Tuesday, April 13, 2021

So little time to cope with the changes

I cannot even begin to express how quickly everything is changing.  This is not what one would call rolling with the changes, this would be considered flailing in the ocean at high tide, all while seeming mostly normal on the outside.  This is another one of the busiest times of my entire life, (the third one but probably the busiest) but this time it's packed with all these emotional markers that are, on their own, monumental.  I'm not a person who easily becomes overwhelmed, but this... this past 4 months has been just that-- overwhelming.  With everything being overwhelming, it makes everything else overwhelming.  Do you follow?  If not, nevermind; I obviously cannot put it into words tonight.

My normal yearly routine has pressure-cooker weeks in it because I'm a teacher in a small school that doesn't know it's small and tries to conquer the world sometimes, which takes every ounce of energy, every gift and talent, and every spare moment to pull it off.  Throw in preparations for Rosalind's spring wedding, Regan's graduation celebration with a BSN pinning, the upcoming 2021 high school graduation as the sponsor and one who will speak at graduation and plan and attend (most of) the senior trip, and another wedding (including the wedding cake) at Tulsa, plus one more highly emotional funeral this week... I'm not done... in addition to my mom's in February and the father of one of my seniors in March-- very unexpected... (I'm going to breathe right here)

The German Feast was moved to April from February this year due to fear of what C-19 restrictions might do to the attendance; this helped tremendously when my focus was on caring for Mom and I didn't have to spend the energy in February to spare.  I didn't really have the energy for it last week either with two days of schnetka baking and one day of silent auction set up or for the evening we spent going through all of my mom's personal belongings after the feast.  My dad is moving.  This week he will close on a new house in the country, outside of a neighboring town.  A house without Mom or mom's things.  A house outside of our hometown for the past 37 years.  I don't blame him. Everything is happening so fast, and I feel like I'm being robbed of the time to be able to process all of it as it needs to be.  It's not about me.  There's no blame; it's just overwhelming.  

I also spent 12 hours on the road, back and forth to the dentist, last week and had another molar pulled.  If you see me eating like a rabbit or a beaver, mind your own business.  And if you notice me dropping weight, don't say anything.

Did I mention that the house Mom loved so well and that we all considered home was demolished last week?  I haven't even driven by it yet.  It was two-twenty-two North Oklahoma Street.  Mom died on 2-22.  Weird.  It became an eyesore in recent years as each new tenant stripped it of its splendor.  Mom and Dad discussed at length buying it back and renovating.  Some things cannot be restored, not to mirror the nostalgia of our memories.  Who would renovate a house with 1980s decor and fixtures? Dusty blue carpet and mirror stripes on the walls, faintly resembling paneling with their width and spacing.  Renovated to fit the times, it wouldn't have been the same, so a handful of pictures and our fallible memories is all we have to remember some of the best days of our lives.

This week I'm working on our spring banquet at school, which equals prom at public schools.  The student council kids and I spent 5 hours today getting a lot of the big jobs done without the interruption of a school day to make the rest of this week go a little easier.  This is another crazy week at school with a couple days of standardized testing for 7-10 grades.  The seniors are overwhelmed with their term papers and just the last-month-of-school emotions that are bombarding them at every turn.  Another funeral on Thursday for my brother's mother-in-law.  Yes, my brother and my sister-in-law both lost their mothers this winter-- in two month's time.  Mary died on December 22, but due to C-19, the family waited until this week for a service.  As much as I'm grieving my losses this winter, my heart breaks for both of them and my nieces who lost both grandmothers.  I am thankful we all live here close and can lean on each other and support one another through the heartbreak of all of this loss.  I'll close out this week with the banquet on Saturday (complete with our getting all dressed up in our 2019 wedding clothes), and we'll have it all cleaned up and put away next week before the next big thing-- a wedding!  Some of my best friends have a daughter getting married!

There's so many other overwhelming little things that have happened in all the in-between moments (mostly good and mostly when people are being nice to me) over the past 4 months that make me break down and weep too, (like our 25th wedding anniversary and Regan and Hayden's buying a house, a wedding shower for Roz and Kelby, like the girl in the dentist's office telling me that something I said reminded her of her grandfather who passed, etc) but all the details get to be to tedious for many, and if you're still reading, you're a saint or you truly love me.  (Or you're just really bored)  I think the biggest hurdles will be behind me by the end of this week,  but the moving forward through all of these upcoming milestones without my mom, my girls' grandma, will be another challenge in the days to come.  

Did I mention that Rayne is moving home in a couple of weeks?  I think she's bringing a college friend home for the summer too.  That will definitely do this mama's heart some good.  The more, the merrier.  I love my home and my people, and our dogs and their dogs, and... and... and you get the idea.  I'm looking forward to a slower summer and a few moments to breathe.



Saturday, February 27, 2021

A video tribute to Mom




 

Eulogizing my mom— such an honor

Colleen was a private person.  She didn’t complain; instead, she would fix it.  She always tried to make things better for the people, animals, or organizations that she cared about.  Sometimes she would go overboard if it meant that she could fill a need by purchasing something.  She found joy in providing items that others needed or wanted.  She loved the CBA plays and loved helping Roshelle pull together props or costumes for them.  As the Wherritt girls grew and were faced with new adventures and new household needs, school needs, or personal needs, they always found themselves saying “we need a . . .” fill in the blank, and they would always end it with “Grandma probably has it—call Grandma.”  She also liked helping others anonymously. If a need was brought to her attention, especially around the holidays, she would figure out a way to supply it.  She’s been there. . .  on the giving side and on the needing side.

 

Because Colleen was such a private person, many of you probably don’t know how much she enjoyed working in her yard or taking care of the swimming pool.  She always welcomed her kids and granddaughters and their friends over to her backyard to swim or cookout—especially Rita and the girls, because if they stayed long enough, Wayne would show up, too, and grill supper for everyone.  You also probably don’t know about her love for animals.  She wanted every animal to have a home or someone to care for it.  Some of you in here are probably recipients of stray animals that she knew needed rescuing.  She always fed the strays and made a warm home for them.  During her illness, Denny continued to feed the stray cats and the resident opossum.  She loved her horses and her house cats and spoiled them.  The running joke with the family is that if they died, they wanted to come back as Colleen’s house cat.  Her cats loved her too.  Girl, her smallest calico, would spend all of her time on the hospital bed in the living room with Colleen, even until the very end.

 

I could stand here and tell you that Colleen was a polished, sharp dressed woman or that she had good taste in furnishings and décor.  I could tell you that she loved the holidays and loved her family.  I could tell you that she was determined and opinionated and liked to learn and discuss topics or events, but you know all of that.  The most important thing that I can tell you about Colleen happened just 4 years ago.  She asked and the Holy Spirit came into her life and everything changed.  The things that she used to spend her time doing weren’t as important to her anymore. She was hungry for knowledge.  Different knowledge this time. She was hungry for Jesus.  She read the Bible, books about the Bible and took notes; she started listening to preachers online and watching sermons and studying basically everything she could get her hands on, and it all started making sense.

 

Colleen told Roshelle in January: “I’m amazed at how the Bible is everything ever that did happen and ever will happen and there’s nothing new.  It’s all in this book [the Bible] if you can put it together properly.”

 

Colleen has always been a reader and a learner. Even in her last weeks when reading and learning and even lengthy conversation wasn’t really possible, she would say to the kids, “talk to me.” She still wanted to learn.  Wayne would read through headlines he knew she would be interested in.  Roshelle started searching for everything she could find about heaven and had been listening to Dr. Dixie Yoder’s videos about heaven.  She shared with her mom what she had learned: in heaven we will still be learning the greater knowledge that we seek, but it’s much easier to do so because it’s easier to learn, to remember, and to understand.  Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 13 that our learning will be fuller and more intensive—we will be not be making assumption or learning errors.  It will all be truth and it will be clear.  We won’t become omniscient like God and have all the answers when we get to heaven, like the world seems to believe, but we will continue to learn and study God’s truths.  This made Colleen very happy and gave her more peace.

 

Right now, Colleen, as a child of God, has the ability to sit at the feet of Jesus and just soak up his presence and his truth.  She is still learning.














Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Mom's obituary

 

Colleen Ridenour was born to Ding (Wilbur) and Dee Dee (Corinne) Krull on March 8, 1955, in Austin, Minnesota.  Colleen passed to the peace of the Lord on February 22, 2021, in her home at Thomas, Oklahoma, after a short but difficult battle with cancer.  

Colleen grew up in Southeast Minnesota, where she met the love of her life at 16 years of age and thereafter married Denny (Dennis) Ridenour in a small ceremony in Springfield, Missouri, on June 17, 1972.  Denny and Colleen initially made their home in Missouri and then returned to Minnesota before moving to Oklahoma in 1984.

In Oklahoma, Colleen attended realty school with her mom and became a realtor in Weatherford, until she retired about 10 years ago.  Colleen attended Southwestern Oklahoma State University in the 90s and earned her master's degree in Psychology, graduating in 1996.

Colleen is survived by her husband, Denny; her daughter Roshelle Wherritt and her husband Rodney; her son Wayne and his wife Rita; and 6 granddaughters, Regan Lemieux and her husband Hayden, Rosalind Wherritt, Rayne Wherritt, Ali Ridenour, Taylor Ridenour, and Shelby Ridenour, all of Thomas.  She is survived by her brother Wayne Krull and his wife Marsha of Thomas; her sister Karen Clapham and her husband Bill of Dubuque, Iowa; her sister Lisa Goucher and her husband Steve of Rockwell, Texas; and her step-father Richard Gieser of Thomas.  Colleen was preceded in death by her parents and brother John Krull.

Memorials may be made to Corn Bible Academy.




Friday, February 5, 2021

My heart is broken

My mom is dying and my heart is broken.  I can't stop it.  I can't fix it.  There is no piece of it that I can control except the portion that I am given.  I do all that I can but it doesn't feel like enough.  I rack my brain trying to find a way to stop the pain.  I just want to sweep all 100 pounds of her up into my arms and hold her close and comfort her and tell her that it's ok.  It's ok if she's tired.  It's ok if she just can't do it anymore.  I want to stroke her hair and rock her and tell her it's ok to go to sleep.

Stage IV lung cancer that's metastasized into her lymph system, spreading into her gall bladder, adrenals, and most likely liver and kidneys: that's the battle.

I pray daily for a miracle to heal her or for God to take His child home.  She's weary.

So.  Much.  Wasted.  Time. 

She lives 20 blocks away.  She's 65 years old.  She push mows her yard, for goodness sake!  There's plenty of time.  A couple short weeks ago, I held her in my arms and apologized for all the wasted time.  She just smiled through her tears and reassured me:  we all thought we had more time.

Some days I feel like Hezekiah in Isaiah 37, taking the letter he received (full of bad news) and marching to the alter and laying it out before God, crying "Look at this!"  Now, "Do something about it!"  

Other days I just weep.  

Some days I am all out of tears.  Mourning the living is something I've never experienced before now.  It comes in waves and some days I'm drownding.  Some days I find it too hard to engage in the tedious details of my work.  Grading term papers is definitely going to have to wait for awhile; I'm thankful it's play season because it's a new creation, bringing new life into my soul.

The love that radiates from those who love me makes me weep too.  Their prayers sustain me right now.  My husband, my children, my sisters-in-law, my aunts, my extended family.  In the other hand is my co-workers, my dear friends, and my students and their families.  My cup overflows from the grace and the love and gentle care that comes from their actions, words and their prayers.  I am truly loved, and that love is what's holding my broken heart together right now.  The only thing that could heal it is a miracle from heaven.