Goodbyes at Christmastime
A dear friend, Susan, sent an e-mail to say that, just as she's prepping her annual Christmas party, she's learned that an uncle is in his last hours, and she should go to his side.
Though her words may suggest devotion, this is not entirely the case: "I have something of regret for an obligation not met", she wrote about the last five years, when he was in a nursing home.
Though her words may suggest devotion, this is not entirely the case: "I have something of regret for an obligation not met", she wrote about the last five years, when he was in a nursing home.
She said,
"I think he loved us kids although he was more interested in drinking when he came to visit. This was an embarrassment to my father."
and
"Charlie molested every woman he could get his hands on. He would shake hands with his right hand and reach for the breast with the other. Few women objected out loud. 'That's just Uncle Charlie' they would say. My ex nearly broke his arm once after I told him that Charlie did this and I didn't like it."
My reply included a reminiscence of my father's brother, Jerome, a blunt, blustery hard drinker whose visits to us were rare but fraught. My father, the brother who made good, both loved him and felt an obligation. Finally, after a week-long stay that damaged her house and nerves, my mother blacklisted Jerome, so Dad saw him only on visits to Chicago.
I responded to my friend, saying the truism that we ought to grieve every family member to the same extent is as false as the one that says that women ought to tolerate being groped.
Many families have an Uncle Charlie, a relative tolerated rather than welcomed, eventually pushed to the edges of the clan.
I thought, hearing my friend swing between consternation and caring, you reap what you sow. If we hope to be remembered with an abiding place in the heart, we shape that possibility in the present. "Set me as a seal upon thine heart...", the poetic Song of Solomon entreats, "for love is strong as death."
Charlie's past behaviour notwithstanding, Susan put aside her baking to sit with him. He is family, and she is capable of such kindness and compassion.
Charlie's past behaviour notwithstanding, Susan put aside her baking to sit with him. He is family, and she is capable of such kindness and compassion.
Comments
Your friend has great compassion.
I have such similar thoughts about the death of my father some 17 years ago. A mix of relief and regret. People are never single-faceted, and we must remember that with the bad comes the good.
Dad was charismatic, handsome and insanely intelligent. He was also moody, intolerant and violent. I miss him yet not all of him...
These emotions have learned to live side by side in my heart. I expect your friend is working to find a way through her emotions as well.
And your post has reminded me that I must call my GF, whose father was in the end days (pancreatic cancer) when we spoke a few weeks ago -- Death and Illness don't make way for the holidays, unfortunately. . . meanwhile, I count my blessings!
Your friend Susan displayed grace.
Yet I can't help feeling guilty that I didn't know he was ill, and thus didn't go to see him in hospice. Not sure I would have gone anyway; it seems a little odd to show up at the deathbed when you haven't had contact in years. Fortunately our mutual aunt and uncle were able to spend some time with him in the last few days.
So I guess it just adds to the sadness of his death at such a young age, knowing that his short life wasn't very happy at all.
hostess: She does have those qualities.
LPC: Yes; and as long as that does not driven by compromising one'sintegrity (which is not an end to which you are referring, I think), it is selfless behaviour. Everyone in her position has to make that difficult call.
spacegeek: Bad comes with good, and I have seen people uncover the love that has been obscured by abuse, neglect or humiliation- many times, decades later.
materfamilias: She had pretty much already made the decision but was exploring her swirl of conflicting emotions. Glad this reminded you to call.
Artful: Sometimes civility is a major achievement.
Rubi: She was able to get some distance and not be extremely stimulated by his past behaviour. I think one of the assists to this is her faith.
Lorrie: See diverchic's comment below, she is the woman in the post.
Jill Ann: When I worked in a hospital, decades ago, I saw a number of these attempts to make peace. Most of the time (but not 100%) they were appreciated by the ill person. There is a possibility for transformation at that time.
That's why I wrote the post, to raise the issue, so that if one knows and has time to sort through feelings, it might help.
Rubi: As I said earlier, I'm not sure about forgiveness...
We could ask her: diverchic, want to comment?
diverchic: I thank *you* for sharing your story.
Beatnheart: Everything anyone does is for a reason that makes sense to their psyche, consciously or not. There was indeed difficulty in his life- some caused by external events and some caused by his own behaviour.
" Bad comes with good, and I have seen people uncover the love that has been obscured by abuse, neglect or humiliation- many times, decades later."
Life is not always easy and family relationships are sometimes fraught with real pain and sadness. Don't ask me how I know.