Around the ones left

'The funerary corteges didn't end till fall...'
I guessed a premonition in her words, but little did I know how soon or how shocking. Hers was a life rather sought out by tragedy, and when I knew her, I often wondered how people so young survive. Except it's easy, really. When somebody dies, we rearrange ourselves around the ones left.

Another aunt died last week. She was 43. She wasn't sick. Only briefly, and not obviously deadly, last year. None of us knew she'd died until after. Those were her wishes, and I've been thinking a lot about what that says about a person. How little you might like yourself to decide that in death or dying, you are not worth witnessing.

But more so, to rob those who love you of a chance to say goodbye. I wasn't close to her for a decade, though I met her in passing last year at a protest. Was surprised how she smelled exactly the same as when she used to babysit me. The fondness that triggered in me, after all these years.

She wasn't a happy, well-contended sort of person. She was strict and anxious and riddled with frustration. She feared what it'd be to try, so she didn't. She used to bully her sisters' children because, to her, it was a form of love. She once adopted an abandoned boy but proved to be an authoritarian martyr, and he, in turn, abandoned her.

He also had cancer.

A little before she died, she decided her sister's children would burn in Hell and told her so. Her sister who, for years, has also been fighting a fierce, private battle against cancer. Who is one of the strongest people I know.

All I could think when she died was, thank god it wasn't her. Take the others, but don't take her. My good aunt. Is that a calloused thing to think? Probably.

It's tempting to forget someone's faults when they die; to deplore their sad death. But what about their sad living? What about the fact that she lived in bitterness all her life, friendless, unloved, pouring her anxieties, and repressed wishes into other people's children? Filling young heads with harsh judgments and baseless fears? Not going after the life she wanted for fear of what that might mean...eventually?

Do such things justify a sad, untimely death? Not really. Does that mean we didn't cry for her? Not really.

I find it strange how, when somebody dies, life starts rearranging itself almost immediately. The inner geographies of your life start bridging over the sudden gap. Tears come through long spells of normal. Lust for life rushes over you. Primal.

She is no longer. A sister who didn't get to say goodbye says, baffled, over scraggly phone line. She is one with the sea.

And we think, what a waste. To dream all your life of living on the seashore. To never quite dare. To find, only in death, the courage that might've made your life worth living.

At least it's a lesson. My friend and I say. A subtle warning to those who'd live near the Sea. Those like you or me.



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8 comments
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A beautiful reflection, thank you for sharing. It's sad to see people struggle in life that way, not being able to take a risk, or to make a decision and own it. To never find their way, nothing to hold. To never overcome the pain inside, the fear.

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My grandfather didnt want people to know he had cancer. He was "old world" strong. He saw how people took pity and attempted to out-love my dying grandmother.

It was his choice. We respected it. He was not well enough to have wrath, but my mother and I respected his fierce wishes.

Ultimately, he communicated so strongly through scolding, respectful glances, and he was stoic. What, I think - would have broken him - worse than the cancer, which he called the "black condemned" was people fauning over what in his mind would have once been a strong, productive body that slowly withered away.

Without skirting into the topics of VAD, the way an individual approaches their demise is a reflection of what they probably are deep down.

Even in facing my own known, unknown once upon a future mortality, I want to make it as painless as possible for others. Hopefully it won't be something I dont need to think about for a while, but I cant control trucks running red lights. :)

Sorry for your loss, and thank younfor this writing which provoked my response.

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I can definitely get and respect these kinds of choices. The other aunt i mentioned did a similar thing and most of us respected her wishes. It's a terrible experience, going from a dignified, ordinary person to a patient (especially in the eyes of loved ones).
Unlived lives, though...I don't get. Terrify me.

Thanks for the long comment and sympathies. It's always a pleasure reading your thoughts.

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While it fills me with immense sadness to lose someone close, a person who was living a full life, it's very sad when someone who never lived a fulfilled life, dies.
I am sorry that your aunt never experienced that kind of life!

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We all die, but some of us never really live and that's worse. I think i remember a quote along those lines. :)

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When somebody dies, we rearrange ourselves around the ones left.

Ain't that the truth. And for the first months, we do it very, very tightly, as if afraid to let them out of our sight.

life starts rearranging itself almost immediately. The inner geographies of your life start bridging over the sudden gap. Tears come through long spells of normal. Lust for life rushes over you. Primal.

Of course, it depends who it is, and your relationship.

Of course it's okay to not mourn your 'bad' Aunt - we are remembered by the relationships we had with people, and she sounded like a right terror. Compassion is one thing, forced grief is quite another.

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what does that say about the lives we’re postponing out of fear waiting, like her, to find courage only when it’s too late?
One thing is that fear can quietly steal entire lifetimes if we let it. So much of living is in the small, uncomfortable choices we postpone speaking up, trying, reaching out, daring to care.

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