❤️

My siblings and I spent our childhood going to wakes and funerals. Every year someone in our extended family would die and we would make the forty five minute drive to the city my parents grew up in for the wake. Back then this was a two day event followed by the funeral on day three. As young kids we were more familiar with funeral parlors than parks.

We watched all methods of mourning (or stoicism) and the influence this had on us was life long. The toughest death of all was our thirteen year old cousin and a room full of people in collective shock. When my grandma’s brother died and it was time to take the coffin from the funeral home to the church, my grandma threw herself on top of it and started wailing. My mom and dad scurried us out of there and later I would overhear Dad say how mad his mom’s behavior made him – the message being that you could mourn but for god’s sake keep the drama to a minimum.

A few years ago I was having a conversation with a close friend who had an uncle who was not long for this earth. “Remember,” she said, “how every time you’d go to a family function all the aunts and uncles would be sitting at the same table? They’d have their coffee and watch everything going on and comment amongst each other about everyone.” “Oh yes,” I said and could immediately picture every one of those people in my own family sitting together. “Now we’re those people,” she said. “We’re the older ones at all the family events having our coffee and saying do you remember so-and-so? Whatever happened to them?” It was as if I had never considered this for a single minute. What do you mean we’re the older aunts and uncles now?

My grandma’s niece was named Belle. I never knew the connection when I was growing up other than that they were related. They did everything together and were more like sisters. My dad once said that Belle was the kindest person he knew and Mallory has her middle name. Belle and her husband had one son, Hal. Hal was ten years older than my oldest brother and for us the ultimate cool guy. He was an architect and after he got married and we went to he and his wife’s house for the first time we were in awe. Up until then everyone decorated with whatever Sears was offering but this place was different than anything we had seen before.

For the entirety of our lives, Hal was there for every event – first with Carol who died from breast cancer and then his later in life partner and wife, Cindy. At some point a third cousin a few years older than you becomes your equal but every year when we would go back to Chicago for the holidays the first thing Hal always said to me was, “Hey, kid.” After our uncle died last year and then our mom, my sister and I would joke that we needed to protect Hal at all costs, wrap him in bubble wrap, and put him in a secure location because losing the last person in our parents’ extended family was too much to consider.

But this spring something did happen to him. He fell, was seriously injured, and for six months his wife moved heaven and earth to get him better. Cindy didn’t get the outcome she and the rest of us prayed for but she did get time with him and on my side of loss that is immeasureable. Last week I flew home for the services and was okay until the cemetery when in unison we repeated after the priest, “And may perpetual light shine upon him.” I knew if I let out a single sob it wouldn’t stop so I dug a fingernail into the palm of my hand and made it through to the end where we all walked away from an urn that held Hal’s remains as if that was a perfectly normal thing to do on a Tuesday.

In my life I don’t think there was anyone who opened up my eyes to design, gardening, and less is more (but make sure the less is good quality) more than Hal. He was an older brother to all of us, the last tie to everyone we grew up with, the ones who shaped our lives, the table full of relatives at every event.

My brother wrote some thoughts down to make at the funeral home and asked me to look them over. I wanted to add something but had no confidence in saying it out loud without my voice shaking so I said it was great and handed him the piece of paper back. Maybe it wasn’t the time or place to say that when Hal called someone a son of a bitch you believed it to be true even if you had no idea who he was talking about.

Now the aunts and uncles table has gotten turned on its head once again which is how life unfairly goes. But, oh my, were we ever the lucky ones for all those years when it was full to the brim. As for you, Hal, may perpetual light always shine upon on you. I don’t think you ever knew all the ways we adored you.

*Hal read everything I wrote and frequently commented the same thing every time – a single red heart.*

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Author: Kathleen Fisher

Kathleen Fisher is a Chicago girl at heart though she moved from there many years ago when a handsome scientist swept her off her feet. What started as a light-hearted blog about life, marriage, and kids turned more serious in September of 2018 when her husband of 35 years ended his life. A new journey began that day and she now writes about unexpected loss, grief, and finding a path towards healing.

7 thoughts on “❤️”

  1. I see the sparkle in his eye, Kathy. I’ll bet it was brought on full steam when you entered the room, giving you that “I’m someone special to you” vibe. I still, at my advanced age, love to know my family’s faces are all like that when we first meet after long absences. What a brilliant picture you’ve drawn of a man I never met, but feel I would know if I ran into him. As my Jewish hubby’s family says, May his memory be a blessing.

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