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Posts Tagged ‘Memories’

That’s too many. Even if we are on the wrong end of middle-age.

It seems quite frequently we lose another old classmate, friend, or extended family member. But this last round was rough.

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First, my partner lost his brother. 

He’d spent many years disabled after a stroke, but it still hit hard. Doesn’t it always? Yet when someone is expected to pass, we can find some solace in the memories shared with those left behind, the pics of our loved one cradling grandchildren, and the boisterous gathering of all the scattered family. 

The funeral passed in a blur, with my love doing his part as a pallbearer, in spite of still recovering from back surgery. He comforted his sisters in quiet corners at the dinner afterward. Hugs and tears all around. Then everyone dispersed, pulled back into the minutiae of the day-to-day. 

Until the next family funeral.

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A few years ago, I made the agonizing decision to leave a long marriage. 

I did not know where I would land that night. Someone’s couch? A hotel? But Miss Evelyn and her clan took me in and let me rent a property from them in the very small town where I taught. Most of her children, grandchildren, and even some of her great grandchildren knew me from school and events around town, but I had not met the matriarch herself. 

Evelyn took me into her great heart and nurtured me, just as she had her six children and all their offspring and friends young and old. I spent many hours next to her chair as she stroked my hair, and I talked through the hurt and confusion and grief that clouded over me. Sometimes we sat in silence, but genuine caring needs no words. It was then I understood why so many people adored this tiny powerhouse of a woman. 

The small Catholic church overflowed at her service, with every heart a witness to a life well-lived. At the country cemetery out on the prairie, the wind sighed through the old oak trees. Evelyn would fly from here, light and free, every task finished and all duties fulfilled. All is well with my soul. Go in love, Miss Evelyn, go! Catch the capricious breeze and dip up and over the grass and flowers, past the old church and the simmering heat into the depth of the bluest sky. 

We will remain here for a time, but we are well because you loved us so well. 

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Did you hear about Tony? 

My daughter called me on the day after to ask if I knew what had happened. Did my young friend change jobs? Move? That he had driven to the end of the road, literally, and taken his life did not compute. No, that can’t be Tony. I just talked to him not long ago. He’s a teacher, a giver, a musician, a dream weaver. He’s alive!

For several days I simply refused to believe it. I reviewed the last messages from him, looked at pictures of him, remembered our conversations about education, teenagers, travel, and a myriad of other things. Yes, I knew he struggled with depression, but he was climbing out of that. He had hopes of finding his soulmate someday and raising kids of his own. How had I failed him? What did I miss? His brother confirmed the worst.

At the funeral, his mother sobbed in my arms, and I had no comfort to give. I heard the rumbling of the priest’s voice during the funeral mass, offering prayer. I whispered the response, Lord, hear our prayer, but God felt far removed. The suffering of his family lay like a heavy blanket of sorrow over his assembled friends and students. I was an intruder in their grief because my own already engulfed me. I gripped the wet tissue in my hand and held on to a faint faith. Alleluia. Alleluia.

Inwardly, I screamed all the way to the gravesite. It is not right to bury a child before his parents! Has the earth reversed course around the sun, or day turned to night? All is not well in the universe when a young man of promise, who gave so much to others, loses his hope. The pallbearers placed flowers on the coffin, and a child in front of me played with his father’s shoelaces. 

Alleluia. Alleluia.

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© 2024 Joyce Martin. All rights reserved

Note: None of my content is AI generated. Ever.

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           A train whistle woke me the other night.  We can hear the trains coming through more clearly when our small town has gone to bed.  The melancholy calling of the whistle brought to mind the recent passing of my uncle, and his trip on the Glory Train.  In the weeks preceding his death, he would tell his family that he had a ticket, bought and paid for, on the Glory Train.  After months of illness and suffering from the cancer that had ravaged his body, his daughter sat at his bedside.  When they heard the train whistle, she gently reminded him that he had his ticket, and it was time to get on the Glory Train.  Soon after, he boarded that train for his last journey. 

            This episode reminded me of other goodbyes.  As is true for us all, the older I get, the more of them I have to remember.  I have become a collector of memories and mementos, of sights and smells, all of which I carry about in my mind and in my life as a living memorial of those who have gone on.  I can still have a few things about me that my loved ones used and loved, even if I can no longer have them with me.

            My mother often made biscuits in a green milk glass mixing bowl, with a handle on the side and a notch for pouring.  I can picture her strong hands tossing in the ingredients in short order, mixing with a few powerful strokes, and ladling the batter onto the floured counter for kneading.  Perfect biscuits every time, and a beautiful illustration of her nurturing love.  The beloved green bowl sits in my kitchen, and when I use it, I remember her.  When she died, love was literally the last word on her lips.  She breathed the word over and over, until she had no more breath.  To her, it was the most important thing to say.  And to me, how she lived is as important as how she died.

            Daddy had a different lesson to teach.  He lived a contentious, turbulent life, with his dreams always just out of reach.  They were grand dreams, too.  He was a man of ideas, but for him, reality and hope never reconciled.   He was opinionated, obstinate, and ornery.  In the years after Mother died, and without her as his saving grace, he alienated almost everyone who had been close to him.  Even his articulate and piercing intelligence could not save him from himself. 

When I went down to care for him during his last illness, I found a changed man.  Redemption came with the realization of his own mortality.  He let the walls down and let us in.  He gave up his pride and his need to be right, and we, just as we were, loved him, just as he was.  He asked for potato soup, like Mother used to make.  It had been years, but I made as close a facsimile to Mother’s version as I could, and we sat and ate it together. 

Later, when my siblings gathered in and we shared his care, we resorted to waving a bottle of peppermint oil under his nose to ease the waves of nausea that would come over him.  The clean, refreshing scent of peppermint still recalls the poignancy of those last days with him.  Daddy taught me that a death with dignity and honesty can heal a lifetime of anger and hurt. 

Now, as I move into the midday of my life, it is time for me to live my lessons learned, to heal every hurt as I can, and to love with a free and generous spirit.

© 2024 Joyce Martin. All rights reserved

Note: None of my content is AI generated. Ever.

Thank you for reading! Please subscribe below!

You may also find my writing on http://joyous461.substack.com & Joyce Martin on Medium

You may tip my writing at: https://buymeacoffee.com/joycemartin

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