My friend is gone šŸ˜­

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Yesterday I learnt that someone dear to me had passed on. I knew that the situation was difficultā€”she had a heart conditionā€”but I hoped that a miracle would make her live and enjoy the love of her children and husband. There was no miracle. There was no last minute answered prayer.


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I am grieving not just her passing but also, the inevitability of death. The older I grow, the more people I know die. It is only in childhood that one is invincible and it seems like every wound will heal. It is when you grow old and discover complete freedom, then you find out some wounds never heal and sometimes, these wounds kill.

My friend was a fun, vivacious personality. She was smart and kind as well. Whenever I visited her before she fell sick, we would talk nonstop. The last time I went there, she only asked me to put on the fan for her. We could not talk. I just looked at her struggle. I just looked on.

I think one aspect of grief that I have not really being able to come to terms with is guilt. You feel as if you should have done something, said something to prevent the inevitable from happening. Maybe I should have called more, maybe I should have settled our differences, maybeā€¦ It makes it hurt more. It is as if you are creating fresh pain out of nothing.

This grief has weakened me though. Unlike other situations, where the passing occured quite suddenly and one can hope that they didn't suffer, my friend had a difficult time and I knew of it, I saw it, I tried not to think about it. It hits different, you know. You wonder about a lot of things.

I have not been able to sleep since. I have been thinking, wondering about the possibilities that would have existed if a certain direction was taken. For example, my friend wanted, desperately, to leave Nigeria. She kept applying for a visa to get her and her family out of the country. Each time her request was denied. If she had been granted the visa to leave her country, she would have gotten better medical care and would be alive today.

Maybe she won't have the money to pay but the option would be available. She would know that she can be considered if push comes to shove. In Nigeria, she had little or nothing of hope. I wonder how people with health conditions that need 24 hrs medical conditions cope in this country. I wonder how they face each day.

If I had foresight, the last time I visited my friend, I would have asked her to write something for her children, something for them to remember her with. I think there's a difficulty among my people to accept death. There's always so much preparation for the healthy return from the hospital even when the situation is dire. There's almost no preparation by the dying to say goodbye in their own terms.

I thought about this all through yesterday; the children, will they remember their mother's voice? Will they remember her laughter, or how she walked, or how she played. Will they remember to miss her? They are young and time blurs everything. The thought made me think of putting something together in case I have to leave as sudden as a flash flood.

I have not been able to see my friend's husband. We do not live in the same city. I had plans to go visiting this coming week but time waits for no one. I have been trying to reach the man on the phone but his lines are switched off. I hope he is coping well. I hope he is gentle on himself. I hope he finds happiness.

I don't want to be going to funerals of young people like me. It makes eating or working hard. What is the point of all these pursuit, all these attempts at success? What is the purpose of money if it can not buy you a comfortable and long life? What is the purpose if you cannot use it to help those who are in need? We work from January to December, almost everyday and at the end, casually, death takes everything. It makes no sense.

It is when you are in need you realise how cold the world is. I am reminded of Timaya's song Cold Outside, in which he featured Buju. The lyrics says;

Make nobody tell me nonsense my n *** a
The streets is so cold my n *** a
Make nobody come try cry me a river
I'mma pull through like the strings of my guitar.

Nobody really cares what is going on with you except their emotion is attached to your comfort and satisfaction. Giving on television can be awesome. You get fans screaming your name and testifying to your kindness but it is those secret assistances, the ones that go unnoticed, that carries the weight of your regard for people.

What can I say? Will I not continue to exist, carrying grief like a stone around my neck? Will I look back and not smile at how this friend or that friend made me laugh? Will I not miss them? Will I not look at my life in my hand and wonder, of what use?

I have been asked to interact more and leave the house. Yesterday after staring at pictures I took with her so many years ago, back when we still held the world in our palms, I went to visit a friend at his place. I numbed myself the best way I know how to and tried to forget for a few hours, the futility of it all. I like to think that my friend is in a better place. I like to think that her good deeds won over the bad ones and they counted for her in the other side of life. I hope when my own turn comes it is quick and painless. I know it won't be but the hope keeps me sane.

Thank you for reading my rambling thoughts. I know we all have dealt with grief at one time or the other of our lives. I don't do well with losing people and I can be incoherent in processing thought. I can only think of escape, any silent place. I hope this finds you well. And if you grieve, I share that burden with you. I am saying, see me too, I feel. Good morning.



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(Edited)

I'm sorry to hear of the passing of your friend. She sounds like a dear person who will be greatly missed by her family and friends.

I remember when I first learned about death as a young boy. My sister used a very memorable way to explain it to me. She said: "Death is when you go to sleep and never wake up." For some reason, that clicked in the young mind of mine and made it very real to me.

Years later, I began reading about what was called Near Death Experiences. This was started by a book called Life After Life by Raymond Moody. That, and many other books and websites describe accounts of people who died and shared what they saw when they came back to life.

I can say this; I absolutely believe we exist after death. There have been many reports from doctors and nurses of people dying then returning and describing conversations and events that occured in other parts of the hospital that they could not have possibly known of unless they'd seen it themselves.

I have an aunt and uncle who have told me similar stories as well about patients in their care. I remain convinced that we exist after death and that your friend is somewhere in a state free from pain and disease. I wish her peace.

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Amin. One can only hope. Thank you for sharing. This means much.

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Pole sana mwalim. You have my condolences.

I am digesting grief and death differently too. Age does that everyone I think. It is crippling in its own way and I am not sure I'll ever get out of this dark place. I am not even sure I want to.

But. If we can learn to live with trying to accept what is and how it can not be anything other than what it is then we have a chance at healing and I am here for it.

I hope light stays with you even as you trudge through this dark fog šŸ§”

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Yeah but it is coming to grips with the futility of it all that's difficult. How can I accept it? And if I do, what sort of life will I live?

As always, you live Tez šŸ’•

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How can I accept it?

With time. Let time. It is difficult because you can't contain the bleeding or the emotional mess but with time Mwalim šŸƒ

When you accept it, it should be exactly the kind of life you would wish on your loved ones when your time to exist in this realm comes. Nothing more, nothing less šŸ§”

I am sorry the universe is hurting you all while letting you see how much you can love and honour a friend šŸƒ

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I am not sure if saying this helps, but I think I should say it anyway.

Don't feel guilty, man. It not a fault of you.
Whatever you do for your friend, it will never be enough. You will always be left with feeling to do more. There will be things left unsaid, things you wanted to do together and hundred of millions of other things. But the sad truth you can't.

The only thing you can do is honor and cheer the things that you did together.

I am so sorry for your loss, brother.
ā¤ļøā˜®ļø

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Thank you. I know this but I can't help feeling the way I feel. I guess we move on. My own turn will come.

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Sorry to hear about your loss. The memory of your friend will live on in you and her family and friends. Take care my friend

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I'm sorry to hear of your loss. I am also going through the same difficulty after losing my best friend back in the middle of July. His death has shaken me to the core and has been affecting my mental and emotional health right up to today. It is still too hard for me to accept that he is gone.

We have been friends for 25 years. He was a colleague of one of my uncles, and they were also best friends. He was like family, like an older brother to me. Now, at this time of the year, we would usually get together about two or three times before Christmas and party. But things will never be the same without him.

Be well, brother.

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Be well brother. It is the knowledge that things will never be the same again that haunts.

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I'm sorry for your loss
May God grant you the strength to survive this hard time

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