Courage at Twilight: An Enormity of Love

Dad insisted I speak at my sister’s funeral. Logical, of course, but impossible.  I had met her husband at the funeral home, at his invitation, where we spent three numbing hours making impossible decisions about vaults and caskets and flowers, payment plans and printed programs and Zoom links, fingernail polish and lipstick and hairstyle, rings or no rings, makeup to cover her wounds.  Feeling dead ourselves, we wandered through the casket showroom, and slowed before the Virginia Rose maple-wood casket, gently grained and softly carved in roses, lined with Easter pink fabric embroidered with a flower spray.  Tracy looked at me and choked, This is where she wants to rest, and I turned my face to the corner and sobbed and knew he was right.  The viewing became a bizarre reunion of a corpse and family and friends, with hundreds of hugs and thousands of tears.  “How’s Nelson holding up?” an uncle asked Mom.  Pierced.  That is the word she used.  Dad was crushed and broken and pale—and pierced through.  He has whispered revelations of his agony every day: I may not survive this.  I thought I might just go with her.  And he told us all of loved ones he looks forward to meeting on “the other side,” his grandmother Natalia Brighamina, a sweet-hearted Swedish beauty who infused the little boy with love and worth, his grandfather and namesake Nelson who rescued the mine’s company town when he detected the odor of almond in the water, his grandpa William T who lived in an unheated unplumbed shack and taught him to snag trout barehanded from the brook—and Sarah, who beat him there.  Every morning I wonder if Dad has survived the night.  The viewing room was hot and crowded and happy-sad, and I could not face my sister, meaning, I could not go to her and gaze at her and hold her hands or even glimpse her unliving body.  One little boy felt like I did, avoiding her “creepy” “plastic” visage.  I averted my eyes and said good-bye a million times in my heart, resolute on remembering her living laugh and her tight embrace, and her I love you dearest brother.  And the inevitable moment came when they closed the lid and clicked it shut, and I sank clear to the earth’s core.  The utter finality of that muffled click…  Her casket came rolling by, and I touched it, and I turned to the corner and sobbed.  Do I really have to speak?  Can I?  In my terror of the task to talk, a lovely friend eight states away softly suggested: Just speak to her.  And that is what I did: “Sarah, you are beautiful to me.  You share normal human imperfections, but to me you are a perfectly delightful, forgiving, super fun, uber smart, good, kind, hard-working, lovely, and loving woman.  You are one in a billion.  I adore you.  And I will miss you sorely for a long, long time.”  Standing at the congregational pulpit, there was no corner to weep in, but I wept anyway.  And I cannot deny that, in that fiery crucible of grief, I felt an enormity of love, and a universe of prayer, wrapping me warmly and holding me aloft and carrying me gently forward to tomorrow.  I love you dearest sister.

 

The maple-wood Virginia Rose.

11 thoughts on “Courage at Twilight: An Enormity of Love

  1. Unknown's avatarAnonymous

    Your time speaking about our Sarah was perfect. Your words so well placed and poetic. I miss her. I will always miss her. She was a life’s bestie and I treasure my sadness because I know I loved her with all I have and she did me.

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  2. Unknown's avatarAnonymous

    Wow, that was very well written, thank you so very much for sharing. I’m so sorry for your families loss. Your sister sounds amazing, loved, and loving.

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  3. Unknown's avatarAnonymous

    Once again I am in awe of your beautiful use of words. I saw what you saw and felt what you felt. Thank you for sharing your gift so we can see and feel through your words!
    Mary Ann

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  4. Dawn's avatarDawn

    It’s strange how many people sit along the same web of thought within a few days’ time. I see it on WP and in my own life as synchronicities quite often, especially with my sons. We three often discover we’ve been researching or learning the subject. Once, one son and I even watched the same random YT video regarding what happens in shopping mobs (different t.v., different state).
    My book review post morphed into speaking of my parents. Which apparently, I needed to write of. But I will edit that post to take it out.
    What I’ve read here made me realize some things, including, but not limited to my lacking in word selection magic.
    I wish I could speak of my parents with the beauty they possessed. You have done an ultra fine job of lassoing (that’s a word, right:) minds into the experiences of all involved. Thanks for setting the bar so high.😁
    We are saddened about your loss, your family’s loss.

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