always push up against our pain. It can feel like poison in a happy place, but I’ve learned that the dark colors spill into the bright ones to complete the spectrum, to make us more whole than before. The rainbow needs blue, indigo, and violet. It also needs all those unseen light waves, the ones that affect our world outside of our perception.

Mountain Jam was bigger than Mary, the circumstances, or our own exploits. God put innumerable pieces together for us and we bathed in blessings.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason

The I Don’t Know Project: How Do You Know Jess?

“Some of my best friends are widows,” sounds like a crass punchline, but it’s true. The things we share aren’t quite secrets, but they’re peculiar to those who have lost young spouses. Challenges, feelings, and strange wonderings that only single parents with grieving children can decode for one another. Rarified air indeed.

“So how do you know Jess?” casually asked at a social gathering. “I’ve got a dead wife and now I’m reminding you of her dead husband and yeah, sorry for killing the party.”

How do you get around that? You don’t. It’s there whether you want to be a “widower” tonight or not. Nope, can’t pretend to be normal, that would be a lie.

I’ve never been very good at “normal” anyway.

God bless and thank you for reading,

Jason