But that’s OK because I carry the lock inside my heart. It’s probably gone by now, cut off with giant metal cutters, freeing the bridge from the weight. The bridge of locks taught me I needed to create new rituals with Brendan. As they grew older, together, we created new rituals. And now we play duets together, our hands moving in harmony. I used to pick up Zack and place him next to me on the piano bench, his chubby hands banging on the black and white keys. Now, she rolls out fresh pasta and chops garlic and herbs just like the chefs she watches on T.V. I used to place a wooden stool near the kitchen counter so Lizzie could climb up and chop vegetables with a plastic knife. But that’s also what happened with the ones I had created with Zack and Lizzie when they were little. I lit candles and searched the flame as if I could find his laughter in the flickers of yellow and red. I poured a cup of coffee and pictured him sitting next to me, adding way too much sugar and milk to his own cup. Each time I put on my robe in the morning, I imagined it was Brendan hugging me. In my early days of grief, I created new rituals for myself and my son. RELATED: To the Moms and Dads Who Suffer Loss: You Are Not Alone And yet people kept returning, snapping the lock back onto the bridge because the lure of declaring eternal love is too strong. Sometimes officials cut off all the locks because their weight drags down the bridge, just like the weight of grief. The bridge of locks is a perfect metaphor for grief. It becomes a reminder that our loved ones are always with us and that we hold the key to keeping our love alive. Why not balloons with messages inside that drifted high into the sky, carried by the wind? Perhaps it’s because each lock has a key that opens it up. I sometimes wonder how this bridge of locks began. I walked away from that bridge, feeling lighter as I’d left part of myself there, and somehow hearing an answer back. I felt as if I could pick out my son’s lock even if it were ten layers deep. It would be so easy for it to be lost among the others. The bridge was filled with layers of locks. I wrote Brendan’s initials on them, darkening it, making each letter thicker, trying to make it stand out. The men overcharged us by at least three times, but I didn’t care. My husband Michael gave Zack and Lizzie some money. There were men who’d spread sheets on the ground, filled with little locks. I wanted to be part of this crowd and leave something behind on this bridge. RELATED: Grief is a Constant Companion for the Mother Who’s Lost a Childīut this was a celebration of love, and it filled me with a little seed of hope. There was a panic building inside me I could taste in the back of my throat. I could barely breathe with all the people pushing past me. There were people crying as they wrote down initials honoring a lost loved one. They overlapped each other, and oh, it looked so ugly. We had to squeeze through crowds to see the locks. It was covered with little locks, the kind that locked up a bicycle. But I didn’t want to disappoint the family, so I smiled when Zack took pictures of the Arc de Triomphe or Lizzie gasped with awe when the Eiffel Tower suddenly lit up with lights.īut there was an ache I couldn’t push through until one afternoon when we packed a picnic lunch and walked alongside the Seine. We’d dreamed about it for years, but that was when we were a family of five. I didn’t think I could go to Paris with my husband and two children, Lizzie and Zack.
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