I liked this idea of their spirits being close. I used to talk to Nana as if she was in the
room with me. I said good night to her
when I went to bed. I started first
grade a few weeks after her wake. I was
very cool with the idea of her still being around in spirit, so I would draw
pictures of myself doing regular things, except Nana was also there in her
coffin, just keeping an eye on things.
It made me feel safe.
My first grade teacher was very creeped out about this. She called me up to her desk and judged me
with her wide eyes and unnecessarily slow speech. I thought she was a fool. Obviously her mother had not told her about
how their spirits stay close to watch over us.
My teacher told my principal, who called my mother in for a
meeting. They told her that they were
worried about me because I thought Nana was watching me all the time. My mother explained our family’s beliefs on
that. The teacher and principal were
very concerned that I didn’t understand the difference between life and death,
even though I had seen my Nana in her coffin.
They reiterated this concern repeatedly.
“Look, my daughter realizes that my grandmother is not
rolling around behind her in her coffin,” my mother told them. She knew I understood what had happened. Now she was the one judging. I don’t know how the rest of the conversation
went, but I’m sure it ended with my mother using some curt language and strategic
eyebrow raising before leaving purposefully.
I get my righteous indignation from her.
My great-uncle and grandfather died a few years later. I was fine with death by that point, but my
sister was small and had been an infant when Nana died. My mother read a book to her about a leaf
named Freddie who learns about death when the leaves fall off the trees. It was the first time a book made me
cry. When the winter came, Freddie fell
off his branch and onto the ground with all his friends. It seemed so peaceful. It seemed quiet and like a relief.
I told my sister about how the spirits stayed close. We lay in bed together and talked to
them. We missed these people we loved
but we didn’t think of death as something bad.
It wasn’t punitive. It was just
another part of life. You left here and
you went somewhere else. And then your
life continued, in this new place.
My great-aunt was a therapist. For my tenth birthday, she gave me a book
called “Remember the Secret,” by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. It was about a girl who is friends
with a boy who falls ill and dies.
But when he dies, they go dancing in the stars together and the little
boy is not sick anymore. It is not a sad
book, not really. I was so happy for the
boy that he wasn’t suffering anymore.
I have seen a lot of death in my life. I have literally watched someone take their
last breath. I remember every person I have lost and I never fell out of the habit of talking to them. I know that
they are all close to me.
I have
knelt down and paid my final respects to people who died of old age after long
happy lives, to those who died young of illness, to addicts who overdosed, to
some who died by their own hand, to one whose heart suddenly stopped at the age
of 13. Some of these losses are harder than others. Some of these losses are defining, in a
before/after kind of way. We had one of
those in my family this weekend. We
lost someone young and my feelings are complicated and messy and it feels like
my soul is an exposed nerve ending. It
feels like we will feel this loss forever.
I don’t know where you go when you die, and I won’t until it
is my turn. But I believe that we go
somewhere, and that when you die, you are reunited with the people you love and
you can all be together again forever.
Every time I kneel down in front of a casket, I say the same
thing: I don’t know where you’re going, but wherever it is, I will see you
there.
I’ll see you there.
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