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Devon Corneal

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Why I Read The Sad Things

Posted: 10/11/2012 12:13 pm

My husband found me the other night, huddled over my computer, tears streaming down my face, unable to speak. I'd like to say this is an uncommon occurrence, but that would be a lie. I've always been a crier. Becoming a mother has only made things worse by stripping away whatever buffer I may have once had that kept the troubles of the world distant and remote.

On this particular evening, however, I couldn't stop weeping. I had just finished the last of Sheila Quirke's memorial posts about her daughter Donna's fight against cancer. Donna was four when she passed away, and every one of Sheila's posts illuminating her short life left me undone. I had the same reaction to Emily Rapp's "Notes From a Dragon Mom" which describes how she raises a child she knows will die of Tay Sachs before his third birthday.

My husband gave me a hug and some Kleenex and gently asked me why I keep reading. Why, he wondered, do I read about children suffering when I know I will end up a puddle on the floor? (He is not one to shy away from the unpleasant, but stories about children dying are too much for him.) It would be easier to avoid them, I know. But I can't. No matter how painful or raw, I read the stories I know will make me cry.

I don't limit myself to the hard stuff. I am obsessed with anything related to children and the people who raise them. Videos of a boy and his favorite toy train. Illustrations of crappy kids. Provocative articles on breastfeeding and vaccinations. A call to arms for children in foster care. Baby names. Anything, absolutely anything, written by Jenny Lawson. Honey Boo Boo -- please don't ask why. All of it finds its way onto my computer screen, my nightstand or my DVR. I share what I find with anyone who will listen, which usually means interrupting my husband while he's trying to work. I think he's only listening about 25% of the time, but he nods convincingly.

I like cute pictures, insightful and touching stories, and dubbed baby videos. They capture the fun of raising kids. They remind me that I'm not alone in this parenting thing. I just don't learn much from them. I learn from the hard stories. In a crucible, we discover what we're made of, so I read the stories of parents facing horrible loss to understand what it means to be a parent. I consider the worst and remind myself to hope for the best. I try to figure out how people survive what feels inconceivable. Then I force myself to imagine what they're going through, because saying, "I can't imagine what you're going through," is a cop-out. I can. So can you. We just don't want to.

I read to understand anger. I read so I'll remember not to judge. I read for perspective and to be reminded that that even in the face of loss and pain and doubt and confusion, life does not stop. Someone has to go to work, make dinner, fold the laundry, oversee homework, walk the dog and tuck little people into bed. We don't get to stop because things get hard -- we are supposed to save our weaknesses for the quiet hours of the night. I read to recognize bravery and to confront the fears I try to ignore.

I read because these parents endure and, somehow, in the devastation, they find laughter. And hope. I read for those moments. I read because, no matter how unfair or tragic their challenges, these families are willing to share their joy and strength with anyone who has the courage not to turn away. If grieving moms and dads can make their sadness public, I don't think I have the right to escape falling to pieces in private. They deserve witnesses and so do their children. Nothing I feel can change what they're going through, and maybe it's presumptuous to think that anything I do on this side of a computer screen matters. But on the off chance that my reading makes a parent feel like they've been heard, or that they're understood, or that they're not alone, I'll keep at it.

 

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My husband found me the other night, huddled over my computer, tears streaming down my face, unable to speak. I'd like to say this is an uncommon occurrence, but that would be a lie. I've always been ...
My husband found me the other night, huddled over my computer, tears streaming down my face, unable to speak. I'd like to say this is an uncommon occurrence, but that would be a lie. I've always been ...
 
 
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09:16 PM on 10/14/2012
I wish you would have read my story. As a lawyer it would be nice to get feedback from you on how you think an attorney could represent a client simultaneously in a child support dispute where; the client claims he is disabled and cannot give much support, and in the adoption of three year old twins from another state. The sixty year old, single physician claimed he was unfit to support his biological three year old child, but fit to adopt two children that have no biological connection whatsoever? My campaign to raise funds to fight this monster is over but I cannot for the life of me understand how people did care for these children. Please read and watch the campaign to provide feedback as to how no one cares and to how the courts do not even care that an attorney represented the client in this manner. http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/203109?i=pite
06:12 PM on 10/14/2012
People with depression need to be careful to not read too much sad stuff. It can push you right into the pit. That said, nice article.
03:37 PM on 10/13/2012
I like your point about perspective. These stories help me get a grip about the small bumps in the road.
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DSevere
Deviant mind
09:25 AM on 10/13/2012
I try to not read upsetting things, though sometimes I do anyway. I don't get sad, I tend to get either paran oid/stressed out or viol ently an gry, depending on the story. The main thing I try not to do is read stories about animal abuse because then I spend the next couple of hours thinking of ways I'd like to tort ure the abuser, and that's a very dark place to go in your brain. Stories of others' disease or other misfortunate just make me realize how quickly life can turn bad, which makes me feel more stressed out, and I already have a lot of stress as a small business co-owner.

So, glad this works for you, but not going there....
09:46 PM on 10/14/2012
That's a great point! I think it's so very important to know ourselves and what's good/bad for us. I avoid tales of child abuse, The heavy sadness that burdens me for days or weeks afterward make me no good for anyone! I just can't handle them. I'm not a fool, hoping that if I don't look it doesn't exist, I just know myself and what's not good for me.

Having said that, raunchy music, sad stories and intense books give me a place to put those so called 'negative' or 'dramatic' feelings we all inherently have, so I do enjoy them from time to time. So far it's helped me avoid having to invite them into my real life!
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09:55 PM on 10/12/2012
you read these articles because you have a serious case of empathy, a disease that is becoming increasingly rare in a world where eye contact and listening to others is simply too hard, i hope you never find a cure for yours
03:17 PM on 10/12/2012
This is absolutely beautiful! Thank-you for sharing! I, too, read for all the same reasons as you. And there is one more that I have convinced myself is also true. I read because I am human and have a need to feel. Every emotion exists in me with a desire to be heard. As a child our home was filled with drama of every sort--autism challenges, adoption rights challenges, molestation, prejudice, a single mom who chose to believe in the possibilities of everyone, forcing her to fight with a world frightened by such possibilities etc--and as a family we lived and learned, and now we share loudly, with honesty and condor. Me as a writer, and my mom as an international autism expert/therapist/performer. I read about the pain and anger of others so that I can allow my emotions to exist and be heard, without having to invite such challenges into my life again. As the mother of four teenage boys it is important to me that I feel, that we all feel, but not at the cost of inviting hate or hurt to live in our home.

I read to be filled with feeling, without having to become afraid of it.
www.brainbody.net (for anyone interested in my moms autism work!)
01:27 PM on 10/12/2012
I was just walking back from getting my lunch and felt so sad... I had just watched Jennifer Burgess Thompson's video that was made after she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. She died today. Why did I watch it - It devastated me. So did Donna's beautiful story which I read and cried over daily. And was asking - why do I do these things?? Thanks for making me know I'm not alone. I'm a mom blogger - so I also write some...but I've been blessed so far to have a relatively easy time of it. Maybe I also read to remind myself how lucky am I ...and to just live for the moment.
12:31 PM on 10/12/2012
Wow. I could have written this. My family asks me the same thing. Why do I read stories that are only going to make me cry? I could never put it into words as eloquently as you did, but you hit the nail on the head with this blog entry. Thank you. Now I can let my family/kids read this and tell them, "There...now you know WHY I read what I do and let myself feel the pain, and allow myself to cry unashamedly." Like you said, most people would rather turn away from the pain reading such articles brings, but I'm not one of them. I know child abuse, childhood Cancers and other horrible diseases lurk out there, and none of our children are immune to them. I've been fortunate to have healthy children, but other parents have not. So, I grieve and cry with them. I feel their pain. There is always a box of tissues next to my computer just waiting for me to use.
12:09 PM on 10/12/2012
I totally relate to this although I have to admit that I had to stop myself after the first entry of Donna's story. My little girls are 2.5 and nearly 4 and I just could not bring myself to keep reading. I do find myself reading other stories - I recently came across this one that still haunts me:

http://www.aninchofgray.blogspot.com/2011/10/bridge-one-terrible-night.html

One thing that I find myself drawn to are mothers who have always blogged; and then are struck by tragedy. It's surreal to go back and read the older post and then see that transition.

I don't let my husband even know I read these stories as he would defintiely not want to read them himself and he would be of the "why do you put yourself through that" camp.
11:35 AM on 10/12/2012
nice read indeed
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Frings
Summer! Summer!! Summer! Summer!! Summer! Summer!!
10:56 AM on 10/12/2012
I know what changed me, but I never thought it would.
09:10 AM on 10/12/2012
Well said, and thank you.
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Bethanese
I may argue with stupid, but not with crazy.
08:05 AM on 10/12/2012
I, also, have cried over Donna's death and even more recently for Meredith Israel Thomas and her family. I read Sheila Quirke's series before, but I was not a mom then; they made me sad, but they did not haunt me like they do now. Now I can imagine those things happening to me, and either scenario scares the hell out of me. I know what changed me, but I never thought it would.

Like you, I also like the lighter stuff too, and especially enjoy Julie Miner's ("Rants from Mommyland" and "Rants in My Pants" on Babble) lighthearted take on parenting. I try to read more of that than the sad stuff. But why is it that the happy stuff not HAUNT me the way the sad stuff does?

I find myself constantly thinking about all those people going through loss and grief, and I remember how lucky I am to have my health and the health of my family, but the thought that it could happen to anyone has not left my mind for a long time. I tell myself to stop feeling bad because I don't even know those people, but I FEEL like I know them with the way their words hit me, with their presence as a constant online. But you're right; life goes on and somehow these strong people keep going and give me and everyone else hope when we hit rough times.
12:00 AM on 10/12/2012
Honest and revealing. Thank you.
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MelanieGagnon
Be yourself; everyone else is already taken
08:44 PM on 10/11/2012
I'm in the same basket and I can't even share it with my husband as he doesn't want to hear it ( he can't take it!). I find it important to read these stories and to cry. Sharing the pain, anger and desperation of these parents. Getting to know these precious angels who'se life's were much too short. I try to understand how these parents deal with it and live with it because I don't think I could.