D'Creative Photography

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While I read this book in a Book Club more years ago than I can recall, I may read it again. In the nearly 21 months sin...
05/16/2026

While I read this book in a Book Club more years ago than I can recall, I may read it again. In the nearly 21 months since John died suddenly, his shoes and his clothes remain in his closet, neat and orderly, just as he left them. More than likely this book is in the basement among his most prized possessions: his books and work papers. by Diana Cavazos Rivera at D'Creative Photography.

Joan Didion's husband died in the middle of dinner. He was sitting across from her, they were talking, and then he was gone.

One sentence, he was there. The next, a woman was sitting alone at a table that still had two plates on it, inside a marriage of forty years that had ended between one breath and the next, and the world, with almost offensive indifference, just kept going.

And Didion, who had spent her career making precise sense of the world, found herself completely undone by the one thing her intelligence could not think its way through.

She went home that night and could not, for the entire year that followed, bring herself to give away his shoes. Because if she gave them away, he could not come back. And some part of her, the irrational, devastated, yet fiercely human part that grief had placed in charge, was not ready to close that door. Not yet. Maybe not ever.

She started thinking, obsessively. She researched death. She went back through their life together, looking for the moment she might have changed the outcome, as though the right combination of remembered details might somehow undo what had been done. She called it magical thinking. The irrational, desperate, quietly insane logic of a person who knows someone is gone and cannot, at the cellular level, make themselves believe it.

The Year of Magical Thinking is the book she wrote in that year. And it is, without question, one of the most honest accounts of grief I have ever read.

1. Grief doesn't make you emotional. It makes you irrational, and that is a completely different thing.
Didion wasn't weeping on every page. She was bargaining. Keeping shoes. Refusing to change things. Running the same mental programmes; turning to tell him something, reaching for the phone, and each time finding the absence like a new wound. She taught me that grief lives in the brain before it lives in the heart. And once you understand that, you stop judging yourself for the strange, desperate logic of it.

The grief, she found out, was proportional to the love. And the love, it turns out, was enormous.

2. Nobody talks about what it's like to grieve one person while being terrified of losing another.
While Joan is dismantling her marriage in memory, her daughter Quintana is critically ill in the hospital. So she is doing two unbearable things at once, mourning her husband and holding herself together because her child still needs her to. That particular kind of doubled grief, the kind that doesn't let you fall apart completely because the falling isn't finished yet, is something I had never seen named honestly before this book.

3. The people around you will want you to be further along than you are. Love them anyway.
Didion writes about the way the world has a timeline for your grief that has very little to do with grief's actual timeline. The casseroles that arrive in the first week and the assumption, by the fourth, that you are doing better now. The way people who love you will say things that land wrong. The way you learn to perform a version of recovery for the people around you because their relief is easier to manage than their worry.

She never says this bitterly. That is what makes it so devastating. She understands why people do it. She was probably one of those people herself, before. But she also tells the truth about the loneliness of grieving in a world that is fundamentally more comfortable with the idea of grief than with its actual duration and texture.

But the shoes stayed in the closet. That is the whole thing. Love doesn't get the memo when someone dies. It keeps running, keeps reaching, keeps holding space for a person who no longer needs it. And grief is just what it looks like when love hasn't caught up with loss yet.

Read this if you are in it. Read it if you survived it. Read it if you love someone badly enough that you already know, without wanting to think about it, exactly what a closet full of their shoes would cost you.

It will find you where you are. It always does.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/4wwX9lG

Reading “The Year of Magical Thinking” by Joan Didion years ago may have prepared me to be calm and rational on the day ...
04/24/2026

Reading “The Year of Magical Thinking” by Joan Didion years ago may have prepared me to be calm and rational on the day John died, August 22, 2024, 20 months ago. Being irrational and the magical thinking came later. As the survivor after a loving marriage, grieving has been my most challenging endeavor ever. I’m grateful for my family, friends and GeeBees (Grief Buddies) support group. 4/24/2026 Diana Cavazos Rivera

John Gregory Dunne died at the dinner table. He was talking about his work, and then he wasn't talking at all. Forty years of marriage ended in a sentence he didn't get to finish. No goodbye. No final conversation that could be held onto and turned over in the quiet that followed.

Just dinner, words, and then the particular, shattering silence of a table set for two with only one person left at it. And Didion, who had spent her career making precise sense of the world, found herself completely undone by the one thing her intelligence could not think its way through.

She went home that night and could not, for the entire year that followed, bring herself to give away his shoes. Because if she gave them away, he could not come back. And some part of her, the irrational, devastated, fiercely human part that grief had placed in charge, was not ready to close that door. Not yet. Maybe not ever.

The Year of Magical Thinking is the book she wrote in that year. But because writing was the only thing left that felt like something she could do. And it is, without question, one of the most honest accounts of grief I have ever read.

1. Grief doesn't make you emotional. It makes you irrational, and that is a completely different thing.
Didion wasn't weeping on every page. She was bargaining. Keeping shoes. Refusing to change things. Running the same mental programmes; turning to tell him something, reaching for the phone, and each time finding the absence like a new wound. She taught me that grief lives in the brain before it lives in the heart. And once you understand that, you stop judging yourself for the strange, desperate logic of it.

2. You only ever take the full inventory of a love after it's gone.
This book is, underneath everything, a love story. Forty years of a marriage between two people who were each other's whole literary world; first reader, harshest critic, closest friend. Didion spends the year turning their shared life over in her hands, trying to understand its full weight now that she has to carry it alone. The grief is proportional to the love. And the love, it turns out, was enormous.

3. Nobody talks about what it's like to grieve one person while being terrified of losing another.
While Joan is dismantling her marriage in memory, her daughter Quintana is critically ill in the hospital. So she is doing two unbearable things at once, mourning her husband and holding herself together because her child still needs her to. That particular kind of doubled grief, the kind that doesn't let you fall apart completely because the falling isn't finished yet, is something I had never seen named honestly before this book.

4. The people around you will want you to be further along than you are. Love them anyway.
Didion writes about the way the world has a timeline for your grief that has very little to do with grief's actual timeline. The casseroles that arrive in the first week and the assumption, by the fourth, that you are doing better now. The way people who love you will say things that land wrong. The way you learn to perform a version of recovery for the people around you because their relief is easier to manage than their worry.

She never says this bitterly. That is what makes it so devastating. She understands why people do it. She was probably one of those people herself, before. But she also tells the truth about the loneliness of grieving in a world that is fundamentally more comfortable with the idea of grief than with its actual duration and texture.

But the shoes stayed in the closet. That is the whole thing. Love doesn't get the memo when someone dies. It keeps running, keeps reaching, keeps holding space for a person who no longer needs it. And grief is just what it looks like when love hasn't caught up with loss yet.

Read this if you are in it. Read it if you survived it. Read it if you love someone badly enough that you already know, without wanting to think about it, exactly what a closet full of their shoes would cost you.

It will find you where you are. It always does.

BOOK: https://amzn.to/3OVUxg7

04/03/2026

By the light … 🎶 by Diana Cavazos Rivera at D'Creative Photography©️2026 Lubbock, Texas. April 3, 2026. Good Friday.

Uninformed locals often say there’s nothing to do in Lubbock. Visit Museum of Texas Tech University— There’s plenty of t...
06/26/2025

Uninformed locals often say there’s nothing to do in Lubbock. Visit Museum of Texas Tech University— There’s plenty of things to see and do, at no cost to you except your time.

Broadway show season five at The Buddy Holly Hall of Performing Arts and Sciences looks appealing. I’ve enjoyed more tha...
05/09/2025

Broadway show season five at The Buddy Holly Hall of Performing Arts and Sciences looks appealing. I’ve enjoyed more than 30 years attending shows with my dear friend Cheryl Hall.

The curtain is UP on your 5th anniversary Broadway Season, and it’s bigger and bolder than ever! 🎭 Get ready for a season packed with showstopping moments, unforgettable stories, and four Broadway at Buddy Holly Hall premieres that will leave you breathless:

• Winner of eight Tony Awards and the Grammy Award for Best Musical Theater Album, HADESTOWN
• The unique, spectacle-filled new musical The New York Times calls “stunning, emotional, heart-filled and gorgeously imaginative,” WATER FOR ELEPHANTS
• Based on the 1985 film and inspired by the classic Hasbro board game, CLUE
• National tour of Meredith Willson's six-time Tony Award-winning musical comedy, THE MUSIC MAN
• Heartfelt musical comedy based on the beloved film, MRS. DOUBTFIRE
• The brand new World Tour of BLUE MAN GROUP

🎟️ Secure your season memberships now for a year of Broadway magic you won’t want to miss!

03/19/2025

Thank you so much for sharing your work as a historical scholar on social media, Heather Cox Richardson.

While I love to create images in “plein aire” I commend those out in it the dust from here to Amarillo and beyond on Mar...
03/15/2025

While I love to create images in “plein aire” I commend those out in it the dust from here to Amarillo and beyond on March 14, 2025. Thank you, First Responders. follow me: Diana Cavazos Rivera & Creativity-Artistry.

Today was wild. Thank you so much to all the agencies and businesses who keep things moving.

Social media posts of video and photos were terrifying. Grateful for first responders and all the Texas Tech University ...
03/13/2025

Social media posts of video and photos were terrifying. Grateful for first responders and all the Texas Tech University staff working to mitigate this tragic situation. Thinking of students, faculty & staff at Texas Tech University - Whitacre College of Engineering .

Texas Tech University Update:

Lubbock Fire Rescue crews remain on scene at Texas Tech University (TTU) conducting atmospheric monitoring of subsurface utility vaults. Crews will continue to assist TTU officials in a support role until all potential hazards are mitigated.

Presenting one of my watercolor paintings of sunflowers.
03/05/2025

Presenting one of my watercolor paintings of sunflowers.

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