Cloudless October Sky

Poetry

It still takes my breath away. Realizing there never will be any new pictures. After I’ve recycled all the best and my favorite photos of us, of you… there will be no others.

No new memories to be made. No more laughter at silly mistakes. No more time to get things right. No more chances at a marathon. No new medals or PR bells.

The rush of anger that overtakes me— still, after 4 years— of letting go of everything we had and all that we wanted. It surprises me even now.

I have work to do. Some that I’ve tackled. Some that I’ve used simply to keep me busy and preoccupied. Some that I continue to avoid. Mainly because I fear what it will cost me in the doing.

Because I am afraid.

Of feeling too much.

Of feeling not enough.

Of forgetting.

Mostly— I am afraid of forgetting.

Happiness no longer shames me. But, if I am smiling in the now, will I still be able to hold your face in my mind? Will I still hear the echo of your laughter when I close my eyes? Will my stubborn determination to see the light of each new day still allow a space for you?

I believe it does.

Because even 2,103,840 minutes have not dulled the sharp edge of your loss. Fourteen hundred sixty-one days without you have not lessened the love you left behind.

Cloudless October sky, so much like the day you left. I wrap its beauty around me as grief twists and knots within me, and I acknowledge that I am capable of holding both simultaneously.

It is the complexity of our uniquely human experience. And I do not want to miss out on any part of it.


I still miss you.

Date night, December 2016

Calvin Keith Johnson

May 9, 1957 – October 23, 2019

Book Release

announcements, Poetry

It’s official! My first collection of poetry “Pretty Little Widow” is now available.

Order paperback here https://www.amazon.com/Pretty-Little-Widow-Shelley-Johnson/dp/B0C6BFCY5X

Download ebook here https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0C64VTPD9/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?ie=UTF8&qid=&sr=

Friends in the Central Louisiana area, look for upcoming announcements on availability at local retail locations.


Thank you to everyone who has already ordered! “Pretty Little Widow” is currently at number 10 on the Amazon New Releases in Poetry by Women list!!! Thank YOU!


If you have ordered and received your copy, please leave a review to help others discover my book. https://www.amazon.com/review/create-review/?ie=UTF8&channel=awUDPv3&asin=B0C6BFCY5X

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This project has been one more step in my journey through grief. I am grateful for the friends that have traveled with me and the lessons of love I am learning on the way.

Holy Night

Uncategorized

Tonight, a family has lost their 22-year-old daughter. Tonight, 150 miles away, a family has lost their mom, their wife, their grandmother.

Tonight, I feel broken and exhausted; weighed down by grief.  My tears, hot and angry, question the purpose of suffering.  The inexplicable complications of life.  The meaning of …  everything.  Why we love.  Why we die.  And mostly, WHY must we lose the people we love.

This is Holy Saturday.  A sacred time of reflection in the darkest of days before the single most important day in our Christian faith.  Sunday- Easter morning, all the churches will sing their Alleluias and proclaim the resurrection of the Messiah.  There will be trumpets, brass bands, smiling robed choirs, brightly colored dresses, and newly shined shoes.  We as a united people of faith will exalt in the promise given to us that Jesus died for us, to deliver us from sin and death, and lead us to the kingdom of God.

Sunday morning.

But tonight… Tonight it is dark. Quiet. Mournful. Tonight is full of anguish, questions, and anger. Tonight, it is difficult to think of Jesus healing the sick when so many people I know suffer from illnesses and traumas perpetrated upon them. Tonight, it is difficult to remember how Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead when innocent lives have been taken through random accidents or intentional violence. Tonight, my faith wavers because I can find no answers to my questions.

Those who grieve new loss tonight, on the eve of Easter morning, likely can see no hope of the sun shining again.  Maybe they cannot imagine there being truth in a distant promise of redemption.  I can understand that because I’ve been in that darkness before.  I have lived there, gasping to breathe, praying for deliverance even when I could not see a possible way for it. 

Those who suffer tonight, choking on the questions in their throats, are desperate for answers.  I have none.  I have no pretty words to soothe.  No platitudes to dish out on fancy trays or champagne flutes of trite clichés to swallow down in one easy gulp. 


Through my own dark night of the soul, I asked plenty of my own questions.  Screamed them.  Shook my fist at the sky.  Cursed God.  Cried.  Prayed to God.  Begged for the cup of grief to pass from me.  And when it would not, I dug deep within myself to search for whatever of value remained.  What I found, when I was brave enough to look, was love.  A deeper empathy for others.  A flash of understanding that life is temporary, and that is precisely what makes it so special and valuable.  I discovered that the people in my life who love me are what deserves my closest attention, and that every moment of Now demands to be lived.

If in your darkness you cannot yet see the sunlight of Easter morning, I hope you can at least feel the warmth of that light as it surrounds you. And I hope you choose to lean into it.



“I still believe
You’re the same yesterday, today, and forever.
And I still believe
Your blood is sufficient
For me.”

“Still Believe”
Messiah, POA Worship

Alleluia.

Amen.

Stages of Grief

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This graph on the stages of grief is the most helpful I have ever come across. Someone shared it in a Facebook group, and I saved it. I do not know the original source. If anyone recognizes it and can cite the source, I would be grateful!

This graph is an incredibly helpful tool for anyone grappling with loss. It is vital to be able to identify each emotion as they come rushing in like a wave in order to know which coping skills on which to rely in any given moment or day.

I am grateful to have a new tool. I can use all the help I can get.

Clyde W Johnson

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The world has lost another soul. A family has lost its father. Grandfather. A life partner. A brother. A friend. A life Force.

Clyde Johnson was one of the warmest, robustly full of life people I have ever known. He was always smiling. Even now, I can hear his jolly laughter echoing in my memory.

His loss leaves a hole in the lives of those who knew and loved him. He will be missed, but he leaves a legacy of love in his absence. I hope those who loved him best can feel the warmth of that love embrace them in the coming days.

3 brothers united again: Clyde Johnson, Calvin Johnson, James Johnson (seated)