If you haven’t seen the movie “The Best Man Holiday”, you’ll need to stop reading now because this post contains spoilers. Big ones. And if you haven’t seen it, why not???? You should fix that ASAP! If you’re not familiar with this film or part 1, “The Best Man”, click here to read a plot synopsis with spoilers. For a review of the film without an spoilers, check out what Luvvie wrote here.
I had a hard time putting my thoughts to words regarding the movie but a photo search for a LittleTDJ school project helped. As my thoughts came together, I was struck with the underlying thought that I’m an anomaly. Something different, abnormal, peculiar, or not easily classified. Such an anomaly that even my closest friends have trouble understanding me. Allow me to come back to that point, but I need to share a few memories and observations first.
I have a pretty big head. Its ok, you can chuckle. It runs on DaddyTDJ’s side of the family and I surely have one. I’m ok to admit it. MrTDJ had a large head too, so together we truly blessed LittleTDJ with a super dome. It’s a random tidbit of info about me, but it is essential to you understanding my relationship with hats. Back in my high school and college days, it wasn’t unusual at all to find me rocking a baseball hat. I had shoulder length hair and I loved putting it in a pony tail that popped out the back of the hat. Yeah, I had to buy larger hats, but I didn’t think too much of it at the time. I wasn’t a full on tomboy, but I certainly wasn’t as ladylike as the women around me. In my 20’s and 30’s, my girlfriends wore lots of gorgeous fedoras, berets, floppy hats in the summer, and perfectly cute hats in the winter, yet I did not. I had enough sense to know that my college look needed to be upgraded, so I simply stopped wearing caps. My husband loved for me to wear hats. One of his favorite photos of me is the photo on my UVA ID card. He actually requested that I report it lost, so that he could have one to keep in his wallet. Seemed like a pretty average picture to me, but he adored it.
I have no idea where my other ID is, but I found the one above still in his wallet after his death. In the days immediately following his passing, I was determined to wear a hat to his funeral service. That choice was not deeply rooted in my own desire to wear a hat, but as a way to honor MrTDJ. Many photos were taken that day, but I think that the one below speaks to the moment. I’ve had sad eyes since the moment I knew he was gone and a smile that doesn’t quite ring true. I try to put on a happy face as often as I can, but that takes major work. I think it equates to having a split personality or maybe living a double life. Not really as medically or psychologically exact as that, but that’s the best way I can describe it. A smile on the outside that’s covering heartbreak and pain on the inside. Even at moments when I can “enjoy” the laughter of friends and family, part of my brain in always detached and expending energy into “memories”. Always. Yes, always. That is my constant state of being. I try my best to keep my distraction from being obvious to the people around me but I know that those closest to me can sense when I’m not really in the moment with them.
The sad eyes in this photo is how I feel every single day, yet I have perfected a better smile that doesn’t make people quite so uncomfortable in my presence. I share here because this is my space and it is cathartic for me to write. I’m amazed that so many read and make an effort to empathize. I’ve been “lucky” enough to connect with a few other widows and widowers who have thanked me for voicing some of their thoughts and feelings, and sharing them with the world.
I was naïve enough to think that the 2nd year without my husband would get a little easier. NEGATIVE! It has changed, but the essence of it has gotten harder. He’s gone! Not gone on a long trip, not the break from one another most married people like to enjoy every now and then, not a separation until issues are worked out. Nope. He’s truly gone. Being on auto-pilot and coping so “well” the first year has made the 2nd year take on a tone that is more intense, a bit rawer and certainly lonelier. I got through all the celebrations that marked the firsts “without him” moments. As the second round of “without him” moments roll on, they become harder to get through. As 2014 starts to beckon on the horizon, I had hoped that I’d be a better, saner, happier, less emotional MrsTDJ. In many ways, I am different. And I have embraced new things in order to find a different kind of happy. It seems that many in the world expected me to return to “normal” without realizing that it isn’t possible.
As I’ve settled into new routines and patterns, nothing about them feels normal. Some things should kinda grow on you after a year, but when they do, there is a sour taste and a sharp edge. The image of a prickly pear cactus instantly comes to mind. Each new thorn is a reminder that life has changed dramatically. Wearing an “S” on your chest symbolizes Superman and shows the world that nothing can hurt you. Although I don’t wear a “W” on my chest, I still look in the mirror, see that black hat and it seems that everything hurts me. I still feel the tightness of that black brim several times a day. Some days there it is a strange comfort like that of a tight hug and other days it feels like the weight of a mighty mountain. The farther we get from the date that my husband departed, the more the image of me as “a widow” fades from the minds of many. I actually overheard a co-worker ask another, “Why isn’t she over this yet?” I refuse to let it anger me.
Sitting in the theatre as “The Best Man Holiday” unfolded, I knew about 15 minutes into the action that Lance’s wife Mia was going to die. I’d seen the cast on the cover of Essence and the first person I noticed was Monica Calhoun. She didn’t seem to have aged as well as everyone else. That was foreshadowing, but I didn’t know it at the time. I took a few deep breaths and tried to calm myself. I was with a group of friends and I told those to my left and right, “She going to die. I don’t know if I can sit through this.” But I sat there because I didn’t trust my legs to get me out of the theatre. So I stayed in my seat.
And then her illness was revealed. And I cried. Hard. And I sniffled. And I blew my nose. Loudly. The scene with husband and wife embracing in their bed for the last time because her death within the next couple of hours is already a foregone conclusion almost broke me. I cried, and cried, and cried. Although it is a fictional movie, these beautiful brown people on the screen resemble my family and friends. Having watched the original in my 20’s, the characters actually felt like friends that I had known for years. So when I cried, I cried for the pain of Lance as a new widower and father of three. I sobbed because I know what it’s like to spend Christmas without your spouse. Watching him sit in the front pew, surrounded by his children during the church service took me back to my husband’s service. The eerie and unsettled quiet at their home after the service took me back to the repass that we held at DaddyTDJ’s house. And while every other woman was drooling over Morris Chestnut holding Taye Diggs’ 10 month old baby in the closing scene, I was struggling to catch an angle that would show whether he was still wearing his wedding ring.
I went to see the movie during its opening weekend, on a Saturday night. Prior to that, at least a half dozen people that I’m close with viewed, reviewed and raved about the movie. And not one single person gave me the heads up on Mia’s death. Even when talking about it after the movie, those in question froze like deer in headlights before blushing and apologizing profusely. Let me be clear – I’m not upset with them; it simply reminds me that although they love me, it is impossible for them to truly understand how I feel. No one thought that I might need to know the tragedy that occurs. My little heart shattered into another million pieces watching a loving couple that has been together since college, married for 10 years, raising 3 children together on the big screen as one partner died. Yes, it’s a movie and it is fiction but it is an emotional parallel that I wasn’t ready to see. I don’t want or need anyone to approach me with kid gloves or walk on eggshells around me. I simply wish there was a way for me to help others understand what my new “air” is like. My new air hasn’t allowed me to watch any of my favorite movies like Beaches or Steel Magnolias because I just can’t deal. This new air hasn’t allowed me to open a computer folder full of videos that MrTDJ and LittleTDJ recorded together during his first 3.5 years of life.
If I can write and have just one person understand the depth and range of emotions that loss brings, I’ll know that I accomplished something. I won’t ever attempt to compare categories of loss as they are all devastating, but I can surely speak on the loss of a spouse. Overall, I was entertained by the movie and I’ll add it to my DVD collection when it is released, but I don’t know if I’ll ever watch it again. As Christmas approaches, the commercials for the movie have increased and the airwaves have been playing songs from the soundtrack. Every commercial and every song causes a small tightening in my chest, and I feel the constriction from my own wide black brim that has become almost invisible to the rest of the world.
love it cuz keep up the great writing
GOOD BLESS YOU MY SISTER. IMY HUSBAND PASSED IN 1999, I WAS 46 YOURS OLD. I WILL BE PRAYING FOR YOU AS YOU WALK OUT THIS JOURNEY. I COMPLETELY KNOW HOW YOU FEEL.
BE BLESSED.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts to us. For me, it’s refreshing to read a about true love. And the love lasts even after death. God bless you my Sista.
Cuz, i can never say i know your pain but i can say that moment when i realized that she was dying of cancer slammed me like a tone of bricks because i sat in the theatre and thought of another Christmas my mother wont be here. I remember a few years ago my dad and your aunts and uncles all bought tickets to the play Madea’s big hapy family…now mind you all of my siblings were present and watching along engrossed in the film. some of the other people we were with had already seen the film but failed to mention that the mother passes wtih the kids standing around her in the hospital room, and needless to say we all had a complete breakdown with the flashback of us standing at the cancer reasearch center the day our mother passed away and i said to myself wow and no one thought to mention this to me? and as i looked around i realized that no one else had lost their mother so how could they understand? and like you i wasnt mad but i realized that people cant feel what they dont understand. i will continue to pray for you and Marcus and just ask God to give you strength to deal with this the best you know how and continue to be who you are and take each day at a time. love you!
Thanks for sharing Taya. I can’t imagine how hard this has been and will continue to be for you. I have a friend who lost a spouse and we told him not to see the movie for the same reason.
P.S. Glad someone else noticed that baby at the end was dang near a toddler.
I sobbed and sobbed through the second half of the movie..because I know you and because I am a wife now. And I would like to be angry at the person at your job who whispered “why aren’t you over it?”. How DARE they judge how long you grieve!!! Ugh!
I cried like I knew those characters too. I don’t have a husband but I understand and have dealt with loss. It’s hard and it doesn’t get easier. I always pray that God continues to help youthough your loss and pain .
I love you, Taya.
Thanks for sharing your perspective. This makes me more sensitive to those who are dealing with the death of a spouse.
I saw it, alone, probably the week after it opened. I cried like I knew them too but my focus was more on the friendship and the love and the absolute “I got you” sense. I knew Mia would die. I’m not sure how but something in one of the commercials (that didn’t appear in the movie) struck me as death related. Still, when Lance was in that game, I kept thinking there’d be a twist and either he’d be hit and hurt or killed and Mia would survive. I still knew absolutely that death was involved though. And you’re right. Much as we love you, not having experienced such a devastating loss as you have, it doesn’t always register.
Thinking of you.
I.L.Y.
Taya……. every time I read your blog you leave me speechless. Your strength is amazing. Even through your sadness you press on and this is nothing but God. I will forever continue to keep you in my prayers. Thank you so much for sharing this piece with us.
Thank you for sharing your feelings Taya. I was emotionally drained by the end of the movie & surely understand how challenging it must have been for you to sit through it. I am so so sorry that people continue make insensitive idiotic comments about your grief ! It makes absolutely no sense to me. Your writing talent continues to amaze me, and you might have a big head, but it’s a pretty head. LOL Even though I saw the sadness in your eyes when we met, I was still struck by your beauty and your warm spirit & nice hugs 🙂
Beautifully written.
This was written so beautifully!
I just happen to run across your blog today.and I can truly understand all the emotions you are going thru. My 37 year old son has been in the hospital since April from a split aorta and a stroke.. Even though he is still here on earth we are grieving the lost of how life was. I too saw the movie and found myself crying and wanting to leave but made it through it. I was glad I did because it was a good movie.
I am saying all of this to say yes we are hurting but there are still good things for us to experience and good things we must do. Your feelings are real and has brought comfort to me. No there is nothing wrong in feeling like you do; I felt the same way. Thank you for helping me to see that it is all part of the grief process. Hang in there