Dear Nita –
Five
years ago last night, we said our last goodbye to you. I’ve always wondered how
much you knew about that night. How much did you know what was happening in
that bedroom in your beloved log cabin, and how much of it was lost to you
because of the medicine they gave you to keep the pain at bay?
I
hope you saw your children gathered around you, crying because they didn’t want
to ask you to stay but simultaneously didn’t want you to go. I hope you knew
that the ones you loved so much who weren’t standing beside you were doing
everything they could to get there quickly, and even though they didn’t arrive
before your Homegoing, they loved you so dearly. I hope one of the prayers I prayed
for Jesus to be near and to comfort you did the very things I asked.
Ryan
sat with you for over two hours, holding your hand and making sure you weren’t
alone – until the funeral home came. It was his last gift to you, and I loved his
heart for it. He told me he promised you he would be there for you, and he
wanted to keep his promise.
There’s
no way we could wish you back to the madness of the last five years on this earth.
With all your struggles to breathe, there’s no way we could have wanted you to
try to make it through a pandemic. As hard as our goodbye to you was, I can
only imagine if we’d had to say it over a screen because we weren’t allowed in
a hospital. I know many people lived that kind of a goodbye.
You’d
be proud of your kids, Nita. They’ve done a good job. They’ve taken care of
your home, they tended to all the details after Allen’s unexpected death, and they’ve
honored you with their lives. They’ve walked through some hard stuff together –
big illnesses, job losses, births, deaths – and I think you would be proud of
how they’ve handled it.
Your
grandbabies are not babies anymore – at least the ones you knew. And you’d love
the ones you never got to meet. They’re all pretty great kids, and I know the
number of pictures that exist of each of them would probably not be
satisfactory to you.
Ryan
and I talk of you often. We have pictures of you in our home, we use your
catch-phrases, and we tell stories of days we spent with you. I think of you
every time I wear my hat that matches yours. I think of you every time I drink
out of one of the coffee mugs you gave me. I think of you every time I put on
one of the big blingy necklaces you gave me. I have your camera bag and am committed
to carrying on the family legacy of documentation.
I still have pictures of you in my phone and sometimes just sit and look at them, remembering the times we had together – before and after the word glioblastoma changed everything in life. I still have the video of you walking out of the rehab hospital singing “This is the Day.”
You
had many great accomplishments in this life, Nita. You were a friend to many, were
a fantastic nurse, and served well in the church. But I have to feel your
greatest accomplishment is the son you raised who has been the biggest blessing
to my life. I see so much of you in him. That smile. Those dimples. The laugh. The
compassionate heart. He’s you. And I love you both so much.
Nothing
on this broken earth can compare to the perfection and healing you’re living in
now. To wish you back would be selfish. But know that you are missed and loved
by these two Shaffers.
Until
then, Nita.
Bekah
5 comments:
Oh Bekah -- this is so beautiful. Thank you for sharing it (and Nita) with all of us. Much love to both you and Ryan this day.
Beautiful tribute.
Odie
Beautiful tribute. You both loved her well.
Bekah Brooks
She was a wonderful woman and so so loved. Thank you for this beautiful tribute!
Thank you, everyone!! :) - Bekah
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