The Vulnerability ​Movement
  • My Blog
  • About Me
  • Gallery
  • George
  • Blog

My Blog

Please join me on a journey from grief to surrender, from fear to empowerment, from uncertainty to.... uncertainty. 
"When you become comfortable with uncertainty, infinite possibilities open up in your life."  ​
~Eckhart Tolle

The Gift of His Life

12/22/2022

Comments

 
​On this day in 1975, a few minutes past 11 a.m. in Pittsburgh, PA, George Schnakenberg III was born. This singular event, along with his departure exactly 38 years and 7 months later, would alter the lives of many in beautiful, profound, and heartbreaking ways.

He would have been 47 years old today. Because 4+7=11, and 11x2=22, and today’s date is 12/22/22 (we all know how much George loved the numbers 11 + 22), it feels like an especially special birthday. But this year, I am not making a cake. Nova is making a cake. Nova, our girl who has somehow grown into a human who can research recipes and create shopping lists and follow step by step instructions is making her dad a decadent chocolate layer cake with pretzels, chocolate ganache, and peanut butter frosting - from scratch. All I get to do is grease the pans.
Time is an amazing thing.

As I look back on our year, I am flooded with gratitude, and I am flooded with loss. So many have left us this year. Every time I hear of another soul departed, the familiar weight of grief rushes to greet me. I remember those early days all too well. I wish there were words, a shortcut, a magic wand. A balm for the injustice.

I am still learning about this thing called grief. While it may be universal, it is also deeply personal, and no two experiences will ever be the same. My grief for George is very different from my grief for my mom, and my grief for each of them over time takes on varying textures, colors, forms. I can’t say that it gets easier, because sometimes I feel that it gets more complex. The layers of who I am becoming in relationship to what they have become for me continue to morph and stretch me in ways I’m not always comfortable with. Their departure is a paradox, for they have not left me at all. We are constantly integrating. We are more connected than ever.

There is one known fact, and I have held onto this since the moment I kissed his body goodbye. The insurmountable grief, the injustice, the anger, the exhaustion - these pale in comparison to the immeasurable blessings he has bestowed on my life. The simple gift of his life, and the lives of those lost, is enough to hold me through the darkest days.

Happy Solstice + Happy 47th Birthday, George. We love you with everything. 
Picture
Comments

The Best 8 Years

7/22/2022

Comments

 
Every year on July 22, I write to honor George, and I make the writing public.  Every year Nova and I do something to remember him, like have grilled cheese and Sapporo beer, or have a special outing, or make art and bike and snuggle and dance.  

Every year feels beautiful and hard.  Every year I am filled with gratitude and dread.  There will never be a way to honor him enough.  He has reached a place of infinite wonder and oneness and not my words, nor my actions, nor my thoughts, carry the right translation.  The only thing that comes close are my tears.  And when I look into the eyes of that girl of ours.

Last night, on July 21, I sat across from Nova at dinner and thought about the dinner I’d had with George 8 years ago, our last dinner together.  We’d gone out for burgers and we’d talked about the work he had left on his plate that night, how it would be a late night, but by this time tomorrow he’d be on paternity leave.  This time tomorrow.  It was a fantasy.

And I wondered how it is that we choose to commemorate the day that someone leaves us instead of the day we last spent with them.  I’d rather remember the happy day, the day of innocence and contentment.  Maybe it would feel less dreadful.  Maybe it would feel more luminous to celebrate his last day on Earth than the one that mysteriously landed him in the ER, with all of the heartache that ensued.  This of course is a selfish idea, for George’s experience was vastly different from mine.  Perhaps for him, returning to the infinite is all the reason to celebrate.  Perhaps what we are honoring is not his life on Earth, but his transcendence.  

Then I looked at Nova, and said, “8 years ago today was the last day I spent with your dad.”  And when I said that, while looking at this beautiful creature of ours, a new truth emerged.  “They have been the best 8 years of my life.”  

She looked at me, and I looked at her, and we smiled a knowing smile.  And in that spontaneous moment we glimpsed perfection in our nonconforming little family.  There would be no Nova without George, and there would be no George without Nova.  It is as though his dying made way for her living.  And her living transforms his dying into enormous waves of awe and gratitude, and the physical manifestation of love.  She is our love in motion.  She is his spirit, animated in space and time.  Her life honors him, and it is more than enough.

8 years ago, Nova and I became a team.  8 years ago, George empowered me to become a single mother, gifted Nova the virtues of courage and resilience, and set us out to create something beautiful out of something hard.  They have been the most amazing, crushing, inspiring, heartbreaking, heart-opening, transformative years.  They have been the best 8 years of my life.
Picture
Comments

He was my knight in shining armor.

10/26/2021

Comments

 
Picture
He was my knight in shining armor.  

When I saw him standing there, holding his bicycle, among a sea of other strangers just beyond the grassy knoll, I knew.  He was the man I was waiting for.  He was the man who was going to save me.

I never would have admitted that I needed (or wanted) saving.  I was 3 years widowed, and I was just fine.  I had lost a husband, raised a toddler on my own through infancy, purchased my first home, and moved from California to Colorado to start again.  I was doing well, making a life for us, and playing strong, on the outside.  

On the inside, I was lonely.  I wanted companionship.  I wanted to feel like a woman again.  To be kissed, admired, held, loved.  I wanted to not be alone.  I wanted the dream of a family that hadn’t been fulfilled, and I wanted to feel that I deserved it.  I wanted a different life.

Read More
Comments

We are together, all of us.

7/22/2021

Comments

 
Picture
“Tomorrow is a special day”, I say.
“What day is it?” she asks.
“It’s the day that George became spirit.”
“Oh yeah!” she flashes her big smile at me, and remembers.  “July 22.  That means it’s my birthday in 9 days.”  A fact she will never forget.  
“It really is a special day,” she declares.  “What are we going to do for him?”

We begin to list off the possibilities.  
  • Build an altar
  • Wear only black, white, or gray with jeans
  • Go to McDonalds for breakfast
  • Find a bacon-wrapped-hot dog stand, or a Primanti Bros-style sandwich
  • Dine on grilled cheese -- or upgrade to sushi since I’m off dairy
  • Take her new roller-shoes out for a spin
  • Buy a bouquet of stargazer lilies
  • Make art
  • Dance

Read More
Comments

The fight.

4/8/2021

Comments

 
Picture
I took my mom to the hospital this morning.  

It’s a familiar drive, one we’ve become accustomed to over the past year.  We talk about the family, my dad, her doctor.  We talk about how far she’s come, and how acupuncture has been pivotal in supporting her through the intensity of modern medicine.  We talk about me opening a practice again someday.  She says I can make a difference.

I do not ask her if she is scared.  It is not a question worth answering.

Since the diagnosis last year -- Stage 4 Undifferentiated Pleomorphic Sarcoma -- her 77 year old body has endured two major surgeries, six weeks of radiation, six rounds of chemotherapy, experimental immunotherapy, multiple biopsies, and countless blood draws, CT scans, and MRIs.  Today is what we hope will be the third and final surgery to remove a large mass in her right thigh, a mass that materialized five months ago out of nothingness, ghost cells that played silently on a seemingly clear MRI before building a spiral around her nerves and vessels.  We can be thankful, at least, that they decided to say hello.  To give her a chance to fight.

Read More
Comments
<<Previous


    ​Author

    Joanne Chang is a writer, mother, widow and movement-maker.  She lives in Denver, CO.

    RSS Feed

    Archives

    December 2022
    July 2022
    October 2021
    July 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    July 2020
    July 2019
    September 2018
    July 2018
    January 2018
    November 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015

    Categories

    All
    Acceptance
    Alcohol
    Aloneness
    Anger
    Anniversaries
    Cause Of Death
    Confusion
    Connection
    Dreams
    Fear
    Gratitude
    Grief
    Guilt
    Letting Go
    Love
    Nova
    Parenthood
    Racism
    Resistance
    Self Transformation
    Surrender
    Transcendence
    Vulnerability
    Writing

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • My Blog
  • About Me
  • Gallery
  • George
  • Blog