Skip to main content

Days Gone By

You are here: Home » Days Gone By

Captain Imperfecto and Air Force 1

February 19th, 2013

The times have changed rapidly since last March when my wife died, and man, do I need to learn to change with them. I’m not talking about me acting as if I am some kind of Neanderthal and not evolving with my environment. I mean in everyday life. 


In everyday life, I see others go on with their day-to-day activities. For instance, the people in my life are transforming themselves into the current times that life has brought them in today’s world since last March. In a sense, they are going with the flow or rolling with the punches, so it seems, at least, by the looks of their smiling Facebook photos. For them, the year is just another year filled with their own trials and tribulations. But now it is time for me to man up and get on board or fall behind even further. I need to come up for air eventually.


I have stood on the sidelines long enough, and now I have decided to engage in life and begin to roll with my own punches. Not that I haven’t made my moves after my wife died. I have done things to get myself going because if I didn’t, I probably would have just gone insane. The fun stuff I did with my kids as therapy for them probably helped me as much as it has helped them. But as a grown man, I need to do more for myself.

I always told Mimie that no one cares more than us about what goes on in our lives. No one cares about how we live. How we struggle. How we moved on from the loss of our twins or any other thing, no matter how mundane our issues became. And now, I have to heed my own advice because if the past few months have shown me anything, no one will help me or my children. My loved ones want to pretend everything in my life is getting better. What do they care about my struggles? Spoiler alert: They do not. 


It’s not that I’m lashing out at anyone in particular. It’s just that people have their own problems, and after the initial shock of my reality entering their world, the window of sympathy and understanding is only open long enough until that person decides to shut it. Then you are on your own.

And I am and have been on my own.

It has been a struggle for me to get reality in check. The medication and therapy are starting to work, and the once-hazy path to clarity has begun to come into focus as the fog lifts. Or perhaps this newfound cure will only last for a month before my window shuts, but I know I need to strike while my character is strong enough to embrace my life today.


Other than my therapist, my blog has been instrumental in keeping what has occurred in my life organized. And it has brought a therapy all its own. In addition to my blog, I have privately documented my struggles and, at the same time, being as honest in my public writings as possible without being committed to some facility where I would probably wind up for hours in a white padded room with absolute sound proofing, all the while being peered through some window where doctors would take notes of my behavioral attributes that would later be documented in some medical journal for all to study. As you can see in that statement, my imagination can get the best of me.


I remember I was once afraid to write this blog because I thought I would be too vulnerable and possibly appear weak until someone put writing my blog into perspective this way: “Vulnerability is good, because it allows others to see that we all have struggles in life.”


I embrace vulnerability because it breeds honesty. Everyone in my world needs to hear this because those who love me suck and have failed me and my children. Without this honesty about who I am and how I feel, it will cause me to bottle this emotion up and create resentment. Sweet, sweet, bitterness, and anger. I may have gotten lost somewhere along the way without that organization of my thoughts. Someone who had read this and found it helpful may have felt alone without knowing that we all struggle in this life.


I know my blog has helped someone move along in their own personal journey of loss. People have reached out and told me so. I hope that in that helpfulness, I may inspire and nudge them enough to see that there is life after the death of someone they love. It is about time I subscribed to that same medication talk, took a dose of my own medicine, and finally got on board the life train or found myself becoming derailed. It is time to see the life that has eluded me as the days gone by. Because those other lost days gone by are gone forever.





© Copyright 2012- 2024 Captain Imperfecto, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may not be republished, rewritten or redistributed without permission.  Please contact if you would like to re-publish in film, television or print. 


843 words
Creative Commons License


The Adventures of Captain Imperfecto/Born Again by Christopher P. Fusaro is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.


Based on a work at christopherfusaro.blogspot.com.

The Adventures of Captain Imperfecto ©  is also a Registered Copyright with the Office of the Registers, United States of America, TX 7-611-138

Comments

  1. So amazing to see you get your strength and life back. You deserve so many good things. It's been a pleasure following your journey for almost 2 years.
    Thank you for risking it all by becoming vulnerable. I have no doubt you have helped many people because you have shown what it's like to be human, to wear your emotions on your sleeve at any cost, to carve out a moment in time and record it in words for your boy's future. To remind people that we all hurt, grieve, cry, "lose it", get angry, feel ready to give up at one time or another. You've made us feel like we're not alone. That no matter how high the ups or low the downs in a marriage, that true love never goes away. People read your blogs, Chris because they can relate. Because you've allowed them to. Because they care. And I have a feeling they always will....
    Here's to many, many more "adventures". May they be filled with happiness, hope, prosperity, laughter and most of all....love.
    Thank you Thank you Thank you.
    Kris (you can submit this under Anon if you'd like).

    ReplyDelete
  2. You don't own the market on struggeling, depression and being alone. This you now know. Just being YOU, what little friendship you could muster to give, sharing your story, your blog helped more than you will ever know. Even if you didn't want the job, you were needed. Your help was needed. We didn't have a choice but to move on/close that window. You've come so far - very proud of you.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I think you're doing great. And I love reading your blog.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

"Far Away"

You are here: Home » "Far Away" May 5th, 2012 For mommy in heaven… My kids wouldn't let me sleep last night. I kept them busy all afternoon and evening, yet they were still very hyper. I picked Nico up from school at 2:00 o'clock P.M. and decided to take them for a road trip to Broward County. It's a close drive from where we live. I am just one county over to the north. I didn't feel like going home and falling into the same routine. I wanted to stimulate the boys so that they would sleep later that night. Honestly, maybe we all could get some sleep that night. It's hard to get motivated in life when you are sleep-deprived. Nico leaves class about 10 minutes earlier than the rest of the school. Since he was a premature baby, he has had a learning delay with speech. The State of Florida placed him in a program called Early Steps. It's a great program, and it allows him to catch up to the rest of his peers academically so that by the time h...

Hi Mama. Bye Mama

You are here: Home » Hi Mama. Bye Mama. June 26, 2012 Hi mama. Bye, mama. And so it goes. Up the street, hi, mama, down the street, bye, mama. The boys know where they can find mommy. It's just down the road, a path we take every day. Everywhere we go. We go with the flow. Hi mama. Bye, mama. It always starts the same, the familiar path of the road the boys have become accustomed to. It doesn't matter what we do; we will always pass right on through; regardless of how we travel, mom will always be on their left or their right. She's never too far out of sight. Hi mama. Bye, mama. The boys anticipate the car ride. They look on either side as we drive by, seeking a clear view of their mama to be seen through. They eagerly await with no other thought on their plate. They are just waiting for the moment to see their number one visually. Hi mama. Bye, mama We are getting closer now; they look at Dad, their pal. Their smiles reach from ear to ear, knowing the time is near...

Anatomy of a Loss

You are here: Home » Anatomy of a Loss July 5, 2012 When you lose someone that you love and that you depend on, it feels like everything around you has just crashed and burned. It doesn't matter what is happening in the world because yours just got charred beyond recognition. You are forced to reprogram everything about you. Who you are. What your path in life was. The goals you had planned. Everything before the death of a loved one is scraped.  Your mind wanders about aimlessness, and you just go over your mind time and time again about how you will be able to do it. Where do you go from here? You are afraid and bewildered because you are unsure what to do and who to turn to. You find that you question God and yourself and examine everything about your life.  The doubts set in about yourself, and you want to return to the day before so badly just to reassure yourself that everything ...