The Beautiful Weight of a Shorter Life

A few summers ago, while travel was on hold as I waited for a heart transplant, my family had to get creative about how we spent our time. With nowhere to go and plenty of hours to fill, we found ourselves wandering through the city cemetery.

Morbid? Maybe.

But for us, it felt more like a small, unintentional anthropology project.

We began noticing patterns in the dates carved into the headstones. Our completely unscientific research revealed something interesting: if a person managed to survive childhood, the next major hurdle seemed to be middle age.

There were a surprising number of headstones marking lives that ended around fifty.

And by anyone’s standards, fifty is not old.

That observation has stayed with me.

Recently, my autistic daughter Keelie learned that her dear friend Annie is facing a health challenge. In a moment of anxious honesty she said, “I’m afraid Annie won’t live to be eighty years old.”

Annie is twenty-five.

And the truth is, reaching twenty-five is something Annie’s family already considers a miracle, given the circumstances of her extremely premature birth.

She isn’t the only young person I know living with what might be called a “limited-time offer” here on earth. Sadly, there are a few others whose lives carry that same uncertainty.

And yet, if you know them, you know something remarkable.

Their lives are beautiful. Meaningful. Inspiring.

Each one seems to have been gifted with talents, interests, and joys that exist for no other obvious reason than to bring them happiness—or perhaps to quietly teach the rest of us something about how life is meant to be lived.

If you know, you know.

No one who knows these young people would ever say their lives lack purpose. If anything, their lives shine with it.

And because of that, we celebrate differently. Each year matters more. Each month. Each ordinary day.

So what would you do if you knew your life might be shorter than expected?

I’ll tell you one thing—it has a funny way of making sixty-year-olds look awfully young.

The other night Aaron and I found ourselves talking about death and dying. I’ll admit, it’s not exactly the most romantic bedtime conversation. But the question came up: why are people so afraid of death?

Aging, at least from what we can observe, doesn’t always look particularly appealing. If we’re honest, the process leaves quite a bit to be desired. So if aging isn’t exactly the dream scenario, why does the thought of death frighten us so much?

And suddenly something occurred to me—something I had realized before but never quite put into words.

I had faced death once already.

I had looked it straight in the eye.

And what I felt wasn’t fear.

It was sorrow.

In the months leading up to my transplant, there were moments when the reality of my situation would surface with startling clarity. The heart condition that made my transplant necessary—ARVC, also known as ACM—could have caused sudden cardiac arrest at any time. And of course, the transplant surgery itself carried its own risks.

I didn’t know when the call would come telling me a heart was available. But in the weeks before it finally did, I had a strange sense that something was approaching.

The only way I can describe that time is that it felt a little like Katniss Everdeen before she entered the arena in The Hunger Games—a quiet moment standing at the edge of something enormous and uncertain.

But the truth is, I wasn’t afraid to die.

What I feared was leaving.

Leaving my husband.
Leaving my children.
Leaving the people I love to carry the weight of that loss.

Because I know what that kind of loss feels like.

I have already grieved the deaths of too many people I love—a dear brother, a beloved sister-in-law and friend, my daddy, and grandparents who meant the world to me. I know the hollow ache grief leaves behind.

And if there is anything I would wish to spare someone, it would be that kind of pain.

But grief tells a story of its own.

It tells us that a life mattered.

It tells us that love was real.

And in that sense, a life that is deeply loved—no matter how long it lasts—is not a tragedy.

It is something to celebrate.

A life isn’t measured only in its length, but in the love it gathers and the meaning it leaves behind. Some people are given many decades to discover that truth. Others seem to understand it much earlier. And the rest of us, if we’re paying attention, are lucky enough to learn from them—to celebrate the ordinary days, to hold our people a little closer, and to remember that even a shorter story can still be a meaningful one.

This is me Winning

According to Dictionary.com, a superstition is defined as:

  1. a belief or notion, not based on reason or knowledge, in or of the ominous significance of a particular thing, circumstance, occurrence, proceeding, or the like;
  2. a system or collection of such beliefs;
  3. a custom or act based on such a belief.

I’ve always been superstitious. When I learned how to play solitaire as a tween, that superstition quickly found a home. I began playing the game the way others might use tarot cards: If I win this game, it means good luck. If I lose, my wish won’t come true.

Oh, don’t worry—I know from whom all blessings flow. My faith is firmly grounded and not easily shaken. But sometimes, in my humanness, I fall prey to my feelings and find myself in need of distraction. Maybe control. In some way, superstition offers me a little of both.

Recently, I’ve been thinking about the difference between emotions and feelings. The clearest way I can sum it up is this: emotions are physiological reactions to stimuli, while feelings are the thoughts we assign to those reactions based on our experiences.

Why is knowing the difference important? I don’t know. It probably isn’t. But for me, I wanted a better way to take control of my feelings—a better way than sitting down with a deck of cards and telling myself that if I win this game, everything will work out just fine.

If we understand that emotions are simply human reactions to the world around us, then we can reason that, given enough time, those emotions will pass. Feelings, on the other hand, are trickier. They get tangled up with our beliefs.

The other day, I learned something that triggered an emotion I immediately attached feelings to. Those feelings made me deeply uncomfortable. I found myself wrestling with censorious, unfriendly thoughts toward another person—and toward myself. It felt like carrying an unwelcome burden of hostility, competition, regret, and maybe even a little jealousy. When I searched for the root of those feelings, the emotion they were tied to, I landed on anger. And I had to ask myself: What am I angry about?

My husband answered that question for me. I wasn’t winning. And it wasn’t really about winning, not exactly. It was about fairness. Equality. Balance.

We aren’t all dished the same plate of struggle in this life, and that reality was making me angry. But it is reality. No amount of whining, crying, complaining, or angry lamentation will change it. So I took a deep breath and chose to move on. Once I identified the emotion behind the feelings, I could reason that there wasn’t truly a need to be angry at all.

Still, as a human, I’m entitled to my feelings. More than that—I think feelings matter. So I processed them the best way I could.

I prayed.

Then I pulled out my deck of cards and set up a game of solitaire.

If I win this game, everything will be just fine.

First game—bam—a win.

This is me winning.