My
husband Rick has been gone for almost four years now, so you can imagine my
surprise when I saw him walk out of the men’s room on the sixth floor of the
James Tower one afternoon a few weeks ago. That’s the cardiology floor at the
Cherry Hill campus of Swedish Hospital.
You
know how it is. Someone you love dies, and you’re out in public somewhere, and
you see someone, and for a gasp of a moment you think you’re seeing the
departed person. Then you realize, no.
The
resemblance was extraordinary – this man was dressed in the uniform that Rick
often wore: jeans, long sleeved shirt with a vest, baseball cap, glasses. He
had a mustache. He was kind of a wiry guy, about Rick’s height. It was as if
Central Casting had sent over a Rick Tuel type.
It
turned out that he and I were the only ones waiting for the down elevator, and
I looked at him maybe a nanosecond longer than you’re supposed to look at a
stranger. Just making sure he didn’t really look like Rick, despite the glasses
and the mustache, though the similarities were a little eerie.
The
elevator came and we got in and as we faced forward he said, “I see my
cardiologist every six months, need it or not.” He went on to say he’d had two
stents put in eighteen years ago, and they were working fine.
People
got on at different floors. He kept talking, about this and that.
The
elevator got to the lobby, and as we walked out he said, “My wife died in
August.”
It
took a few seconds for me to click that he meant this August, about five weeks before
this encounter. Now I knew why we were talking. I told him my husband died
about four years ago.
We
stopped in the lobby and he kept talking. He told me that he and his wife had gone
on a wonderful trip to Greece this summer. They got home a couple of weeks
before she died.
“I’ll
always have those beautiful memories,” he said.
He mentioned the name of his church, and I
realized that he was an Episcopalian, as am I. I asked him if he knew a priest
there whom I know, and he said, yes, that was the priest at his wife’s
committal, which means burial for you non-Episcopal types.
At
some point I wondered what his name was, and “Brian” floated into my mind. “Hush,
silly brain,” I thought.
He
told me about the homeless dinner where he volunteers once a month, and how
he’d learned that not all homeless people are drunks or addicts, and many
people didn’t want to volunteer there because they didn’t realize that.
He
talked about all the many, many plans he had. He has learned five languages, and
he’s going to volunteer to help people in several countries because he knows
the languages. He signed up for a night class on Mondays. He has five degrees. He
was in the Navy for forty years. He and his wife were married for forty-one
years.
“She
had an aneurysm,” he said.
Ah.
He
pulled out his phone and showed me a picture of his wife. She was smiling. She
had dark hair and was wearing a red tunic and dark pants. He showed me pictures
from their trip to Greece. He told me her name. He told me his name was Brian.
I
flinched a little, but tried not to show it.
When
we felt it was time to move on, as you do, we walked toward the door.
He
said, “I was blindsided.”
I
said, “Yes, you were, but no one is ever ready.”
Outside
we waved good-bye and went our separate ways.
When
your spouse dies you’re simply screwed and there’s nothing you can do about it,
and you never get over it and it changes you forever. I didn’t tell him that.
He’ll figure it out. I was grateful to be there to listen to someone in the early
throes of a grief I know all too well. I remember with gratitude how kind
people were to me right after Rick died, and ever since, for that matter.
God
(or whatever you call it – I did not come here to argue) used an extremely
effective way to get my attention: Oh, look. There’s my dead husband. That part
felt a little bit woo-woo.
But
having the man’s name float into my head from nowhere? That was beyond woo-woo.
Occasionally,
I get a reminder that there are more things in heaven and earth than we know or
understand, and I would be wise to have a little humility about that.
Roger
that, Lord.