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I started planting roses, and for a few years, it was this peaceful respite that I looked forward to each summer. Radiant petals would bloom, rising out of cold, lifeless soil bursting into an explosion of color. In early May, I started the cycle again and for weeks the roses were vibrant and rich with life.

My dad died, and I realized I was no better at grief than I had been before. For two days we clung to the tiniest sliver of hope. We showed up, we stood vigil, we prayed, we cried. I watched my mom, my sisters, my childrenso vulnerable, each one of us far too accustomed to loss.

In the hospital room it was busy, pulsing with expectant energy. People came and went, conversations were lively, doctors discussed next steps. And if there were next steps, there was still a chance, right? His body was warm. He looked like himself. He was still with us.

I went out to my gardens today and stood silently, the stillness of the world echoing in my ears.

The moment he left, the world went quiet. It was as if a light went out and the darkness became consuming. The world went graya colorless splotch of nothing.

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You keep busy, of course, in the days following. You go through the motions, tend to the peopleall the people. And for a while, they fill the void. There are stories to hear and memories to share. You go back only to walk through the years again, suspecting that someway, somehow the ending is different.

The leaves on my rosebushes are tinged with brown, the thorns sharp and piercingundoubtedly the effect of a particularly dry spell and limited water to nourish their roots. Yet, in stark contrast, the soft, velvet petals wear their colors boldly in hues of magenta, crimson, peach, and coral.

My phone rings and for a brief moment, I think it is my dad.

A butterfly dances in the breeze. The trees sway, casting shadows in the noonday sun. My mind is fleeting between past and present. There is no after yet. No future I am ready to embrace. There is only today and yesterday.

Of all the potential circumstances I had considered might happen in life, this was never one of them.

There is an overpowering sense of injustice that the world should carry on. Had his work been completed? What do you do with an unfinished existence? I suppose life reveals its mysteries only slowly. Perhaps in time, this too will make sense.

RELATED: When Time Doesn’t Fix your Grief

Stepping out from the hospital doors that day there was a tangible sense that the whole world had shifted. Suddenly everything had changed. The bells had sounded for last orders and there was no refuge for the unprepared.

I had taken advantage of time. And somewhere along the way, I created the delusion that there would always be more.

That there would always be another day.

While I was busy worrying about a million other things that in hindsight seem significantly unimportant and entirely irrelevant, time was slipping away from us.

The pilgrimage from holding tight to letting go was underway. Great love is so intimately connected to that of immense suffering that denying this reality can only bring further despondency. And the paradox here is that this great love is the same love that allows us to let go in order to move through.

With his last breath, the world fell silent. We were left to confront death with unflinching courage. To let go of fear and face our own human boundaries and limitations. I suppose that is the hope that reignites our power to live. That even with fragile heartseven there, in the midst of our mourningwe have faith that the deep pain of this suffering might one day allow us to experience the true fullness of life.

Out of the vast stillness, a bird sings out.

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Shannon Shpak

Shannon Shpak is a writer and social media manager who is rebuilding life after loss with her 5 children. She believes in hope, perseverance and being strong . . . all legacies her son left behind.

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