I first wrote about Grief Brain many years ago.
When I reshare that post, it always generates lots of comments from fellow bereaved parents.
Forgetting things and people’s names, misplacing important documents, sometimes even getting lost in familiar surroundings while driving-all common experiences following loss.
It feels like you’re losing your mind but for most of us, it gets better over time.
I’ve developed lots of habits and tricks that help me navigate my still-less-than-perfect memory and much slower processing ability since Dominic ran ahead to Heaven.
One of them is to carefully check when exiting my car that I have my keys, phone and payment method.
The other Saturday I was running a couple of errands early in the morning so I could cocoon the rest of the weekend, knowing Sunday was the anniversary of Dominic leaving for Heaven.
My first stop was our local feed store.
I got out of my car, opened the trunk and went in to purchase a couple bags of horse feed. When I began walking back to my car, I reached in my pocket for the keys and realized I didn’t have them. Panic set in (it’s never far away).
So I went in to the store to see if I left them on the counter. Nope.
Back out to car-not there. Damn.
As I’m standing there, getting ready to phone AAA and order a locksmith the young man who loads feed asks me what is wrong. I tell him and he says, “You know you can crawl through the trunk and into the back seat on these cars, don’t you?”
Of course I had no idea even though I’ve owned the car for fifteen years and knew the back seats folded down. Never had need of using that feature before.
So now I’m wondering how in the world my big behind and arthritic joints are going to navigate that space when the same fella offers to do it for me.
Can I just say I’ve never been more grateful to anyone in all my life as I was to that young man?
He wriggled and squirmed and wedged his not-too-slender form into that tiny space and popped up victorious in the back seat.
God bless him.
He walked away to continue working and it was then I reached into the driver’s side and realized my keys weren’t there. Not in the ignition. Not in my purse I’d left behind when I tucked the debit card in my pocket.
The WHOLE TIME they were in the key hole of the trunk. Accessible, available.
SIGH…
I slid my hand over them as if I was only closing the trunk down on the feed and drove off. Thankful. Embarrassed. Humbled.
Again.
I know everyone forgets things sometimes.
But those of us living with grief understand that this happens all too often.
And it doesn’t go away even when it gets better.
We just learn to live with it.






Oh Melanie, you made me laugh 😃 so familiar and still happens nearly 10 years later.
A similar incident happened having left my car in the carpark of the hospital to attend an appointment. I had to transverse the site for the appointment and then an xray then back to the consultant. I was worn out when I returned to the car to find I’d lost my keys. I went back to the reception in another part of the grounds to see if they had been handed in to no avail. I called my husband to bring te spare set only to get back to my car to find them in the ignition 😂
I do sometimes wonder what will happen next… we can only amuse ourselves will the results of our grief brains.
My ove to you xxx
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Oh, my dear friend. I understand this too well.
It’s as if I function on being elevated from my feet touching the floor, levitating.
I am hesitant to touch the ground lest all of my grief will come to me at once.
I hang on to His promises that this will end, and all will be well at the end.
Isabel, Christina’s mom
“I believe in pink. I believe that laughing is the best calorie burner. I believe in kissing, kissing a lot. I believe in being strong when everything seems to be going wrong. I believe that happy girls are the prettiest girls. I believe that tomorrow is another day and I believe in miracles.” ― Audrey Hepburn http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/692403.Audrey_Hepburn
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