June was a long month. The beginning was filled with many difficult “last” one-year marks. The last phone call, the last text, the last hug. Up until June 5th, I was able to look back at the pictures on Anna’s phone and see what she had been doing just one year before on any date; a walk with Quincy, a trip with Weston, dinner with Mina, a delicious dish she was about to eat, a beautiful view. Little precious and priceless snapshots into her life. Now that more than a year has passed, memories have to be brought in from 2023, which feels, obviously, much farther away.
I think of Anna every hour of every day. She is the last thing I think about at night and my first thought in the morning. I have cried every day since she left. Time has not lessened the pain. I get through my days by doing things to honor her. I feel her guiding me and can often hear her voice in my head advising me on all the little things she used to advise me on; what to wear, what to eat, what to do, but most importantly, how to live. Anna really knew how to live.
Our family has done our best to honor Anna in different ways over the past year. She has a butterfly garden in her name through the San Juan Preservation Trust. We have planted a flower and vegetable garden to honor her at Overmarsh Farm. We have also planted a summer garden in her little garden box, surrounded by lilacs and fruit trees in our yard. We worked with Friday Harbor High School to have one of her drawings and a plaque hung in the school library. We worked with our favorite Island artist, Nancy Spaulding, to create a pastel painting of Anna’s favorite things, people, and places. We used her photographs to create a calendar and her watercolors to create cards. We have been baking with and sharing her sourdough starter with friends and family across the nation. I have used her jewelry supplies and paints to create and share art I know she would love. We have stuck together here at our little home on San Juan and taken care of Quincy and ourselves because we know that is what Anna would want.
We also know all the ways friends and family have honored her as well, remembered her, kept her in their thoughts and hearts and lives. It is always very comforting when someone reaches out to let me know they were thinking of her. Perhaps they saw a butterfly or a beautiful sunset, are wearing something of hers somewhere special, or ordered her favorite dish at dinner. There have been donations made in her name, bicycle rides in her honor, photos framed, flowers planted, candles lit, trips taken to special places she loved, and countless more in ways that we may never know. We appreciate the ways that we have been supported too, and are grateful for our friends, family, and communities that continue to give us love and grace.
Thank you to everyone for all you do and have done. We know life is short; the world reminds us of that every day. We hope you are finding some joy, beauty, and purpose in your days and are sending love and gratitude to you all.