Fall to my knees

Kelly Jo Feinberg
October 8, 1972 – May 14, 2010

There is something so satisfying about weeding my garden. Unlike most chores or the work I do teaching and writing, where it can be hard to measure success or even know when a thing is finished, when you weed you can see clearly what you’ve accomplished, a cleared space. There is a distinct before and after.

Working in my garden never fails to make me think about Kelly. Sixteen years ago, (HOW has it already been 16 years, and yet also so much has happened since then), when the message arrived that Kelly was being sent home with hospice care, that there was nothing else they could do for her, that the moment we wished and prayed wouldn’t ever arrive was now there, we were going to lose her, her physical body was going to die and it would happen soon, all I could think to do is fall to my knees in my garden and pull weeds.

At that time, I still held a sense of disbelief around death. Yes, my grandparents had already died and of course someday far in the future my parents would follow, but death closer than that felt unfair, unnatural, practically impossible. My first dog Obi was diagnosed with a treatable but ultimately incurable cancer the same week as Kelly got her breast cancer diagnosis, but as hard as it was and would be, I knew most if not all of my dogs would all die before I did, but certainly not Kelly. She would be treated and live to be free of cancer. There didn’t seem any other possible option. And yet, six months after Obi died, Kelly would follow.

I’m aware now, 16 years later, having lost two more dogs, my sister-in-law, three of my “other” mothers, two beloved uncles, my dad and now so near to losing my mom altogether, that death isn’t just close, it’s my roommate. And every time, I fall to my knees and weed the garden. With each loss, I plant another peony bush in the center where the massive cottonwood tree used to stand.

As I live with this deepened intimate awareness of death, with the compound grief of so much loss, I am also aware that death doesn’t remove someone completely. Just like the bindweed in my garden that I pull and pull, season after season, the roots of love are deep and it continues to linger, to hold on. In this way, we never really entirely lose those we love. They are with us still, years later. We can no longer hear their voice or their laugh, we cannot hug them or hold their hand, and yet they are undeniably there, solid and present.

After Kelly died, some of us started to see ladybugs. Ladybugs are thought to be a positive omen representing good luck, prosperity, love, and protection. They are a reminder that she is still with us, that everything is okay, even when it isn’t. This year in my garden, maybe something to do with the warmer than usual winter, there are so many ladybugs, more than I’ve ever seen before. I was out just this morning, on my knees in my garden pulling weeds, and they were everywhere.

More things I’ve written about Kelly:

  • Kelly Jo, October 8, 2011: “It’s cloudy, windy, gray, with a little bit of rain here today. That seems right. Today is Kelly’s birthday.”
  • Dance Party, October 8, 2011: “A while back, I wrote an essay and made a dance party mix tape in Kelly’s honor and mailed it to some friends.”
  • The world is never the same after she is there, May 14, 2012: “‘A girl who knows who she is shows up with so much light, confidence and love for everyone and everything around her that the room, the world is never the same after she is there.’ This quote describes my friend Kelly perfectly–so much light, confidence and love for everyone and everything around her—her life, her presence on this earth meant the world would never be the same, and two years ago today, the world was forever changed in another way when she passed.”
  • Don’t Give Up, May 14, 2014: “This was the view this morning from my front porch, just as Eric and I were leaving to walk the dogs. It makes sense that the sky was extra beautiful this morning. Four years ago on May 14th, Kelly died, and while that remains one of the worst things, she was one of the best.”
  • Day of Rest: Remembering Kelly, May 15, 2016: “About a week ago, I went out to check how many blooms my peonies would have this year. I have three of them — one for Obi, one for Kelly, and one for Heather and now Dexter, planted at the edge of the spot where our Cottonwood tree used to be, a tiny memorial to so much loss. As I counted the blooms, I noticed one had a friend, a ladybug. It always feels like a nudge from Kelly, and to see one on my peonies is a double whammy.”
  • Three Truths and One Wish, May 14, 2019: “Grief is something you never get over, you just get used to it. Nine years ago today, Kelly died.”
  • On the Origins of Things, October 8, 2019: “Today would have been my friend Kelly’s birthday. Would have been, because nine years ago, at only 37 years old, she died.”

Something Good

1. Poetry: Terra Vita by Lisa Hiton and Dispatch as Prologue or Epilogue by Megan Gannon on The Slowdown with Maggie Smith, The Quiet Shift by Anita Nahal and Forever Plastics by Ronald Carson and Aubade on Piazza del Popolo with Saxophonist and Chopin by Ashna Ali on poets.org, Telling the Bees and Seat 24C and Stalled by Julie Barton, Not That I Like It, But I Tell Myself and Still and Listening to Glen Velez in a Garden in Ohio and Sitting Beside the Cellist During Sound Check and Things I Learned from My Mother and A Small Lesson in Infinity by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, [empty ballfield] and Other Haiku by Greg Schwartz and Spin by C. Wade Bentley and Flower in a Field by Dario Cvencek on Rattle, The Time underneath Time: and what gives life by Pádraig Ó Tuama on Poetry Unbound, Open Anyway and More in Time by James Crews, Imperfection by Elizabeth Carlson on Heart Poems, and a few poems from Hannah Ro’s collection Same “to celebrate the women that mother us and the ones who mother with us.”

2. Good stuff from Elissa Altman on Poor Man’s Feast: on a love heavier than iron (“It’s Mother’s Day, and that’s all I have to say”) and a midweek roundup (“(Get Outside Already)”) and From the archives: Committing to the asparagus (“On Sustenance and Being Right Where You Are”).

3. On Bears: And invasive species by Jami Attenberg on Craft Talk.

4. The Gaslighting of the Majority (And the Truth About MAGA’s Death Spiral) on The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz.

5. An action both slightly incriminating and entirely fitting. “There is a kind of intimacy that only time can create” by Patti Digh.

6. Toast Slices Undergo Edible Makeovers into Rock Gardens, Pantone Swatches, and Flower Beds on This is Colossal.

7. Is There Any Love in Fascism? “1984 is now” by Satya Robyn.

8. Grab Some Seeds. Throw Them at the Soil. You’re a Gardener Now. on The New York Times. (gift link) “Welcome to chaos gardening, a laid-back way to turn a patch of ground into a riot of color.”

9. Was It Worth It? “I didn’t think about those nachos even once. I had never experienced anything like it. Is this, I asked my friends, how it feels to be normal?”

10. Opposable Thumbs by Alan Michael Parker. “On Cartoons, Colors, Ferris Wheels, Father’s Day, Prince, Coming Out, the Internet, and Me.”

11. The Guadalupe Swept Us Away. This Is the Story of All That Came After. “In the days after last July’s historic disaster, I wrote about the tragedy that befell my family. But crawling out of the river was only the beginning.”

12. When My Father’s Canary Flew Away on The New York Times. (gift link) “In the final stages of his dementia, a long-lost memory from childhood returned, perfectly formed. What was going on in his brain?”

13. I Want to Live Like Costco People. “No matter who we are or where we’re from, at Costco, we’re more alike than we are different. There’s no such thing as the real America, but if there were, you’d find it here. And you’ll find me here, too, for I have become the Costco person I was always destined to be, preordained by geography and epigenetics, nature and nurture. Yes, I’d like a box to take my groceries to the car. I’m pretty sure all this stuff will fit.”

14. Merriam-Webster Slang Dictionary. “Slang & Trending: Words We’re Watching.”

15. Why You Should Read ‘Yesteryear’ Now on The New York Times. (gift link) “Caro Claire Burke critiques America and asks who, and what, is redeemable?”

16. Retirees Expect Their Home to Be a Financial Safety Net. They Shouldn’t. on The New York Times. (gift link) “Older homeowners often can’t afford to maintain their houses or don’t understand the value in updating them. And that can mean thousands lost when they sell.”

17. ‘Almost life-saving’, Moby on the healing power of sound. “In the optimistic 1990s, electronic pioneer Moby made music that became the soundtrack to a generation’s youth. Three decades on, in a more anxious and unsettled age, his latest album explains how sound brings him calm after a lifelong battle with anxiety.”

18. Feeling anxious? Then try going for a walk in the woods. “Walking around woodland trails cuts anxiety, reduces rumination and boost social connection, new research shows.” Maybe it’s just me, but this seems like doing research to discover that water is wet.

19. Object-ives #34: My Mother’s Photographs on Open Secrets Magazine. “Why I’ve held on to photos of a woman who was cruel to me as a child.”

20. Birds, Buds, Blossoms, Beauty!, “poems and prompts to celebrate the spirit of May” from Alix on Earth & Verse.

21. Near Philadelphia’s New Green Spaces, a Dramatic Reduction in Crime. “With thousands of vacant lots now beautified, the city is showing that targeting places instead of people can work wonders.”

22. Behind every door. “Every person you pass is carrying a reality you cannot see” by Jasmine on The Tiny Joy Project.

23. Why So Sensitive? “Prima donnas, drama queens, delicate souls, and other artists” by Danny Gregory.

24. The Woman Who Got Out. “Trading a too-squared life for a little bit of grit” by Amanda Sandlin.

25. All the right moves! 17 personal trainers on the exercise they always recommend – from planks to face pulls on The Guardian. “Whether you are starting from scratch, or have a well-honed routine, moving can help us feel happier and healthier. Experts share their one essential exercise and how to get the most out of it.”

26. After Seeing “Holding Liat”: Love and grief all over again by Jena Schwartz.

27. Climbing Higher by Lina Lau on Short Reads. “Learning to trust.”

28. I’m 38 and I love my parents and I also resent them. “I’ve spent most of my adult life trying to decide which feeling is the real one — and last month I finally accepted that they’re both real, they’ve always both been real, and the exhausting part of being their son is only performing the half they can handle.”

29. 2026 Pulitzer Prize Winners, list with links.

30. 5 Tips for Mindful Journaling on Lion’s Roar. “James C. Hopkins on how—through writing—you can find the flow of awareness, free of judgment.”