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Etched

but not there

By Shirley BelkPublished 8 days ago โ€ข Updated 8 days ago โ€ข 3 min read
Top Story - January 2026
from Arrowroot Boutique on Pinterest.com

"I really don't get why you insist on going to the graveyard every single day of your life. You aren't even Catholic, and it's not even November if you were! Geez, give it a break, will you? Let her rest in peace, ok?"

Amanda's husband might as well have been talking to the wall because she was concentrating on the type of shoes to wear in the weather and had effectively "tuned" him out with her focus on task.

At first, Ed could understand the need for the visits to the cemetery to spend time with his departed, beautiful daughter. In fact, he brought flowers there on her birthday. It was strange not to see her smile on the day she would have turned seventeen. But seeing a cold, concrete reminder, no matter how nice the words etched in that made it hers...well, it didn't bring her back.

She had died way before her time and he was more than a little upset with God because of it. But now, because his wife insisted on this ritual some fourteen months later, he was becoming more agitated and resentful towards her instead of with the Man Upstairs.

Amanda didn't have the energy to go on with everyday life just yet. The more she tried, the harder it became. She knew Ed needed her attention, but her heart was void and words were non-existent. All she could muster was a nod, a weak smile, and a perfunctory kiss on the cheek as she left the house each day.

Ed busied himself with his newspaper, cleaning up the breakfast coffee cups, and mentally planned his day ahead. They had retired early, being blessed with his financial acumen that made life easier for his family. Their youngest child had come as a complete wonderful surprise, a change of life baby that at first was a bit embarrassing, but then gave life a renewed meaning and brought tremendous joy.

It was true that part of each day, when Amanda trotted off to the grave, Ed found time to sit on his daughter's bed and look around at reminders of the woman she would never become, the bride he wouldn't walk down the aisle, and the grandparent that wouldn't look into the face of the babies she'd never carry. Amanda had not been in the room at all. She insisted she couldn't.

But as he walked out of the empty room that smelled of lavender and vanilla candles, he closed the door and took on the routine that Amanda apparently was unable to perform anymore. (Grocery shopping was a new one for him.) Their friends had become "his" friends. They often met for lunches and that sustained him. Their conversations centered on anything but grief and the absence of his daughter...a welcomed distraction.

Amanda had tried to return to normalcy after the funeral, after the well-wishers left, and each of the "thank you for the thoughtfulness" cards had been extended. But as she stepped out in her attempts, overwhelming memories flooded in like sonic-boom daggers on every corner and crevice where she stepped, so she decided to retreat.

Going to the grave was the only place she found any kind of quiet or peace. It was her solace. It seemed to be the only place she could still connect with her child. She felt whole there, somehow. And yes, she wanted to crawl in beside her, to hold her sweet body tightly back to life. Instead, she just touched the etched name of her precious child with her fingers...it was the closest she could come.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Reference:

https://www.reddit.com/r/offmychest/comments/12mtdyn/i_dont_see_the_importance_of_visiting_my_familys/

Psychological

About the Creator

Shirley Belk

Mother, Nana, Sister, Cousin, & Aunt who recently retired. RN (Nursing Instructor) who loves to write stories to heal herself and reflect on all the silver linings she has been blessed with :)

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Eye opening

    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

  2. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

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Comments (12)

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  • Canuck Scriber Lisa Lachapelle3 days ago

    Sad & beautiful. Congrats on Top Story ๐Ÿ‘

  • Power to Top Story

  • Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! ๐ŸŽ‰๐Ÿ’–๐ŸŽŠ๐ŸŽ‰๐Ÿ’–๐ŸŽŠ

  • Jay Kantor7 days ago

    Daahlink - I go with Sara Wilson. 'We all have our ways to cope.' You do know that I care..! j-bud

  • This one really resonates with me...I never imagined how hard working through the grieving process would be...So glad this made top story

  • Aarsh Malik7 days ago

    I was struck by how both characters grieve alone while sharing the same loss. Neither is wrong and neither is whole. That emotional truth feels deeply honest.

  • Kay Husnick8 days ago

    Reading this, my mind just kept going back to the thought of how common it is for couples to split after the loss of a child. It must be so hard to be grieving so differently and dealing with the impact of that in addition to the grief itself. Great job with this story.

  • This was so wonderfully written. The chasm between husband and wife, both grieving in their own way, felt like a second tragedy. But I'm afraid that's what death does, it changes everything.

  • I feel so sad for both Amanda and Ed ๐Ÿฅบ Loved your story!

  • Kaitlin Shanks8 days ago

    This is a striking portrayal of the different ways that people grieve. I never really thought about it before.

  • Sara Wilson8 days ago

    This was heart breaking. I liked the way you were able to portray two people grieving the same loss in such different ways without villainizing either of them. The way you let the pain sit quietly between the lines rather than forcing it made the story feel real.. and as a mother, this just hurt my heart. Great writing and story <3

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