He would have been on my ass about missing this writing deadline. I was famous for lagging on write-ups and my big brother? Well, the truth is, he likely would have been sitting here, the morning of, writing his first and final draft. The procrastination gene ran deeply in the both of us. Fortunately, the getting shit done gene did, too.
Another truth bomb on this, the one year anniversary of my brother’s passing, is one that only a writer or a soul disturbed by a traumatic loss could grasp. We know that describing our feelings about a moment in time is best done; in that moment of time.
I write this on a morning that aches of the morning one year ago that we were told our beloved Chris Cousins, had died of a heart attack. The sky is blue, scattered with dreamy-white clouds. Blues-rock music plays in the background. I stop what I’m doing periodically, alternating between admiring the music and the flower gardens I was fussing over when I got the call.

I would imagine that no one ever forgets the phone call that informs them that their only sibling is gone. I certainly didn’t. I remember that call each time I step near the part of my garden I was standing in when I answered my phone. I remembered the call when I avoided the entire garden for the remainder of the season after my brother’s passing. I recalled it again when our first spring after losing Chris came, and it was time to look at that garden space again.
I poured as many seeds into that garden space as I could. I planted trailing vines, marigolds, cosmos; the most hardy flowers I could think of. I was determined, for some unconscious reason, to not be able to see the floor of this garden. I threw on a few more wild flower seeds, then a few more, for good measure. Then I walked away. I haven’t weeded that garden all summer.

Call it procrastination, call it laziness, but the rest of my gardens are fussed over at a near-obsessive level. This garden is different. This garden has seen a river of my tears. I’m convinced the soil can still hear the pleading screams that erupted out of me on this morning one year ago. My arms tremble straight through to my fingers as I recall them. A lump in my throat threatens to bring me to my knees; again.

No, we don’t weed that garden. It does not bring me to my knees to do so, as I fear I won’t be able to rise up as steadily as I did the first time. For now, I’ll admire the blooms it produced. So many blooms in fact, that I can not see the ground, the rocks; I once landed on. One day, I’ll step closer and inspect the damage. All I know right now is that a year is not long enough. We don’t weed that garden.
We miss you, Chris. Here is your soundtrack: https://youtu.be/Q5vBzECT7mc






