Reflections on a life
When my mother passed yesterday in the shared room at the assisted living center, the world did not stop. The hallway lights were still on, the aides still walked around helping people, and life moved on in its ordinary rhythm. Yet sitting beside her bed, holding a hand that had held mine through every season, I felt the weight of all the ordinary days I had taken for granted. The table by the window with ginger ale and toast when I was sick, her furrowed brow when I did something wrong (which was quite often), and the gentle sounds she made that had always meant she was still here. And then, she wasn’t.
In the quiet that followed, I began to understand that her life was never about grand gestures. It was about steady love. About meals made, worries carried, sacrifices offered without announcement. She left no statues or headlines behind. She left patience in my voice, strength in my spine, and a love that still steadies me when grief and trauma try to pull me under. And I know now that a life well lived is not measured by how long it lasts, but by the quiet strength it plants in others.
