Posts Tagged ‘Family’
While everyday gets a little easier to smile, I still find myself fighting back tears from moment to moment through out the day. My emotions just keep spinning…
To help me feel close and connected to my dad, I have started researching my dad’s side of the family genealogy. I knew my dad’s lineage was German, but I just discovered that he was Canadian French as well. Genealogy is something I love and could get lost in.
This is my way of coping with my father’s loss. I am my daddy’s girl, more than I ever thought. I can’t change my childhood, but I sure as hell can remember my dad in a positive and loving way, much to my mother’s disgust.
Before my dad walked out of my life, the place I felt safest and most secure was in his arms. I loved sitting on my dad’s lap and falling asleep to the sound of his heartbeat. For years, I used to look out of my bedroom window, praying my dad would come rescue my brother and I from my abusive step father and alcoholic mother. At some point I gave up on that prayer and realized that I had to protect my brother and I…which I did.
My mom and dad should have never married once let alone twice. They were like oil and water, both of them very toxic for each other. Their marriages & divorces to each other was like the movie War Of The Roses…very bitter, destructive, and vindictive! That my friends is NOT love…it was all about trying to control each other.
I know my dad regretted walking out of our lives. I also know he would have protected Scott and I if he only knew.
I’m sitting here this morning trying to figure out how I can have closure with my dad’s passing. How do I make peace with the childhood that I was robbed from having? How do I make any sense at all of a man whom I didn’t really know. Believe me, I’ve tried to get to know him…I just remember SO much from my childhood that he was not expecting. In the end, my dad didn’t believe I loved him, even though I did and I told him so, many times.
My dad didn’t want any kind of funeral services or burial. He is being cremated this week and my step mom will be spreading his ashes on their property in Florida. He didn’t even want an obituary written. I’m struggling with this…big time. I want to say my last good bye’s, but a little lost on how.
This morning I received a call from my brother just before 8:00am, letting me know that our father passed away from a heart attack early this morning at around 6:00am. He was only 67 years old. I’m still in shock and a bit numb.
I do take comfort in knowing I will see him again some day. He is now resting in peace in our Lords arms.
I love you Dad and will miss you greatly!!
~ Love forever
Your daughter
Yesterday my son Alec came up to me to show me an essay he wrote for one of his classes. As I read his words, I had to fight back tears. I knew he was deeply affected by the news of my skin cancers, but reading his words pierced through my heart. My son went from a 4.0 GPA to a 2.78 GPA in two years. Alec had ambitions of being a Neurosurgeon or a Cardiac surgeon. Now, I am not sure what his ambitions are.
Here is his essay:
Not many people may realize, but in every city, town, school there is a story to be told by the unknown faces we encounter in our daily lives. Our world is a virtual library of stories untold, hidden and kept in secret. When I look around my classroom, I don’t see faces or names; I see books that have yet to be read. Our lives are an unfolding library of stories that are being bound together to create a journey. Each person has a unique story to be told; the story of their life.
In my sixteen years of life, there’s a lot to be told. However, the memory that stands out to me, the one that I will never forget in my years of living, will be the day I found out my mother had cancer. I thought such a thing would never happen to me. Cancer is such a scary word when you first hear it. It floods your mind with images and things you’ve heard on T.V. It floods your brain with death and fear. At first, I didn’t know how to comprehend what my parents had just sat down and told my sisters and me; there was no way for me to collect my thoughts. I was left in the dark, not knowing what to feel, what to think. Then it hit me. Like the time I got in a car accident a few years back; first, you feel a jerking motion, then the confusion sets in and time seems to go slower. When it’s all over, you sit back for a moment, and realize you were just in a collision, and that’s when the panic strikes. For days, I went on without feeling any sign of panic from what I had just learned about my mother. However, when it finally did hit me, it was as if someone had punched me in the gut, and my breath was stolen from me. Tears poured down my face uncontrollably; I sat there feeling useless. Fortunately, I was home in my room when it all happened. I can still remember feeling as if I lost control of every movement in my body. All I could do was cry, all I wanted to do was cry. It seemed like an eternity as I sat there useless, not able to do anything but cry.
In the weeks following, I tried my best to gather the pieces of the broken puzzle into which my heart had transformed. It was the hardest thing to sit in class and force all my emotions into a glass bottle with the lid vacuum-sealed and hope that the bottle did not burst. To try and act as if everything in your life is fine, ordinary; to hide behind a mask glued to your face; to lie to my friends and say “I’m fine, really. Just tired is all” was a task that was constantly approached on a daily basis; it became more of a chore than a task.
Skin cancer may sound minor in comparison to the medical terms ‘brain tumor’ or ‘heart surgery’ but a new meaning is perceived when you put the word ‘melanoma’ in the phrase. The picture changed as I began researching. The horror that consumed me can only be described as a constant battle between worry and fear. Melanoma skin cancer is the deadliest and least treatable skin cancer when it is not caught early. Hours seemed as if they were minutes, while seconds seemed to cease. The images ate away at my brain and latched onto my thoughts, as well as my subconscious. It was like a parasite, invading my head, a parasite whose only purpose was to make my life as miserable as possible. There was absolutely no way for me to relax without any worrisome thoughts drifting around in the vast space of my mind.
My mind is a place that is alien to anyone but me, a place where only I can find sanctuary, a place that I can find myself. However, this parasite intruded into my mind, and I lost my sanctuary, my safe house. My memory was left scarred from the day my parents informed me about the cancer. That memory is a scab, that once was an open wound that was left festering and infected my head with panic and terror. To this day, I am overcome by my emotions and, occasionally, I breakdown. My life is a story that is at its end of chapter sixteen, a story that has barley begun; a story that is scribed in pen. It is only one story that quietly shares the massive library that shelves the books of tens of millions of others.
If I’m diagnosed with my 3rd Melanoma and it’s worse than Stage 1A…how do I tell my children? How the hell do I tell them?
On March 28 my brother Eric would have been 43 years old. Eric was a good man who loved his family and his country. I miss him everyday, but take great comfort knowing I will see him again.
One of the best things he ever did was join the Marines and then the National Guard.
Here’s to you Eric!! Ooh-rah & Hooah!!!
I love you!!!



We are mourning the loss of not only Grandpa Wells but Grandma Wells as well today. She passed shortly after 1pm today of a ‘broken heart’. She peacefully went to be with the Lord and to be with her husband of 31 years.
Our family is thankful for the memories we have, and the time we were blessed to share with them. We love you Grandpa & Grandma Wells!!
Ionia Sentinel-Standard Obituaries:
Grandma Wells
Grandpa Wells
Lake Funeral Home:
Grandma Wells
Grandpa Wells
Grandpa Wells passed away early Thursday morning, and then Grandma followed less then 36 hours later — from a broken heart.
So sad, but amazingly sweet at the same time. Speaks stronger then any words could of the love they had for each other for over 30 years.
Love the ones you have, you never know when they’ll be gone.
Grandma & Grandpa, you will be dearly missed.
- Bruce
As we ALL grapple with your loss, I for one am humbled to read on your myspace page, all those who knew you and admired you. I already knew you were a wonderful and good man. To know that others thought the same makes my heart swell and tears fall. Those of us left down here on Earth are trying to understand how you could be taken from us at such a young age (yes 40 is still a young age). You impacted more people than you realize Eric…I love you and I am proud of you. I wish I could have said that to you when you were still alive. Life is so fragile…I miss you!! Knowing that you were alive gave me some comfort at night Eric. You were my family – forever your sister, even if we were only step. Love your sister ~ Lisa





































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