The Wrong Anne?
Sometimes the pain is too much to feel—and that’s okay, too.
I’m in a quandary.
Jane is weeping hard, her head pressed to my chest.
She sobs.
I hold her, and she holds me.
Tightly.
Jane’s crying over the death of someone named Anne—but I’m pretty certain she’s not crying about the same Anne to whom I was referring when I texted, “Anne died.”
The quandary is this: I’m not sure if I should interrupt her with, “Um, awkward, but I think you’re crying for a different Anne. It’s Anne Z. who died. I don’t know which Anne you’re thinking about.”
I don’t.
I figure I’ll hold her until she’s done crying, and we’ll laugh about the situation later.
=*=
How it happened:
On Saturday, before Jane got out of bed, I woke up, went downstairs, and ran my version of a Saturday Service. (You should come—it’s a powerful, lovely community of people practicing being patient, compassionate, and kind in real time.)
Toward the end of this particular gathering/discussion about HOPE, I suggested we each text a note of gratitude to someone random in our phone’s contacts—to test our hypothesis that gratitude can buoy hope. (Spoiler alert: it can—and does.)
However, when I looked at my phone, I saw I had an unread message from Anne’s mom:
> Anne died this past week. I don’t have much information. And I’m very sorry to have to tell you. Thank you for being her friend.
In shock, thinking/assuming I’d read something wrong, I continued on with the gratitude assignment.
The service closed with my singing the wisdom of Nachman of Breslov:
> All the world is a very narrow bridge. What’s key is not to add to the fear.
About twenty minutes later—after the service ended—Jane texts: “Good morning. I’m awake.”
As her sleep had been rough all week, I reply, delighted, “Good job!”
Then I text: “Sad news—Anne died.”
Jane comes downstairs, eyes wide and wet, and collapses into me, crying:
“Oh, Brian, I’m so sorry,” she says.
I hold her, confused about which Anne she’s thinking of.
=*=
I had known the Anne who died—Anne Z.—much more intimately than Jane did.
I performed her wedding, her sister’s wedding, and her father’s funeral.
And, since early 2022, nearly every Tuesday at 10:30 a.m., she and I had a 20–30 minute phone call.
We’d been doing spiritual direction together for a long time.
=*=
But that I’m not feeling that upset—not like Jane is—alerts me to another possibility.
I’m numb.
I’m dissociating.
=*=
It turns out Jane was crying for the right person.
Me—just numb.
=*=
I teach people the five stages of grief:
> Denial. Anger. Bargaining. Depression. Acceptance.
I’m so deep in denial, I don’t—can’t—feel anything.
I know I will.
Just not yet.
And I’m OK with that.
Jane, a therapist who specializes in loss, says, “Grief is idiosyncratic.”
There’s no one correct way to mourn.
=*=
I wish you had known her—the Anne beneath the sometimes difficult-to-love choices she made over and over again.
I wish you could have loved her as I did—as is.
I wish you could have had, like I did, long, drawn-out conversations with her about the welfare of her stuffed animals or what type of vape pen she should buy.
I wish you had known her so I wouldn’t feel as alone with the grief that’s been arising as the shock wears off.
I wish you had known her so I wouldn’t feel so alone with my memories.
Grief seeks witnesses.
Jane was one, and I thank you for being one, too.













