Last night I went to sleep exhausted in a quiet house. This
morning, I awoke to my wife sobbing again. She crawled in next to me and
whispered. “It doesn’t get easier.”
All I could say was, “No. It doesn’t.”
Lara’s mother, Sharon, died in her sleep on Friday morning.
She was 74. She was hiking on Thursday, out in the Santa Fe nature she dearly
loved. She had been bothered by a headache for weeks. But that was nothing new.
Those of us who knew Sharon knew she had been bothered by headaches off and on
for the last twenty years. It did not indicate anything out-of-the-ordinary. It
did not give us any warning. Sharon went to bed on Thursday night and didn’t
wake up.
When I was young, I was certain of many things. I knew about
living and dying. I knew who I loved and who I didn’t. I knew where I was going
and how I wanted to get there.
Now I’m 45, and I know much less than I used to. I thought
that was bad enough, that my experience stripped me of my absolute certainties.
But this morning I’m scared that you cannot count on anything to be certain,
ever.
I was certain that Sharon, who our children exclusively
called Granny, would be here for Thanksgiving, for Christmas. I was certain she
would be a proud grandparent at my children’s high school and college
graduations. I was sure I would see the beautiful new quilts she made for each
of them, sewn with Granny’s artistry, to usher in the next stages of their
lives.
But I’ll never see Granny again. Her majestic quilts marked my
wedding to her daughter, the births of my children, their growth from babies to
young people, and now these are the last quilts we will have from her. She was
making quilted wall hangings for our family that marked the 12 months of the
year, each exquisitely done, each seasonally themed: Halloween in October.
Christmas in December. A sere snow scape for January. We have 10 of the 12. Two
are missing. I can’t help but think of Granny’s
life as those 12 wall hangings, with two more expected that will never come.
All I can do now is think of the “10 months” of memories we
still have and cling to them. I think of Sharon’s unerring compass of social
justice. She didn’t preach it. She lived it. She took care of people she didn’t
have to because she saw it as her obligation as a human being.
I remember Granny’s “basic diet”, a healthy helping of natural
foods and the basics of the human condition: Arts. Literature. Our connection
to nature. She loved museums, especially out-of-the-way and out-of-doors
museums, curiosities like Tiny Town and the Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum that
showcased the subtle accomplishments of every-day people. She took my children
to these every chance she got. And she took them to nature’s own museums as
well, hiking the trails of Santa Fe, the arroyo behind their house, or white-water
river rafting.
Above all, I remember her investment in our children. In the
raising of them, in exposing them to wholesome aspects of life. She longed to
visit them. She sent them packages nearly every week, of newspaper clippings or
the funnies from the paper that she knew Dash loved, post cards from places
they’d been or of scenic moments in Santa Fe. Of all the things I will miss
about Granny, I will miss this the most. I lament that she will no longer be
here to guide my children, to teach them the best things about grandparents:
That they care about you and are interested in your growth. That they want to
expand you with their many years of experience, let you see through eyes that
have lived in a time you did not. Granny loved my children so much. She gave
the very best parts of herself to them in every moment she was with them.
Over the past years, I have watched Lara begin her own
quilting. A little bit to start, back when we were first married, then more and
more. And now Lara has begun to make quilts for new babies just as Granny did.
This, and so many other things, are part of Granny Sharon’s legacy, and I hope
that Lara continues to quilt. I know, for my part, I will quilt with Granny in
my own way. I will try to look with her vision when I watch other people, to
carry her care for them in my heart. I will remember that dignity is the right
of every person, and that we have an obligation to help them find that dignity,
especially when it is the most difficult. I intend to stitch that piece into my
own life and the lives of my children for as long as I am here.