Hard lessons on grief and death
SOUL FOOD
“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.â€
-- Jesus of
Nazareth
The winning numbers for the New York lottery on Sept. 11 were
9-1-1.
It seems just like life, truth sometimes is hard to believe and at
times almost too ironic.
In recent weeks a series of events, the anniversary of Sept. 11
among them, brought both death and grief into sharp focus for me.
But it started with my birthday. Throughout the early morning a
number of people quipped to me, “We aren’t getting any younger are
we?†Then my mother’s dog died. Whitney had belonged to my father
until he died four years ago. It was a good thing in many ways that
she was left in my mother’s care. My mother is good with animals and
Whitney’s sweet disposition as a constant companion was a comfort to
my mother. But Whitney was not a young dog even then. My mother would
say, “I don’t know what I’ll do if anything ever happens to Whitney.â€
I’d say, “You know that is when, not if.†I tried to prepare her for
that day. My sister tried, too, but it was easy to tell she didn’t
really hear it.
The day Whitney died my mother was inconsolable. And she still is.
Someone once told me that grief has no watch. I know at times it
seems true. No matter how much time accrues between the loss of a
loved one and now, grief can -- in certain moments the sight of an
empty chair by the window, the loud silence of a voice no longer
heard -- rise up like a tidal wave and make us wail. I also know that
God means for us to go on living.
The day after my birthday my miracle cat Wayne was diagnosed with
two terminal diseases. One is kidney failure, which can take its time
in some old cats and work quickly in others. The other is the
recurrence of a lung tumor. Five years ago he beat all odds against
it and survived surgery. Now, with his age and kidney failure,
surgery is likely to be as deadly as the tumor itself.
That night I dreamed about a married couple from Santa Barbara I’d
met in Italy more than 18 years ago. I was in Florence, traveling
with my friend Julia. We met the couple by chance in the bar of Caffe
Doney as we waited for tables for dinner. We chatted.
The man and woman spoke bravely and candidly of the sorrows they
had endured the past two years. They had lost their 17-year-old
daughter to cancer one year before. Then, before they were called to
dinner, they said something I would remember as much as their sorrow:
“We finally realized that life is for living and that to bury
ourselves with our dead is no way to honor our dead or to honor God.â€
On Sept. 4, my friend Lisa asked me to go to a funeral with her.
Matthew Maldonado, a 16-year-old Fountain Valley High School
classmate and football teammate of her son Drew, had been shot and
killed three days before.
As I sat in the church just behind that young man’s family I
thought of the hard, hard task set before them, the same task that
the couple from Santa Barbara had faced two decades ago.
It made me think of the words of Brian Sweeney who died on Sept.
11, 2001, on Flight 175. In an answering machine message to his wife,
Julie, he said, “I want you to do good and go have good times.â€
Last week on Sept. 11 my pastor sent out an e-mail to the members
of our parish.
“My dear spiritual sons and daughters,†he wrote, “The Wailing
Wall, the only wall of the Temple left standing since the fall of
Jerusalem in A.D. 70, represents not only the sorrow of a people long
separated from their homeland, but also their long-cherished hope of
national and spiritual renewal.â€
Similarly, within each of our hearts there stands a private
wailing wall where sorrow and hope mingle. Sorrow comes in every
life. But hope comes as well if we cling to Jesus. Earth has no
sorrow that heaven cannot heal. It’s a truth sometimes hard to
believe, but truth nonetheless.
* MICHELE MARR is a freelance writer from Huntington Beach. She
can be reached at [email protected].
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