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Stitching Together the Pieces of a Broken Heart

Article originally appeared in Hope & Comfort, Fall 2016 Newsletter – Survivors of Suicide Loss

When my brother died by suicide, my heart broke. I felt something inside me shatter. At first I existed in survival mode. Able to stand, even speak, at the memorial. Though that soon wore off, and in its wake there was a rawness, an ache, an emptiness inside of me, or what was left of me. My heart literally hurt.

My heart wasn’t actually broken, medically speaking, but a broken heart is a real thing. It’s called Broken Heart Syndrome (also known as stress-induced cardiomyopathy or takotsubo cardiomyopathy). The American Heart Association tells us that: “In broken heart syndrome, a part of your heart temporarily enlarges and doesn’t pump well, while the rest of your heart functions normally.” They assure us that broken heart syndrome is “usually treatable.”

Treatable: right. In the beginning nothing about my broken heart felt treatable. It wasn’t a clean break down the middle. It wasn’t the kind of break that heals quickly or perfectly. My heart was shattered. It was covered in fractures and fissures.

As the months turned into years, I found that my heart was healing. In its own way, in its own time. I won’t say I am grateful for the pain I endured, but I am grateful for the gifts and growth that was born from the pain.

When my heart was split open, I began to put things inside of it. I carefully placed a piece of my brother into my heart, so I knew he’d always be there. Into one of the cracks I put gratitude for the life lessons my big brother taught me, then I stitched around it, closing that one fissure. Into one of the fractures I tucked away a kind of compassion I had never known, because I had both endured and witnessed pain no words can describe. I used a cross-stitch to secure the newfound compassion in place, filling in that one fracture.

This process went on. I sewed memories of Joey into my heart. I stitched in a greater ability to let go, some grit and tenacity, the ability to laugh again. I stitched in acceptance, empathy, joy, hope, and as much love as my heart could hold. When I couldn’t get the stitch right, I had friends who would cover sewing duty for me. When the sutures wouldn’t hold, I had friends to give me Dermabond skin glue.

As I put each new thing into my heart, it grew fuller, it began to mend piece-by-piece, fractures and fissures healed. It was no longer broken, though it was permanently altered. It was rebuilt and in some ways stronger than before. But my heart is covered in scars, with some wisdom tucked into the wounds that will never quite heal. It isn’t the same, but it is whole.

We always have an opportunity to make something positive out of even the most horrific situations. We are each on our own grief journey. We will heal in our own way, in our own time. I would never say that we can “move on,” but we can move forward. We can rebuild some of what was broken and we can create something new in the empty spaces.

When my brother died by suicide, my heart broke; but it didn’t just break apart, it broke wide open. Though so much was taken away, space was opened up to add more. Now I try to live my life with presence and intent. I try to live with compassion and kindness. I try to live well as an homage to Joey… because he lives on in my heart.

Shot at Sunday Services & the Second Amendment

26 people. A 5-year old boy. A 14 year old daughter of a preacher man. A person born the same year the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Japan, 72 years old. Shot to death while attending Sunday services.

2017 Year-to-date: 532 people have died in mass shootings on American soil, 1,625 injured. These numbers will be higher by December 31st. This is our country.

I deeply respect our Constitution’s framework. The Bill of Rights is brilliant. I am particularly moved by the First, Fourth, Fifth, and Eight Amendments (among others later ratified). All of these constitutional rights have limitations born of legislation and seminal Supreme Court cases. It is long past time that the Second Amendment “… the right of the people to keep and bear Arms” be fucking infringed. A 5 year old shot to death at church is not a partisan issue — it is an American issue.

As the battle cry for the right to bear arms wages on, let us not forget the Second Amendment was born alongside Article 1 that counted black people as three-fifths of a whole person. The right to bear arms, carved out for the purpose of a “well regulated militia,” was drafted into the same Constitution that did not give me the right to vote. And the very same Constitution that put the last two republican presidents in the white house without a majority vote.

Sometimes it is damn time to change shit.

I do not take it lightly to advocate for infringement of constitutional rights. Today a 5 year old was shot to death in church. Tonight two parents mourn the unspeakable. It is damn time to change shit.

“If fidelity to freedom of democracy is the code of our civic religion then surely the code of our humanity is faithful service to that unwritten commandment that says we shall give our children better than we ourselves received.”
– President Josiah Bartlet, The West Wing

Fines For “Masturbatory Emissions” – The Counterpoint To The Women’s Right to Know Act, Texas House Bill 4260

Texas State Representative, Jessica Farrar, filed Texas House Bill 4260: “Relating to the regulation of men’s health and safety; creating a civil penalty for unregulated masturbatory emissions.”

Yes, you read that right.

This is the Man’s Right to Know Act and it serves as an important counterpoint to the Texas Women’s Right to Know Act. The Women’s Right to Know Act mandates that women considering abortion be given information at least 24-hours prior to abortion that, among other egregious things, contains medical warnings that are not supported by medical research.

The stated purpose of HB 4260, Man’s Right to Know Act:

“The purpose of this chapter is to express the state’s interest in promoting men’s health; ensure Texas men experience safe and healthy elective vasectomies, Viagra utilizations, colonoscopies procedures, and men’s health experiences; ensure a doctor’s right to invoke their personal, moralistic, or religious beliefs in refusing to perform an elective vasectomy or prescribe Viagra; and promote fully-abstinent sexual relations or occasional masturbatory emissions inside health care and medical facilities, as a means of the healthiest way to ensure men’s health.”

Here’s the deal:

Jessica Farrar, the bill’s author, said: “A lot of people find the bill funny… What’s not funny are the obstacles that Texas women face every day, that were placed there by legislatures making it very difficult for them to access healthcare.”

Nonetheless, she persisted.

“The time comes when silence is betrayal. That time has come for us today……some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak.”

― Martin Luther King Jr.

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