Tag Archives: home

When Home Isn’t a Place Anymore


This morning, I walked through my daughter’s house and caught glimpses of my late husband Eric in photos. Pictures of him, frozen in time. It’s strange how someone who was once my entire world can now feel so far away, like he belongs to another version of me I can barely access. Another lifetime. Another self.

There was a time when seeing his face in a photo could split me wide open. Now it barely moves the needle. And that feels like a betrayal, even though I know it isn’t. I know this is what time does. I know he would understand. He always understood everything about me before I ever had to say a word.

He was my partner, my home, my biggest cheerleader in life, for 23 years. He knew me in ways no one ever had before, and maybe ever will again. But that part of my story feels dim right now, not gone, just buried under something heavier.

Because then came another.

Greg… he opened my heart but in a different way. He was the love of my life in this chapter. He was my twin flame, and it was hard for me to admit at first. This was the kind of love that makes the rest of the world feel blurry. We had our chaos, our plans, our morning hopes. We had our laughter, our softness, and a future we kept building even while the ground beneath him was crumbling.

Losing him has rearranged something inside me.

It’s the kind of grief that overshadows every room you walk into.

It’s the grief that doesn’t ask permission.

Sometimes I can’t even feel my old life because this pain is too loud, too present, too immediate. It isn’t fair, but it’s the truth. And I guess the heart can only hold the fire that’s burning hottest.

I keep thinking about this idea of home.

Because home used to be a person.

Twice.

And now both of those people are gone, and I’m here trying to figure out where I live inside myself.

I miss the security of being known so deeply.

I miss being understood without explaining.

I miss having someone to come back to at the end of the day, someone who felt like mine and who saw me as theirs.

Today I’m sitting alone in the quiet house after everyone left for work and school, and I’m realizing this:

My grief today isn’t really about losing either of them.

It’s about losing the version of me who existed when I still had a home in someone else.

Maybe one day the memories of Eric will soften and return.

Maybe one day the pain of losing Greg won’t crush my chest.

Maybe one day “home” will be something I feel inside myself, instead of something I chase outside of me.

But today, in this exact moment, I’m just a woman. Alone in the quiet, learning how to occupy my own life again.

Learning how to breathe through the emptiness.

Learning how to be here without the people who once held my world together.

It’s raw, and it’s real, and it hurts.

But I’m still here.

Thanks for reading –xxooC

me hiking in colorado

Living Minute by Minute: How Grief Rearranges Time

Journal Entry


I made it to Kentucky yesterday, and for the first time in weeks, I feel like I’m sitting inside a tiny bubble where I don’t have to carry everything. I don’t have Odin and Freija depending on me. I’m not surrounded by reminders or tasks or the weight of an apartment that feels too big and too quiet. I’m here in a space that has always held me gently, and I can feel myself breathing again in a way I haven’t since the moment everything collapsed.

It’s strange how grief rearranges time.

Before Greg died, I was always thinking ahead — planning the weekend, the next trip, the next move, the life we wanted by the water. Now I can barely see past the next hour. My world has shrunk down to the smallest increments: wake up, breathe, take a shower, sit still, cry, drink coffee, breathe again. It’s not weakness. It’s survival.

I’ve talked a lot since I got here. Cried a lot too. But something is shifting in me. I’m not angry anymore — not the sharp, chaotic anger that used to rip through me. If anything, I’m angry at the circumstances… at the weight I’m carrying… at the reality he left behind. But him? No. His darkness was bigger than either of us. I see that now. I wasn’t meant to save him. I couldn’t have. His mind spiraled into a place I couldn’t reach, and he slipped away.

The sadness is quieter now, but deeper.

I keep thinking about the life we were building — not just our life, but mine and his. Two separate lives woven together with plans and dreams and all the little rituals that made us feel like a team. He always said I would thrive without him, and I hated hearing that because I believed I needed him. Now it’s just me. And I have to carry on with the pieces I still have.

I wish I had understood everything better. I wish I had recognized the signs sooner. Not out of guilt — I don’t blame myself — but out of sadness. For us. For everything we could have been if his mind weren’t fighting him every day. I’ll always carry him softly in my heart. He’ll always have an imprint on my soul. But the future we planned together died with him, and now I’m standing in this strange place of rebuilding a life I never wanted to live alone.

I know I’m on some kind of path. I can feel it even if I can’t see it. Right now, I’m just living moment to moment, because that’s all I have the capacity for. The future is too big and too blurry to look at. Maybe one day I’ll be able to picture it again. Maybe not. But for now, the minutes are enough.

Sometimes healing looks like doing nothing but existing in the safest place you can find.

Sometimes that’s all you can do.

And right now… that’s where I am.