after the eulogies: the hard part of being human
by bam
it’s been months and weeks now. months since one friend died. weeks since the other. maybe because it’s been one after another, one too-soon death followed by another, i’ve tried mightily to listen to the lessons i’m certain they and the heavens were trying to teach. to pound into my thick hard impenetrable skull.
to make sure i didn’t miss the point: live with all your heart. live now. don’t let waste a precious second. and do not get tangled in all of those snarls that really, truly, could not matter less.
why, then, is the last of those truths — the most certainly human — so impossibly out of our reach, or mine anyway?
oh, i’ve cried plenty across the hours of all these months and weeks. tears poured out of the blue because i heard a voice that reminded me of one of my two friends. because i bumped into an email. or a recipe. or a pine cone tucked into a pocket from the last time we walked in the woods.
in the rawest days following death, your head — your whole being, really — all but quivers with the newness, the wrongness, of this life that seems to have a hole torn in the thick of it. in the hours when the stories are churned, and told and retold, you pay keenest attention. you distill the essence, as if a potion that might just save you. you whisper the hardest truths of a life just lost, and you spin them into incantations, promises to the slipping-away friend that you’ll never forget. you’ll never never forget to be alive in just the way their parting words implored.
“Keep marveling,” wrote my friend who died in september, words she’d sent at the dawn of a summer’s day when she was pulled to watch the sun rise over the lake, and wanted me, too, to never stop marveling. and then, in a text one week before she died, she wrote: “Xxx swirl love swirl love recipe for today” (she’d had no time for punctuation that morning, and i didn’t need it.)
not many months before that very last text, exactly one year ago today, she wrote me an email that felt almost like haiku, or a buddhist koan, wisdom refined to its purest: “blessings, blessings, more blessings. every minute is bonus. sun. birds. now.”
my friend who died in march, she too, left me with instructions. she wrote: “if you love the life you have, please, please, practice gratitude. wake up every morning acknowledging just how much beauty is in your world. pay attention to it, honor it and keep your heart and your eyes wide open. you won’t regret it.”
because i love those words so much, because they wound up being inscribed on the back of the prayer card at my friend’s memorial service two saturdays ago, i’ve tucked them on my kitchen counter, just beneath the window sill, where i keep watch on the wonders in my tucked-away garden. i’ve made them my everyday altar. i perched the card in precisely the spot where i stand when i make my coffee each morning, where i pull a cookie out from under the great glass dome, whenever i’m packing my little one’s lunch. i perched the card at the pulse point of my everyday, where i sometimes pause to stare through the panes, to catch a glimpse of springtime unfolding, to marvel at the flashing-by pair of cardinals, entwirled in the vernal pas de deux of lovebirds.
and here’s the hard part: no matter how deeply you promise, now matter how fully you inhale the one sure thing you know — that the only way to be alive is to be infused with love — the certainties begin to fade. or maybe they only get muddied. it’s the stuff of being human that never fails to knock us at the knees.
we lose track of our promise to live each and every day as if it might be our last, and to ferret out all piddling nuisance and distraction. and it’s not because we’re fatalistic or showing off our celtic obsession with the beyond, but only because it puts the sharpest edge to being alive.
yet, the litany of temptations is as quotidian, as humble, as imaginable. it goes something like this: the guy in the shiny silver SUV who lays on the horn from just behind you, because you’ve decided to heed the red octagon that’s insisting you STOP; the soccer coach who picks the other kid (after months and months of vying) and doesn’t bother to tell you directly, deputizing someone else to deliver the news you know will break your kid’s heart; the email that wasn’t supposed to land in your mailbox, the one sent by mistake, by someone who meant to grouse behind your back, except that she hit reply instead of forward. oops.
yes, truth be told, it’s these insignificant traps that clutch us by the ankles, that totter us from our vows to stick sure-footedly to a life lived beautifully, gently, blessedly. to stay above the fray, as if wafting with angel wings, hovering over the melee.
i try, with all my might, to resist the temptation. to not give in to the bitter impulse. to stay tuned to the wonder, the astonishment. it’s being human that makes it so hard.
which is why i walk around these days with two slips of paper in my pocket, slips i reach for as if prayer beads, whenever i need to fill my lungs — and my heart — with all that is holy, to discharge the everyday demons:
“swirl love swirl love recipe for today,” reads one of those slips.
“wake up every morning acknowledging just how much beauty is in your world,” reads the other.
and so, on the days, in the hollows of hours, when my promises tumble from my heart, and i feel my knees begin to wobble, i reach my hand in my pocket, and i hold on tight to the last best instruction from my two beautiful friends now watching from heaven.
what makes you tumble? and how do you find the strength to right yourself?
Thank you for the words of inspiration and advise. I will now incorporate this in my daily life. How are you feeling?
Andrea Lavin Solow
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xoxox. on the mend, dearest.
Dearest Barbara
Lately I find the strength to right myself by coming to your table! Although we’ve never met you feel like a soulmate. By sharing your heart through incredibly beautiful, moving words you give sustenance to my soul. YOU are one of the things I am grateful for. Thank you.
Love Laura
bless you, laura. and isn’t it uncanny how many kindred spirits have found their way to this quiet, gentle little corner of the so-called cyber-globe. the thing that puts courage to my sitting down here each friday morning is the hope that somehow some glimmer seeps through…..
Thank you thank you thank you bam😄 God knows how much I needed this….
you and me both, darlin. i love love love seeing you here. xoxox
Hold fast to those prayer beads of love, dear friend. Their beauty is everlasting, and they are yours to keep, always and always…
When I’m disheartened by the actions of others, I take my cue from the birds of spring. What do little birds do when the winds blow cold? They fluff out their feathers, close their bright eyes, tuck heads beneath wings, snuggle deep in their nests.
Keep to your nest, little bird! Fluff your feathers, let foul weather pass. Turn your back to impatience, thoughtlessness, and mean-spiritedness, which are no part of you. Let these things slide like raindrops from the eaves of your good and gentle heart. Bluer skies and warmer days await. And when you fly, it will be on an updraft of love.
Sending sheltering hugs~ xxoo
oh, i love this. wisdom from the heavens, literally. i’ve been deep breathing the love of my friends, the lessons of my friends, and it’s certainly helped me over a hump or two. it helped to say aloud how hard it can be, for all of us. this day after day practice might some day do the trick. i love your gentle words: “let these things slide like raindrops from the eaves of your heart…..”
xoxoxoxox
Love you!! Love your words! I slow down and cling in everyone !! Xo
Sent from my iPhone
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love you, too, mar. xoxox
What Amy said. I could never say it so beautifully. I am dashing between houseguests … I saw in a Fb meandering that you’d been under the weather … know that I’m holding you closer than close, heart to heart, with love. I hold on to you, dearest, when I’m wobbly. xoxo
dear dashing butterfly: sending love. houseguests = nest making with gusto. xoxoxo
Lovely reminder–on my wall as I dress each day there is a small poster–“this day shall never come again”–the best reminder not to wallow in the difficulties but to embrace the beauty. Thank you.
beautiful. i love the secrets we tuck in our closets. or those nooks in our lives where our barest self gets ready to face the day.
xoxoxox
I love this essay so much–and it spoke to me, because thinking of how to live each day like it may be my last is something I strive to do, but, as you so eloquently describe, it’s such a difficult thing to achieve. I am so, so sorry for your losses and send so much love and hugs your way. Please know that I am now subscribed to your blog (I’m kicking myself for not doing this sooner!) and reading your essays fills me with a renewing, wonderful energy. Thank you so much for giving so much love back to the world, even during your painful times. That takes so much strength and courage!! ❤
There are so many things that make me tumble–most recently, I think it's staring too much into screens, and letting technology take up so much of my time and energy. I want to be reading poetry or cooking or digging around in dirt, but here in the city I get caught up clicking through unimportant notifications or playing meaningless games on my iPad… But deleting apps or forcing myself to put my iPad down for a certain amount of time (at least) has worked wonders, and I feel so much more alive and fulfilled when I'm not a slave to all of the media that surrounds me!
I'm very much looking forward to reading more of your essays!! 🙂
my beautiful zoe (is it okay if i use that name, your beautiful born-with one?).
i love reading here that you too try to live each day as if the last, only because it keeps us so awake, so alive. you live so beautiful, you exude such light into the world. and the poetry that flows from you is so beautiful. the world needs as much of your gentle and radiant light as possible. i love being a kindred spirit of your beautiful heart.
thanks for finding your way to the chair. xoxoxox i am blessed; we are blessed…..
You can use any name you’d like! 🙂 Thank you so much for your lovely words. I am so happy to be able to read your essays, which are full of light and beauty and wisdom! It’s been a long while since I’ve written for my blog, but reading your gorgeous and from-the-heart essays make me want to try to take up writing for my blog again!! 🙂 Yay!
Oh oh oh. To resist giving in to the bitter impulse. To stay in the realm of wonder. To rise above the fray. Oh how I try, and how hard it is, and every every year, every day!, this is my resolution. How wise to acknowledge that being human makes it hard. But knowing you, reading you—your words, and those of your insightful, departed, deeply missed friends—these are a guide, a most perfect example for me, a buoy that lifts me up and allows me to see all the magnificence in our shared midst. Thank you, always. xox
dear beautiful, i happened to be sitting here when this just rolled in, so for a moment, perhaps, an elusive moment, we can ALMOST be in conversation. my heart trilled when i saw you here. bless you — new mother of a fourth little angel (xoxoxo) — for carving out time to be here. thank you. yes, it’s those little snags, those little snags that can run away if we let them. i now have two indelible guides. i owe it to their beautifully-lived lives to remember, to remember. i love knowing we all travel together, all of us who so often wobble at the knees, yet get up again and again. hope life with sweet baby, sweet baby girl, allows for moments of upsweep that do, in fact, vault you over the fray. blessings. thanks. and a giant tender mama hug. xoxox
There indeed seems to be something connecting us, almost cosmically, as we wobble our way through this world. For that, I am ever grateful. xox dearest one.
She was 18, I was 23, when we met at work.
Decades have rolled by, mostly with Christmas card promises to get together. The distance was not impossible. Her life, unfolding on FB, was full and I believe she lived the advice of your friend, Mary Ellen — living in joy and gratitude.
Sunday afternoon FB came alive with memories and condolences and I still feel the shock waves of her death.
I’ve written those words of wisdom, “swirl love swirl love recipe for today”, in my journal, may they be etched deeply on my soul.
Blessings abound for the journey if we but look for them. Thank you for sharing this “recipe” at the table.
oh, dear elaine, i feel sick for the shock and the unfathomability of this sudden loss. i am so so sorry. i cannot tell you how it melts my heart to know that ceci’s recipe — swirl love swirl love — is now inscribed in the book of your heart…..
blessings. sorrows….
Absolutely beautiful Barbara!! This can be for anybody who is struggling with the loss of a loved one being family and friends gone too soon or even those who have completed God’s instructions to them on His earthly kingdom and are now living with Him in His heavenly home Heaven 💕