Celebrating life, dividing objects, and spreading ashes

Catching up on many milestones that have passed in the last few weeks.

A lot has happened since I last posted. I haven’t felt like I’ve had time to breathe for a while now, let alone write. If you are in a position to better control your schedule, I don’t recommend cramming so much activity into your life like I had to.

  • On August 18, I moved internationally, back to the United States for now.
  • On August 27, we held my sister’s first celebration of life in the town where she had been living.
  • On August 28, we began the challenging task of sorting through my sister’s worldly possessions and deciding who would keep what, and what we would donate or get rid of.
  • On August 30, we drove to her two favorite places along our state’s coast and spread some of her ashes.
  • On August 31, we donated approximately 80% of her wardrobe to a local charity she would have been happy to see her things go to.
  • On September 4, I moved into a new apartment across the country.
  • On September 5, I began intensive training for my job.

I need and want to reflect on many of these milestones, so in the next few posts, I’ll do just that. But let me say I am in a weird place where I am relaxed but emotionally saturated. Rested but tired. Okay and also barely holding it together.

Spreading her ashes was intensely emotional, in a way I didn’t expect. Every step of the way, if there was a way for their to be interpersonal friction between the four of us⁠—my sister’s partner, my parents, and I⁠—there was. Donating her things felt like a major achievement and a sucker punch to the gut at the same time.

Most importantly, I’ve had to reckon with the fact that the first major life change for me has happened, and my sister wasn’t witness to it. I didn’t get to visit her when I briefly went home. I didn’t get to send her a video of my new apartment. I didn’t get to delight her by telling her I was going to give dating a try again in this new city. I can’t try any longer to convince her to come visit me in the places I am.

I have officially moved forward, and my sister has not, can not, and never will. Time stands still for her story, and I wish mine could, too, if only for a moment.

That simple fact is enough to leave me crying, something I haven’t had time or privacy to do in weeks. Clearly, my heart remains heavy, despite the months that have passed.

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Author: Sarah

30-something navigating grief, life, and making meaning of the senseless loss of her little sister. Sibling looking for connection and community among those who understand the unique pain of losing a sibling, especially in young adulthood.

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