5 Min Read, Brothers And Sisters, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, Family, Holidays, Parenting, Robert Samuel Walker

Christmases to Remember

The end-of-year holidays always drove me into a frenzy as a child that my teachers, siblings, and parents all overlooked, and I am grateful they did. It was a frenzy, but it was joy filled. My siblings who lived at home with me had been away at college, returning for Thanksgiving break. Nearly every conversation in the house started with โ€œWhen the kids get homeโ€ฆโ€ Even I called them โ€œThe Kidsโ€ despite their being old enough (biologically) to be my parents. I found joy in every little thing โ€“ the drafty house causing the windows to fog and condensation to run was one of the most ridiculous things to find joyful but was one of the happiest additions to the ambiance.

Even though Thanksgiving itself wasnโ€™t particularly my favorite holiday, I enjoyed certain aspects and it was always a good time overall. My siblings coming home was the best part, the marshmallows on that nasty sweet potato thing Mommy made was second, and the mac-n-cheese was third. Outside of that I loved watching Mommy set out her mismatched China and fragile water glasses that she found at a yard sale and I loved how she enjoyed decorating her table and getting us to dress up for dinner. I love seeing those plates and glasses today for that same reason. Mommyโ€™s dressing was pretty tasty as well and generally my soft-drink restriction was relaxed for the Thanksgiving meal.

But Thanksgiving was far too short for me and mostly just served as a defining line for when Christmas, the pinnacle of the year, could start. In between Thanksgiving and Christmas is my birthday, so it would be just a few days after Thanksgiving when I started writing a countdown to my birthday whenever I had to write the date. You know, Iโ€™d write my name and December 1st on my paper and then add โ€œeleven days until my birthdayโ€. I wasnโ€™t exactly making an announcement, but my glee was just oozing out through my hand to my pencil and onto the paper. My teachers sometimes commented, and it seemed they understood the level of excitement demonstrated by that simple act. I can recall that at the height of reaching my birthday, I often sat on top of my desk โ€“ if I sat at all โ€“ and for whatever reason, my teachers had patience with me. The threshold for consequences was lowered for me universally during that time. Finally, about a week later weโ€™d go on Christmas break and โ€œThe Kidsโ€ would be coming home soon again.

Christmas was always my favorite holiday, and being the only young kid in my household, Christmas was all about me, myself, and I. We went through the basic rules of magic โ€“ Santa only came if I was good and at night when I went to sleep โ€“ and I would wake up to a glorious toy-filled room at which I was front and center.

One year Daddy was going to have to work on Christmas morning, so this once Mommy decided weโ€™d exchange gifts early on Christmas Eve at 2PM in the afternoon. It was the only time in my entire life that opening presents early was allowed. That Christmas Eve I was entirely out of control from the moment I opened my eyes until the moment we started opening presents. I had developed a special kind of impatience just for the occasion and thankfully I had a significantly lower threshold for when inappropriate behavior was punished. At some point in the day when I reached a particularly unattractive level of unreasonableness, Mommy suggested that I pass the time by cleaning out a toybox. Who the heck wants to clean? Even as a distraction I thought she was really stretching it. But then she insisted that I find a few specific toys and play with them. It was a step up from cleaning, but I wasnโ€™t exactly thrilled playing with old toys when shiny new ones were under the tree waiting on me to open them. But I did it because even though that discipline threshold was low, it was not inexistent, and Mommy was not one to be played with โ€“ I truly believed everything under that tree might be taken away if she deemed necessary.

While I was playing with those old toys, 2PM made its way around and we opened presents. I felt a little ashamed by my behavior by the time we opened the gifts. Why was I losing my mind when I knew exactly the time of day Iโ€™d be in that bliss? And we were opening gifts a whole day earlier than usual so why was I lamenting the wait? And when I opened the biggest gift, it had everything to do with those toys she made me find and play with. And I was a little more embarrassed. And for some reason โ€“ I guess the moments of introspection, that year was the first time I really noticed how the adults exchanged presents and that they were excited by their big gifts, too. There was a world outside of mine on Christmas and it looked pretty nice. I was further embarrassed by my behavior, and I looked out the window into the backyard to let my thoughts wash over me (staring out of windows was something I learned to do because Mommy did it whenever she was thinking). And while I was thinking, it started snowing! Yes, it was Memphis so snowing meant some little flurries that never even stuck were floating around the air, but it was technically snowing. And since we were doing Christmas at that moment, I declared it my first ever White Christmas. And I grew up just a little bit that year. It would be an extremely slow growth, but it started that Christmas.

I donโ€™t remember the toys in question or the gifts I received that Christmas. I remember that I saw myself as selfish and impatient and rude and decided I wanted to be more generous, more patient, and kinder. And I could see that not only did Mommy plan out every detail for a great and magical Christmas, but she had taken into account that I was going to be a restless spoiled brat up until the moments I got everything I wanted.

5 Min Read, Brothers And Sisters, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, Family, Holidays, Robert Samuel Walker

I love May 27th.

My mother went to work on a Thursday, May 27th as Donna Maria Thomas. She came back from her lunch break as Donna Maria Walker. That was the story. In my parentsโ€™ romance, lunch hours were never a time for actually eating lunch, but for things like making out on park benches and running down the street to the courthouse to get married. I remember making my parents recount the details for their 11th anniversary โ€“ that 11th anniversary was a little over 6 months before my 11th birthday. (It wouldnโ€™t fully dawn on me that I attended that blessed event until sometime after my motherโ€™s death I received a bible with their wedding anniversary and my birthday written together as events in the same calendar year.) I donโ€™t remember my parents ever celebrating their wedding anniversary, but they both remembered it every year. It wasnโ€™t strange to me that my parents didnโ€™t celebrate their wedding anniversary โ€“ I never saw any parents doing that except on television. However, I considered it a significant milestone for my own life without any encouragement from anyone else.

Something else very special happened on a May 27th โ€“ my little sister was born on a Friday. As her mother, my Godmother, promised me she was born while I was safely at home away from the โ€œdramaโ€. I was nervous when she was heavily pregnant that she would suddenly go into labor like the ladies did on sitcoms and I didnโ€™t want to be around when that happened. I remembered thinking, how perfect is it that my sister โ€“ who is not my parentsโ€™ child โ€“ was born on my parentsโ€™ anniversary? Why is that perfect? I donโ€™t know exactly โ€“ I didnโ€™t know then either.

May 27th has always felt like an important date for me. Maybe it was my parentsโ€™ anniversary but if I hadnโ€™t come along when I did, how many more years beyond those 11 would they have continued their on-again, off-again romance? I used to get a kick out of the phrase โ€œMay-December Romanceโ€ because my parents were born 24 years apart and were the very definition of a May-December romance. And they got married in May. And I was born in December. And on another May 27th, I was gifted a baby sister. Yep โ€“ in my mind in those years thatโ€™s who she was to me, a gift. I knew even at age 6 to be chosen as a sister was something altogether different than being born into sisterhood. Neither is greater than the other but the intention behind the former is impossible to dismiss.

After I sent my sister birthday wishes, I decided to write about how I love May 27th. In December I explained how I hate December 26th (the day my mother died). In February I wrote about how I used to hate Valentineโ€™s Day (the day my father died). Then I wrote about hating Motherโ€™s Day. And Fatherโ€™s Day is next month (and yes, I hate it too). So, I thought Iโ€™d throw in some of the days I have managed to love. I donโ€™t have a lot of emotional and detailed events to share about why I love May 27th except that itโ€™s the day that my parents came together, and the day my baby sister was presented to the world. It feels like God made that day just for me.

I love May 27th.

10 Min Read, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, Family, grief, Holidays, Mental Health, Parenting, Relationships, Robert Samuel Walker

I hate Motherโ€™s Day.

As a child Motherโ€™s Day was not a huge deal to me specifically. It was always hot that Sunday. I would usually have a new shorts ensemble. I donโ€™t think it was a โ€œring curlsโ€ event but I canโ€™t really remember and for some reason I canโ€™t find a single photograph from Motherโ€™s Day. And as a motherless child with a dream of parenting deferred, it was hell and now it’s just unpleasant. But I remain slightly melodramatic and declare I hate Mother’s Day.

At my church โ€“ the place where I was baptized and a member until my last year of high school, Motherโ€™s Day events happened for my family mostly on the Sunday and Saturday before. We still attended whatever rehearsal or practice or meeting that was scheduled even though we werenโ€™t going to be in town on that Sunday. And at the end of either the Sunday before Motherโ€™s Day or on that Saturday just before the day, weโ€™d go to the ladies with the trays of corsages โ€“ carnations made from tissues โ€“ in red and white. I canโ€™t be certain, and it doesnโ€™t seem quite right, but in my mind the ladies were selling these faux carnations. We received 3 โ€“ white for Daddy and red for me and Mommy. Remembering this transaction means this memory happened only a couple years but they were obviously poignant years. It was after Grandmommy died and before Dorothy died. (Mommyโ€™s mother was always identified by her first name instead of any version of Grand Mother.)

And for a period of time, I remember the 3 carnations โ€“ one white and 2 red โ€“ carried a little bit of pride and a little bit of sadness. I was sad that Daddy had to wear a white carnation, but he seemed to wear it proudly. And I took on that emotion and carried it as if it were my own. I was sad that Mommy wore a red flower and as she pinned it on her left side sheโ€™d always say, โ€œI donโ€™t know if my mother is dead or alive so I will wear red. I hope sheโ€™s still alive.โ€ She was sad, but hopeful to some degree and I took on that emotion, added it to Daddyโ€™s, and carried it as if it were my own. And then she pinned my red flower on my left side, and I was proud. My mommy was still alive, and I saw her every day and I knew for sure that she loved me. I chose to put my feelings in my back pocket, carrying my parents’ emotions as an expression of loyalty. Even though she received the tissue carnations from the church ladies, we usually wore a different faux flower, a pretty one that Mommy bought, to go to Mississippi.

If my memories are accurate, we went to Corinth and Rienzi in Mississippi โ€“ the place Daddy always called home โ€“ every Motherโ€™s Day until I graduated high school. I donโ€™t remember the years before Grandmommyโ€™s death vividly โ€“ just little flashes of only her like when she saved me from a grasshopper and would have to call me out to come and greet her because I was too shy to just jump in and hug her when we got to her trailer on my uncleโ€™s land. Iโ€™d hang outside the door or against a wall, maybe hiding behind Daddyโ€™s leg until she asked about me.

We dressed in our Sunday best, I remember Daddy wearing his clergy collar and I felt like it made him royalty for a Sunday. Weโ€™d get into the car and drive toward the country. We would make one stop before heading to church โ€“ the church I always believed my entire family for generations belonged, even though truthfully I donโ€™t know for sure how many generations before my fatherโ€™s attended that church.  Weโ€™d stop where Grandmommy was buried, beside the grandfather I never knew and Daddy would go alone. Then we were off to Mount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church. On the way to finding a seat weโ€™d speak to everyone โ€“ I told you I felt like Daddy was royalty that day, greeting all of the parishioners who seemed so excited to see him. I determined after all those greetings that we were related to no less than half of the congregants. Daddy preached the sermon. My aunties and cousins sang in the choir. My uncle was a deacon and usually led devotion. After the service was over we spoke to the people we missed or who arrived late. This is when I tried to figure out how I was going to ride to my uncleโ€™s house with my uncle. Most of the time that meant finding his wife, my auntie, because she always just told me I was going with them. There was no asking permission and no risk of hearing โ€œnoโ€. Uncle would always call me his โ€œpretty little nieceโ€ when we greeted and for some reason my braids and shoes didnโ€™t feel so tight anymore. Weโ€™d head to my uncleโ€™s house where Iโ€™d change into my shorts ensemble to play with my cousins. Sometimes we ate at my auntieโ€™s house in Corinth and sometimes she came to my uncleโ€™s house in Rienzi. The fried chicken – Grandmommyโ€™s recipe – was the star of the meal for me. After filling up on dinner and getting to have sodas โ€“ pops โ€“ without permission (carbonated water irritated my system so they were off limits) I spent the rest of the day playing with my cousins. Weโ€™d return to the city (Memphis), and weโ€™d do it all again in one yearโ€™s time. Nothing about that day meant Motherโ€™s Day to me. It might as well have been called Mississippi Day.

When I was 6 or 7 years old, Dorothy surfaced. She was dying of cancer and the family who had been estranged to Mommy for what seemed my entire life were calling her to California. After what felt like an eternity of Mommy sitting at her motherโ€™s bedside, she came back home to me. But Dorothy took another turn without Mommy with her, was refusing to obey some doctorโ€™s order โ€“ like eat or something โ€“ and was calling for Mommy to return to her. I wanted to go but she was going for an indefinite period of time and I had school. Dorothy died a few days after she returned to California and it ended up being about 2 weeks from the time she returned to California, Dorothy died and was cremated, and Mommy returned home to me. The next 4 or 5 Motherโ€™s Days, mommy wore a white flower. Even though she seemed sad, she also seemed relieved to a degree. She would shed a couple tears, but I think just knowing for certain whether Dorothy was dead or alive was enough. I also think whatever happened in Dorothyโ€™s last days allowed Mommy some closure if not a repair of over 40 years of a challenging mother-daughter relationship and she could more easily wear that white flower.

Two weeks after my 13th birthday, I lost my own mother. That first Sunday going to Mississippi the only assertion of my own rights (as opposed to unspoken rules) was to wear a white corsage, one that chose and found beautiful, and I wore a white dress. Even though I had been sitting alone at church services for about 5 months, that Sunday felt particularly lonely. And it was the last time I would wear a white flower. The main reason was because that white flower served no purpose to me and all it did was made me angry. But the secondary reason was because people โ€“ I think Daddy was one of them โ€“ told me to wear a red flower because I had a step-monster the next year. I hated the entire system of red and white flowers and determined to leave Motherโ€™s Day on the calendar as simply the 2nd Sunday of May and Mississippi Day. Who the hell thought I was supposed to replace my white flower with a red one because of a step-monster? Did no one see that it meant replacing my mother and dismissing that she ever existed? Why didnโ€™t anyone think of at least saying I should wear 2 flowers to represent both women? I wouldn’t have but at least they wouldn’t be suggesting that I erase my mother completely and embrace the monster that my father married in her place.

I tried to pass on some love for Motherโ€™s Day to the other โ€œmothersโ€ in my life. I tried to come up with something to honor Sissy because she was a mother. I always made sure to tell Ms. Bell because she loved me with a motherโ€™s heart and hand, but she was gone I believe just about two years after my mother. But it soon felt that acknowledging other mothers meant dismissing my mother further. It highlighted her absence and was painful. I would be in my 20s before I realized I needed help for my grief and I was going to have to find it for myself โ€“ professional help. Until then whenever I remembered Mommy, I felt the exact same trauma and pain that I felt the moment I found her. Once I had been alive longer than I had had her in my life, I determined the pain should have lessened over the years and that it was a problem.

After finding more peace with the loss of my mother and dealing with the associated trauma, I still found I hated Motherโ€™s Day. For at least a week prior, everyone from the checkout counters in stores to the man who detailed my car, wished me a Happy Motherโ€™s Day. And people who knew I wasnโ€™t a mother came up with a list of reasons I should still be recognized as a mother โ€“ aunties and sisters and nearly all women were recognized as a mother for Motherโ€™s Day. And in addition to highlighting the fact that Mommy was gone, I was reminded that years were ticking by that I imagined I would have had my own kids. And then Iโ€™d approached the age where Iโ€™d decided that I would give up on biological children and began grieving my children who didnโ€™t exist and a dream Iโ€™d had since I was 11 years old. So, I started staying indoors on Motherโ€™s Day avoiding social media, heartsick.

What happens to a dream deferred? Hope deferred makes the heart sick, But when desire is fulfilled, it is a tree of life. (Langston Hughes, Harlem plus Proverbs 13:12 AMP)

The only joy I find is knowing that my niece and nephew make sure to celebrate and honor Sissy. I hate carnations and sometimes have peonies in a vase on the day for myself โ€“ my favorite flower. I celebrate Mommyโ€™s birthday as Motherโ€™s Day, my Motherโ€™s Day, instead of the 2nd Sunday of May with cupcakes and champagne and tulips โ€“ her favorite flower – when I can find them (her birthday is in fall). And I wish the mothers in my family a Happy Motherโ€™s Day on the Monday after.

I hate Motherโ€™s Day.

10 Min Read, grief, Holidays, Mental Health, Parenting, Robert Samuel Walker

I used to like February 14th. Then I didnโ€™t. Now itโ€™s not so bad.

After my mother died my father remarried. He was looking for a way out of a financial bind and a new mother for me โ€“ or a way to not be alone because he knew I wanted to live with one of my sisters. So, my father made a mistake and he married an abusive witch who made my life, our lives, hell until we escaped. I left for college; he left for heaven. The last five years before I graduated high school was not only a hell created and maintained by my step-monster, but my father emotionally abandoned me at the same time. His abandon was driven by many things, mostly those pesky good intentions, but mainly by my step-monsterโ€™s โ€œrulesโ€. I was not allowed to talk with my father alone. Ever. And that was one thing he and I had my entire life โ€“ time alone together for philosophical conversations, even as a very young child. I tried to hold on to the fact that my father loved me during this time but many of his behaviors did not demonstrate love. However, on the other side of that period of time it would turn out to be the knowledge that he loved me that would facilitate the healing of my broken heart.

Tell me that old man doesn’t adore that little girl!
That’s me on my first birthday in my Daddy’s arms.

I went to university in another city and only visited him once a year and only at our church building. I refused to return to that witchโ€™s house ever again after I left town hours after high school graduation. Then he was diagnosed with lymphoma. I canโ€™t remember any details of that except I kept up to date with his progress through my sister โ€“ his oldest daughter โ€“ and I was able to talk to him on the phone occasionally. Even though Iโ€™d prayed for his healing and elicited prayers from my Watch-Care church, I prepared myself for his death. He was in his late 70s living with an inhumane abusive human, trying to help pastor a church while our pastor was in jail. I found a level of resolution and peace about his death, which would possibly happen during critical classes in my final year, and would alert my professors and the dean that I might miss a week of classes with little notice should he die.

Because my father was old and ill (he was healed of the cancer, but his body was worn out from the chemo) I went to visit him over Christmas break during my last year in school. Unfortunately this meant I had to go into the step-monsterโ€™s house and she had the nerve to try and keep me away from him โ€“ Iโ€™d had a lingering cough from pneumonia but was well. She and I almost fought, physically, twice during that short visit. But it was during that visit, he and I finally and truly reconciled. We shared a few poignant moments that I am very grateful for because that was the last time I would see him alive.

Before going to New Nonconnah Missionary Baptist Church in Memphis one cold Easter Sunday morning.

That Valentineโ€™s Day, a Monday, was an early day in my teaching schedule โ€“ I had to get up about 5AM to be sure to arrive at school in time. After I finished my shower, still standing in my robe, I saw my answering machine flashing. My heart fell. No one would call me at that hour unless it was horrible news. I listened to the message hoping the person would have left the details of the call in the message but they didnโ€™t. It was my sister โ€“ my fatherโ€™s oldest daughter โ€“ telling me to call her as soon as possible. That could only mean that something had happened to Daddy. I thought to take a moment and calm my breathing, maybe get dressed to feel less vulnerable but I couldnโ€™t wait to hear the bad news. She spoke with nervous energy and asked an odd question โ€“ she asked if I knew why she was calling. I suppose someone else should have called me first because someone called her to tell her what she called to relay. But no one had called and I didnโ€™t expect anyone to call me with any news about Daddy but her. And I really wanted her to get to the point. I told her I assumed it was something about Daddy and she told me that heโ€™d died about an hour or two before she called.

I told her I needed to get to the school but to let me know as soon as anyone decided on a date for the funeral so I could alert the dean and try to work something out to be at the funeral and to graduate on time. I didnโ€™t really cry โ€“ a few tears made their way through but I didnโ€™t give in to the urge to cry. I had business to take care of, like figuring out how to get to a funeral and back to class within the allowed days of absence required to pass. I couldnโ€™t break down โ€“ be non-functional – so I didnโ€™t allow grief to set in.

I went to school and told the lead teachers that my father had died that morning and that I would need to speak with the dean when she arrived. The deanโ€™s son was in my class and one of my assigned students to monitor development (no pressure, right) so I would see her when she dropped him off. One of the lead teachers interrupted me just after I said the words that my father had died and unofficially suggested I be allowed more time off and still be allowed to graduate on time. She gave me the standard 5 days that the employed teachers received as a part of their benefits and I was so grateful. I asked to stay and finish that day because I had no idea when the funeral would be. You see, there are many things that can delay a funeral in the Black American culture and I was the only black person in my whole major at that school. I hoped they were ready back home and could pull it off within that week but I didnโ€™t know.

Because that day was so exhausting emotionally, and I was developing some weird nervous ticks, I started my 5 days leave the next day, that Tuesday. I still hadnโ€™t really cried and was making my heart harder by the minute. My friends indulged me โ€“ I sort of lived those days in a weird haze, both wanting people to know my father was gone and not wanting anyone to say anything that would make me cry. And I took phone calls from various loved ones in Memphis annoyed by the fact checking of all the scandals โ€“ not only was I entirely uninterested in the drama Iโ€™d left behind for school, but I was the only person not living there so why would I know the answer to any of those questions? But I suppose that is a part of it all โ€“ what secrets did they know that I didnโ€™t and vice versa. Anyway, not quite soon enough, I was on my way to say farewell to my father.

Again, I was everyoneโ€™s concern, just as I was when my mother died. But I vowed to do some things differently with his death. I wouldnโ€™t wait on the adults to figure out what they were going to do about me. I would take care of myself as much as I could.

I refused to be a part of the funeral procession because Iโ€™d learned to hate limos since the first time I rode in one was on the way to my motherโ€™s funeral. Iโ€™d always hated following hearses and didnโ€™t want a police escort. I didnโ€™t want to ride with headlights on. So I stayed with my fatherโ€™s oldest daughter and went to the funeral with her promise to be my shield, allowing me to manage the funeral just as I wanted to. I also refused to view the body. That was the best choice I ever made โ€“ the last memory I have of him was us sitting together and laughing, having dinner. I have absolutely no memory of him dead and Iโ€™m glad. But this refusal meant I would not go into the church until the family processioned in because the service started with the casket open. My fatherโ€™s oldest daughter, all of his children in fact, were near the back of the procession. That was not where we were supposed to be but it demonstrates just how my step-monster tore us apart. Thankfully my fatherโ€™s siblings and some cousins were near the front. Some of them thought it was inappropriate that they sat in front of us but I didnโ€™t care. I only wanted family up there and not just church folk holding step-monster up.  In fact, they didnโ€™t even know I was there until I went to speak on behalf of the family. Yes, I was on the program. No, none of the people who wrote the program told me. These were also people who claimed to be unable to find a phone number to call me and let me know my father had died. My sister let me know I was on program, thankfully, and I was able to prepare.

The funeral was not until the following Saturday, and he wasnโ€™t buried until the following Tuesday. I returned to school that Sunday, missing the burial. I had a degree to get and no more grant and scholarship money. I managed to only need a loan for a semester and a half and I would be damned if I had to repeat a semester for a burial service. And honestly, I believe my father would have understood and even encouraged me to get my degree under those circumstances. Iโ€™ve always felt that the burial was the worst part of any funeral โ€“ dropping the body of your loved ones into freshly dug ground feels cruel. Thatโ€™s not particularly logical, I know, but itโ€™s how I feel.

It would be more than 17 years before I went to the cemetery where my father was laid to rest. I felt so much peace.

The first Valentineโ€™s Day after he died I was furious and found myself feeling that way every Valentineโ€™s Day after that. I thought Iโ€™d handled the situation well but in reality there was still a bunch of feelings just swept under the carpet. The refusal to grieve my father until I got my degree really meant refusal to grieve for much longer than that. The reminder that the ex who Iโ€™d once dreamed of marrying was not the right guy โ€“ he called the day Daddy died, not to offer condolences but to seek sympathy for the โ€œsaddest Valentineโ€™s Day of his lifeโ€. The inappropriate men taking advantage of my vulnerability by hitting on me at the funeral and during the repast. The guilt I felt for having essentially abandoned much of my family simply by trying to abandon my father and step-monster. And I never knew I hated Valentineโ€™s Day until then.

Men coming out of the grocery store with bouquets, heart-shaped candy boxes, and pink and red balloons pissed me off. And I wasnโ€™t quite sure why. High schoolers getting on buses with giant teddy bears pissed me off. And I wasnโ€™t quite sure why. I asked myself if it was because I didnโ€™t have a โ€œvalentineโ€ that day but that didnโ€™t ring true to my emotions. Valentineโ€™s day had never been a big deal to me and I had never received anything that felt significant from any boyfriend Iโ€™d had on valentineโ€™s day. Even my secret admirer valentineโ€™s day gifts were blah โ€“ I would have preferred to know who the admirer was rather than have a secret gift. So I blamed it on my Daddyโ€™s death. It was easy to do โ€“ after all, he died on Valentineโ€™s Day.

When I was young Valentineโ€™s Day meant cardboard valentineโ€™s cards, candy, and a day at school that ended with a party or a dance. Then as a young adult Valentineโ€™s Day meant my daddy died. But now as a not-as-young adult, Valentineโ€™s Day doesnโ€™t mean anything at all. You know how I know? I literally forgot all about it. I didnโ€™t send out social media greetings in memory of my father. I didnโ€™t send any gifts to family or friends nearby. I didnโ€™t even send myself flowers or buy any candy. When was it, Sunday? Yeah, just a regular old day.

I used to like February 14th. Then I didnโ€™t. Now itโ€™s not so bad.

3 Min Read, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, grief, Holidays

I am Regina Lynette. I hate December 26th.

I am prone to complicated metaphors. To follow this one, you will have had to have broken a glass on your kitchen floor before. If you havenโ€™t, there are some important things to understand. Shattered glass is tricky. It breaks in large chunks and tiny pieces. Those with experience cleaning broken glass can often manage it without injury. Large chunks go first. Tiny pieces are carefully sought out and picked up with care. And you wipe and sweep and vacuum and mop and wipe and sweep and vacuum and mop again hoping that youโ€™ve gotten everything up. Somehow you know one little shard was missed and you announce to the household that a glass was broken in the kitchen so that everyone takes care. Hard soles are worn for days in the kitchen to protect feet from cuts. And just as soon as everyone forgets about the broken glass, someone not wearing shoes steps on the last missed shard and bleeds. It is never in the place where the glass was broken but usually somewhere odd โ€“ it either ricocheted across the room during the break or was moved by all the wiping and sweeping and vacuuming and mopping.


A child at my church was killed one Christmas Eve. She was younger than I by a few years. Her parents had recently divorced, and she was spending that holiday evening with her father. Sheโ€™d asked to sleep in his room, but he sent her to her own room to be a big girl. Later that night a truck slammed into the house near her room and killed her instantly. It was so horrific that our household was not filled with the usual cloudiness of grief and compassion for others but a foreign inability to comprehend the news. What must that family feel? What does that kind of trauma do to a family that is already smarting from the recent divorce? How do they go on? And do they celebrate Christmases going forward at all?

Then I lost my mother a few years later on December 26th. That following year I remembered thinking about the questions we had about that family whoโ€™d experienced a traumatic loss right at the Christmas holiday โ€“ if theyโ€™d ever celebrate Christmases again. We were quickly approaching my nephewโ€™s first Christmas and of course weโ€™d celebrate Christmases again โ€“ life moved forward regardless of who came along with us.

One can never be adequately prepared for loss, but the accompanying shock and bowlful of mixed reactions is expected and well attended by loved ones in your community โ€“ particularly the elders of the community who come and see about your immediate needs. But what Iโ€™ve never witnessed is anyone taking care of people in the aftermath of loss. Once youโ€™re sort of standing on your own, no longer hunched over in sobs and listless with grief you are often left to figure out the rest of your life on your own.

Exactly one year after my mother died, I woke up in my sisterโ€™s house to silence. It wasnโ€™t particularly unusual to wake up to silence, but this silence felt eerie. As I sat up in bed trying to understand what I was feeling, it dawned on me โ€“ I expected that everyone would be dead. I donโ€™t mean everyone in the house. I mean everyone in the world. I was old enough to know that was an irrational thought, but it paralyzed me in the bed. After a while, I heard life sounds and I knew everyone in the house was accounted for and was able to continue about my day as usual. I would not feel that kind of fear again until the following December 26th. And I would continue to feel that fear every December 26th.

After seeking professional therapy for the trauma associated with the loss of my mother, December 26th wasnโ€™t as bad. I didnโ€™t expect that everyone in the world was dead, but I did still spend some part of the early morning reminding myself that my thoughts were irrational and even if someone did not wake up that day, I would be able to survive it. It usually happened when there was only one person who slept later than everyone else so I would just wake them up if I couldnโ€™t console myself.

This year I woke up late on December 26th. My tummy woke me up, finally ready for a meal that was not chicken wings and I got up to make breakfast. Just before I went downstairs to the kitchen, I realized that I didnโ€™t have that annual December 26th fear. There wasnโ€™t any feeling at all โ€“ it was a normal day as it should have been โ€“ and I went downstairs to eat. A few minutes later, everyone else in the house emerged from bedrooms and I was so grateful that I hadnโ€™t even been listening for life sounds that morning. It was a perfectly normal day. It even dared to be sunny and warm.

But I still hate December 26th and I spent the day with a general I-donโ€™t-feel-good funk. Maybe it was grief. Maybe it was because Iโ€™d eaten my weight in chicken wings the day before.

I am Regina Lynette. I hate December 26th.

10 Min Read, COVID, Fasting, Holidays, Spirituality

I am fasting in a time of feast.

When I experience emotional pain, I build a fort around myself in an attempt to feel safe. I donโ€™t generally respond this way for sudden and traumatic experiences that cause pain but in response to the microaggressions, sarcastic and sardonic remarks, insults delivered with kind tones, and all the other little pin pricks that wear away at your resolve on a daily basis. For me, this fort manifests in different ways. To keep myself safe from my own thoughts I keep the television on as much as possible, only turning it off to focus on a game that requires little skill but keeps the mind engaged. To be safe from people coming too physically close, I allow clutter to accumulate, not only making it an unappealing space to share but also literally leaving no space for anyone to get close. To avoid spending time with people who donโ€™t treat me with respect, I get deeply involved in secret projects where I have to deny invites with cryptic excuses and sometimes outright lies.

When the fort I build around myself becomes a prison โ€“ junky rooms, mountains of paper on my desk, isolation and loneliness โ€“ I have to begin to deal with the pain in more constructive ways. I have to allow myself room to think which means having some quiet time โ€“ no listening to anything, no talking to anyone. I have to clean up and organize the chaos and mess. I have to stand up for myself and demand respect when necessary as well as give of myself to others who value and love me and let them in.

Along with the entire world, I thought that COVID-related challenges would be temporary. I never believed that weโ€™d close down for two weeks and resume business as usual as many people talked about just before April 3, 2020 โ€“ the start of confinement where I live โ€“ but imagined it would be closer to two months and I was hoping that I was being overly pessimistic about that much time. Never could I have thought that I would be masking up seven months later with no end in sight. I found myself drinking too much because I mixed cocktails at home rather than going out to have one or two a month on average. My at-home pour is heavy and when I stepped back to look at monthly expenses, I couldnโ€™t believe how much I was spending monthly on alcohol. I am now addicted to lemon pepper chicken wings and coffee. I eat bacon and eggs literally every day. And my grocery and eating out expenses have tripled. I have cancelled doctor appointments for anything preventative โ€“ I am at high risk for various cancers and have not had any regularly scheduled preventative screenings. I havenโ€™t had professional dental cleaning and x-rays. I havenโ€™t had my hair professionally styled. I look and feel a whole mess. And my confinement is showing symptoms of agoraphobia.

I refuse to enter 2021 in this weakened state, so I am taking a 40-day fast from November 22nd through December 31st. ย 

I donโ€™t typically fast during the end of the year winter holidays because it is a time for feasting โ€“ October: candy; November: Thanksgiving; December: my birthday, Christmas, and New Yearโ€™s Eve. Itโ€™s a time to enjoy extended family and indulge in mac-n-cheese, brown liquor, and pound cake. Itโ€™s a time to watch holiday movies and catch winter finales of my favorite series. Holiday music is a constant soundtrack of the season. And itโ€™s a time to dismiss the insensitive remarks from family and friends for the sake of creating pleasant memories.

Because I have no idea what the holidays will bring โ€“ I forgot when Halloween happened until I looked at the date on that day and we totally forgot that Thanksgiving is upon us โ€“ I am doing a modified fast. While Iโ€™m not missing out on my sisterโ€™s mac-n-cheese and tropical pound cake that only makes an appearance twice a year, I have a list of foods that have become a comfort and a crutch that I will be abstaining from during this time. Iโ€™m limiting my television time to one news show, one feature length film, and one hour of sitcoms a day โ€“ I will not miss out on my annual viewing of Miracle on 34th Street, This Christmas, The Preacherโ€™s Wife and Itโ€™s A Wonderful Life.

Since there will be no travel or visitors during the holidays, I will be completing several declutter challenges to get my space in order, and thus get my life together. My holiday decorating will be limited to my Advent calendar, turning on the birch trees that stay up all year, and glimmer strings in my lanterns and on my shelves โ€“ which means the only thing Iโ€™m pulling out of storage will be 4 DVDs and my Advent calendar. I also have some organization projects related to work that I will be tackling during this time โ€“ I look forward to seeing the top of my standing desk and emptying the storage bins where I dumped things I havenโ€™t sorted.

I wonโ€™t have to make a lot of time to avoid people and have meaningful times of silence due to COVID-related restrictions, but I will be making some strides against the cabin fever and agoraphobic-ish reactions that are becoming harmful to my spirit and mental stability.

Every day I will get outside for some movement โ€“ temps where I live are like Spring and Fall with very little rain so I have no excuses there. Every day I will run an errand using the necessary precautions versus having everything delivered. And I plan to go to the beach at least once a week, likely on Sundays for some quiet time in nature and time to write.

With these sacrifices, I expect to tear down my fort of safety and the self-made prison so that I can receive spiritual rejuvenation and answered prayers that will bolster my resolve and give me strength to tackle 2021 come what may.