Mom

The Echo of the Week

This week holds many milestones for me.
Some are marked on the calendar, others live quietly in the tender spaces of my heart.

Yesterday was the five-year anniversary of my cancer surgery.
It’s also the memorial date for my mom.
And a week ago, I celebrated another birthday.

I often find myself wondering why this stretch of days carries such a complex mix of emotions — sadness, a dull ache of loss, and even a flicker of anger. But then I glance at the calendar, and I remember.

The year 2020 was a storm I will never forget.
It was the year when loss became layered.
The year my body held pain and my heart carried too much all at once.

I can still picture myself sitting in the backyard with my family, feeling the weight of it all. The sickness in my stomach was more than physical — it was fear, uncertainty, and grief tangled together. Everything felt fragile.

2020 changed me. It changed the way I see the world and the way I move through it. It changed many of my relationships. It shifted how I hold trust. And if I’m honest, it hasn’t all been neat or tidy. There’s still anger tucked in there — quiet at times, sharp at others. I don’t want it, but it’s part of what remains. It sits beside a new kind of clarity, a deeper awareness of what I can no longer ignore. Some things once felt unshakable, but now I see them differently. And I can’t unknow what I know.

And woven through all of this is the ache that Evan isn’t here. My son should be here. He should be part of the conversations, the milestones, the quiet moments of remembering. His absence isn’t loud to the world, but it is a constant hum in my heart — a space that will always belong to him. I feel it in these weeks especially.

And then there’s Alex. My heart aches for all he has had to walk through — all that he has carried as a brother, as a son, as someone who has also felt the weight of loss. I see how it’s shaped him. How it still does. Grief isn’t something we each carry alone; it lives in the spaces between us, too.

Though time has softened some of the edges, the memories remain. Not as sharp or unbearable as they once were — but present, steady, and real.
These anniversaries are more than dates. They are reminders of all that changed and all that I survived.

I haven’t fully completed this chapter. There are parts of that week that still ache. But I also know healing doesn’t mean forgetting. It means learning to live with the echo of what was, while still reaching toward what is.

I will never wish those days on anyone. And yet, they have shaped me in ways I’m still discovering.

And now, as I sit with this week once again, I can feel the ache — but I can also feel the strength I’ve built along the way. The work I’ve done to tend to my grief has brought me to a steadier place. I can hold both the sorrow and the gratitude together now. Both are true. And both matter.

This week, I honor what was lost.
I honor what remains.
And I honor the quiet strength that has carried me this far.

An April Wedding...Becoming the Botkins.

In about two weeks some dear friends of ours and the best friend of our son Evan will be getting married.  This has been something we have waited for a very long time and the wait is almost over. We believe it will be the wedding of the year and we are excited to celebrate with you both.

I know that if Evan were here this would be the party he would be right in the middle of...I know he would've had great words to speak and you would be able to hear his voice singing loudest of all. So although it is bittersweet I know that Evan's presence and spirit will be with his dear friends as they say, "I Do". 

In preparation for this great day, I wanted to share a few snapshots from Brinton's shower that I've not shared. 

Enjoy!! and we'll see you in April!

Thank you, Mom. I can't wait to see what you capture next....

Last year I was challenged to take my art out into the world. This challenge came in the form of a letter written from Evan but I had also many friend who told me I should try. So I did and it was successful. I placed in many of the shows I entered and won small monetary prizes for those placements. I'm glad that I did it and it helped me see a different side of photography....

I was unsure if this year I would be up to the task of placing my photography in the numerous shows that I had last year. Some of my motivation was that Evan and Alex really helped to move me forward and honestly putting your work in shows is time consuming. But I felt that I had a few piece that I could enter and my motivation was different this year so I entered a few shows along with entering the California State Fair. I've included those piece in this blog post.

Being an artist is unique and beautiful. It can also be demanding and test you in ways that you thought impossible. Sometimes I think that it was more then I bargained for this thing I do. I want to say that since the loss of Evan my world has changed...I can't really describe it but I feel the full impact of my loss every single day. I was out yesterday and nearly every place that I went or drove past had a memory of something or brought back to me a conversation I had with Evan. The other night I was out looking for picture frames for photos that I was placing in an art show I ran into some dear friends who asked, How are you??? Well at that moment I was deep in the process of trying to get frames and I was great but as I talked further I was grateful to get through a conversation about how I was without tears. Please don't take that the wrong way...for me that is a step forward in my healing. I want to be at a place that the very conversation about Evan does not destroy me.....crumble me to a "bucket of tear"so to speak...."grief ambush" as it's called in my small group study that I'm doing. I want to be able to have conversations that invite people towards me...to not be afraid to see people or have them avoid me or feel awkward. To be real grief is scary....and awkward...and crummy but it is also part of the process of loving and being loved. I'm grateful to have loved Evan and that he loved me too. There is so much joy in that...if I hadn't loved there would be no sadness or this grief that I have. Maybe that is what is different is the full impact of our love is felt in loss. Yes...I think that's what is different is that I know that if I love fully the full impact of the loss of that becomes very clear and painfully real. It goes back to something I believe the Lord is showing me.

For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror.....1 Cor. 13:12.