Jeff’s birthday was on the 16th. The kids and I performed our birthday tradition of making him a blueberry pie. As per Liv and Briar’s directions, we lit a candle and stood on the back deck waiting for him (aka the wind) to blow it out. After a few minutes, the kids ‘helped’ him and blew it out themselves.
It broke my heart to watch them standing there expectantly cheering him on. “Come on, Daddy! You can do it! Blow it out!”
It’s moments like this that I so wish that there was a manual to which I could refer. I don’t know if I should just follow their lead with their beliefs surrounding death or if I should guide them to some more socially acceptable (and adult) way of dealing with their daddy’s loss.
They find comfort in their beliefs. They seem to ‘know’ what happened to him….moreso than I do. It is with such conviction that Liv believes he is always with us. Always here to share our joy, our pain, our experiences. With staunch stubbornness, Briar declares that Jeff found some joke hilarious or some movement amazing. He tells us amazing tales of the adventures that Jeff has now been on, where his boat has sailed and who worked as crew aboard.
I have become accustomed to their stories of the life that Jeff is now leading without his physical body. I, too, find some amount of comfort in hearing that he is still ‘out there’.
But to others less versed in “Death according to Two Small Children”, I wonder if they find these declarations shocking or, even, blasphemous.
Until I find the answers to my own questions or until I know which way to guide them, I don’t think I’m in the position to be able to ‘tell’ anyone where we go after our bodies cease to function. So, the three of us will just follow where this journey leads us….and in the end, we’ll know who was ‘right’….