looking through me

Tag: family

losing memory

“It hasn’t been the same since Uncle Ehrie died. As long as he was here, I still had my dad. Now . . . ”

The words caught in her throat as they lodged in my heart.

Marv’s been gone for almost twenty years. But his mannerisms, his humor, his presence—a piece of him—remained in Ehrie. As long as one brother was here, it seemed the other had stepped out for a moment, not for eternity. Losing Ehrie meant losing Marv all over again.

And the loss is incalculable. Our collective memory has shrunk by a generation. The empty place at the table gapes extra wide. The silence thunders.

Branches of our family tree petrify, and we lose touch with parts of ourselves we can never tap into again. I don’t know how to handle the familial memory loss. We have pictures, yes. Some albums and letters, perhaps. Mementos. But voices and stories slip away forever.

As often as I sit with Grandma and hold her hand and sift through the jumbled recollections, the memories will never transfer to me. I string together letters on a page intent on capturing her tone and spirit. But words are a poor medium for life. Some day the next generation might read them—without being able to recall her for themselves—and they’ll find the faintest representation of her, scarcely a shadow of the reality she lived. I cannot transmit her memory intact.

Such is life. Each generation can wrap their arms around only so many. But how grateful am I so many of each generation trust the same Love to surge through us and enliven branch after branch.

 

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both and

My nephew has been dubbed “destructo-baby.” At six months he hammered a hard plastic Tweety Bird figurine against the solid oak coffee table and left dozens of dents. At nine months he ripped two sections of baseboard off the wall. At eleven months he took a bite out of the spine of a board book. At twelve months he used a hockey puck to spin a globe.

But then, I hold up my hand and say, “high five.” He smiles, leans toward me and ever-so-gently rests his splay-fingered hand against my palm.

He has the propensity to destroy and the propensity for great tenderness. He is both/and.

He rarely sleeps. And. He rarely cries.

He bites—people and things. And. He cuddles.

He eats books. And. He doesn’t complain when they’re taken away.

He is a force of mayhem and a sweet delight. He is both. He doesn’t hide either truth—he hasn’t learned to sweep the parts that have been reprimanded or the parts he doesn’t like into the shadows. He is who he is. All the time.

I, too, am both/and . . . but I’ve lost my transparency. I’ve compartmentalized in an attempt to be either/or. I fall into the trap of binary thinking, yet I know there are infinite points between zero and one. The line of my life contains them all. Still I try to control which facets I reveal of the image I’ve crafted for decades. But who is fooled?

My sharp edges and unflattering qualities take longer to surface in relationship than the time it takes for my nephew’s penchant for damaging things to emerge; but we both show more of ourselves than we realize.

 

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