Tag Archives: Joy

Courage at Twilight: Cousin Party

Jeanette has come to visit.  She came to lighten my load.  She came to visit and to love and to talk with her beloved ancient parents.  She came to lift and be lifted.  Before she came, she organized a cousins party.  “Come on Friday March 15 for pizza and brownies and lots and lots of games!”  And they came: the autistic, the trans, the straight, the atheist and the priest, the gluten-free and the vegan and the red-meaters, the married and the single and the living-together—they all came, and demolished five extra-large Costco pizzas and devoured an enormous platter of raw vegetables and cleaned off three heaping plates of frosted brownies, and they told stories and played a game matching clever memes with ridiculous photos and laughed and laughed and laughed, red-faced and crying and together, a group of cousins with several things in common, like the presence of their aunt Jeanette, and the absence of their aunt Sarah, and their love for one another.  One hermit-like cousin commented for only me to hear, “It’s so nice to be with people I actually like.”  Jeanette’s energy was electrically ebullient and conductively contagious, at the center of the circle, catalyzing their inertia into uproarious fun.  As the older uncle, I stood back and observed and rejoiced quietly in the transpiring of this knitting together of this grief-split generation.  I felt keenly the sting-throb of Sarah’s violent departure.  I saw no defect in the power of Jeanette’s presence, but merely the soft hole of Sarah’s absence.  The gathering, happy and healthy and hilarious, nonetheless occupied the crystalline comet-tail haze of Sarah’s gone-ness.  Dad motored into the room to bask in his posterity’s energy and mirth, but could not hear or understand the pop-culture drollery, and retreated to his recliner to rest and create his own quiet humor with Rumple of the Bailey and the Reign of Terror.  I followed, to help his rise and pivot and point and fall, hearing loud echoes of hilarity from across the house.  I felt sad for him, and I think he felt sad and lonely and resigned, but family is to him life’s great mandate, and I knew he felt mostly joy at the loving laughter of twenty cousins.  Mom accompanied Jeanette to pick up the pizzas, giving directions as she had done (without need) a hundred times, but this time Mom could not remember how to get there, and led Jeanette the wrong way, and the Costco was no longer in its tried and true location, and Jeanette showed her the map, and Mom looked up and cried because she could remember no longer that which she always has known, and she knew she was old and she knew she was losing her faculties, and there was nothing she could do about it.  We did find Sarah’s grave, though, and left in a crease of winter grass a brilliant bejeweled owlet with a poem inside, declaring “Do not look for me here.  I am not dead.”  Yes, actually she is.  But her essence, indeed, is not there buried under nine feet of dirt, but in my heart and my hope and my faith, and I will believe—tell me, why shouldn’t I?—that she sees and hears and cares and will welcome me that day when my turn comes.