2 Years Without My Mom: How I Triumphed Over The Sadness

Don't stop short of thinking that the hurdle standing in your way is one you can't jump over.

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By Courtney Dercqu

Two years ago, my fiancé was racing down the turnpike after receiving a call that my mother died. This morning, I’m sitting in my kitchen drinking a cup of coffee.

This isn’t a story about the day my mother died, or that the two-year anniversary of her death hurts any less than it did the morning I received that phone call.

The latter is certainly not true.

This is a story about how life changes over time, and that the power to get up each morning, despite adversity, despite grief, despite doubt, is what makes you unique.

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Most people you talk to will say that losing a parent is never easy, but the hardest thing is losing a parent when you still have plans.

My mother should have been at my wedding. She should have been able to throw me a baby shower. My mother should have been able to answer my call Tuesday morning.

I read somewhere, not too long ago, that the people who died this morning had plans for tonight. The same goes for the living. I had plans. We all have plans.

Aspirations are what motivate us to do the unthinkable, like working two jobs while going to school, racing around to get to your unpaid internship on time at 27 years old, or staying up all night to edit a content piece.

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Aspirations lead us to the impossible until we make them possible. But what about when the aspirations aren’t enough? What about the times when the self-doubt, the depreciation, and the sadness creeps in?

Suddenly, the aspirations of becoming a recognizable name turn into simply being strong enough to get out of bed in the morning, to wash your hair, to even open your lips to say hello.

These are the moments when strength reveals itself. These are the moments when the choice between giving in and pushing forward become the quintessential Robert Frost poem. They are the moments that inspire.

As awkward as it sounds, I’ve lived my best life in the two years since my mother’s passing. In a span of a year, I traveled to Oregon, Florida, the Bahamas, New York, Las Vegas and Massachusetts.

RELATED: How To Help Children Cope With Death And Grief

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During the span of a year, I overcame my fear of being a motherless bride.

In the span of a year, I landed my first job in digital marketing, after years of aspirations in the form of full-time work, full time school and an internship definitely took its course.

In the span of a year, I’ve become more acquainted with the idea that life is short and that the age-old cliché still rings true. But what’s gotten me through my darkest times was simply getting out of bed in the morning.

Don’t stop short of thinking that the hurdle standing in your way is one you can’t jump over. It is. All it takes is for you to open your eyes and wash your hair.

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Mountains, when you’re standing right in front of them, seem insurmountable, but the further they grow in the distance the more they begin to resemble modest ant hills.

Time doesn’t heal all wounds — people do.

My heart still aches the same it did on a morning like this, two years ago, as I walked into my childhood home that was suddenly caving in with forlorn happy memories.

Today, I sip my coffee, realizing how far I’ve come, simply because I’ve carried on, even during the moments when I thought I couldn’t.

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RELATED: What My Life Would Be Like If I Hadn't Lost You

Courtney Dercqu is a social media manager and freelance writer whose work has been featured in The Good Men Project, Bustle, Elite Daily, Thought Catalog, Her Way, and others. Visit her website for more.