Here in Ohio, in the house where I remember my Nana and Grandpa, and now where my Grandpa says little and sleeps much, and has been remarried for much of a decade to a lovely, gentle person, here in this place:
As I sat on a folding chair in the basement, feeding Elspeth to sleep last night, I looked at the laundry line strung between posts. Laundry pins stood in a row like little lonely soldiers. I imagined my Nana's fingers, strong and swift, clipping up printed sheets, efficient and precise. And upstairs I remembered the voices of my great aunts and uncles as they clustered in the living room, the clatter of coffee cups, the burbling of the coffee pot.
My siblings and I used to play shuffleboard in the basement, amongst my Nana's endless rock collections, paint supplies, canvases.
But then, as I fed Elspeth and put her down to sleep, Merry danced about my sleeping, silent Grandpa. Later that evening Mom and I soaped and rinsed dishes side by side, and I remembered my Grandpa methodically rinsing every dish, stacking and then washing as my Nana put on a pot of coffee and laughter filled the kitchen.
Once again the incredible sense of disconnect, the sense that what is past is not past after all, the sense that time is nothing but an illusion--this hangs in the air. Deep inside I can't help but feel that time, the death of my great aunts and uncles and grandparents, the fading of my Grandpa--all this is real, but it is not all. Our Western understanding of time, this belief that all is linear, these words of "past, present, future; before, now, then--" all these do us a disservice. They are small words, labels we stamp on mystery, words that consign processes and people as impossibly finite.
Somewhere I feel that we are all still living together, in a place where time makes no difference, where death and birth are just memories of a place long ago, and the now, the now with everyone we love, is all there is, forever. It's not sentimentality, or a wish for what can never be, or a trembling silly vision of faces in the sky. I'm not exactly sure what it is, but it is real. You can call it heaven if you want, but I feel again, as I often do, that it is already present, just beyond me, but here already if I could only touch it.
But I do hear now Martin playing a song, and I did hear just two minutes ago my Grandpa say words out loud in his old, strong voice.
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
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4 comments:
My dear niece.
What a wonderful, evocative image!
We are always surrounded by
"A great cloud of witnesses"
When I visit our farmhouse, that my father and grandfather built with their own hands, I can sometimes catch a whiff of the hand rolled cigarettes Paw Paw smoked, or hear the old screen door slam.
I can smell the fresh apple pie that my dear Aunt Bernice was baking.
You are now the rock that your children, nieces and nephews look to for strength.
Tell them the stories of family as you remember them, or they will be lost forever.
King Solomon said "There is nothing new under the sun".
More true now than ever!
Your Auntie and I have just three Aunts, and two Uncles surviving between us.
We are now the wise oldsters!
What a sobering thought!
That's why we love to spoil your kids (and Papaya Mommy's)
You weren't around for us to spoil when you were young!
Do you remember roller skating endlessly around Nana & Grandpa's basement to the tune of Amy Grant's Christmas album (especially the "Emmanuel" and "Sleigh Ride" songs)? Watching Jeopardy with them every evening while Mommy & Daddy were in Kenya? Looking at our reflections together in the guest bedroom mirror & arguing about who was prettiest?
I guess that last memory is one I prefer to leave in the past!
In my literature class this spring we read Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony. It's a wonderful book in so many ways. In it, the main character Tayo says that the Laguna Pueblo elders "could only speak of yesterday and tomorrow in terms of the present moment ... 'I go up to the mountain yesterday' or 'I go up to the mountain tomorrow.'" Silko calls this the "point of convergence"--a realization that the distinctions between past, present, and future are both real and unreal. I like this quote in particular, again in reference to Tayo: "Everywhere he looked he saw a world made of stories .... It was a world alive, always changing and moving; and if you knew where to look, you could see it, sometimes imperceptible, like the motion of the stars across the sky."
A good friend of ours in Dallas, who was a seminary student at DTS, had a good analogy.
Our relationship with others must of needs be linear, or horizontal.
Our relationship with the Almighty is
infinite, or vertical.
Thinking of time and spacial relationships is like imagining a long hall of mirrors, a continuing line of the same image repeated ad infinitum.
It will drive you crazy if you let it!
I like your Auntie Phyllis's analysis while we were sharing a glass of wine on the porch earlier.
"All of our loved ones past simply mill around you, and share either coffee or herbal tea and Lemon Poppy Seed Cake, until the Lord comes back for us!"
Very Hobbitt like, but comforting.
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