Jessica was working on the obituary when I arrived Saturday
morning. She wouldn’t let me read it or help her wordsmith it at all. She
complained it was just another thing to be done on the very long list she’d been working since her mother, Carol, died Monday.
I stayed in Tucson
about 24 hours and when I left, I wanted to write. My fingers itched to express
all I’d seen, to process how it all felt, to frame it with the right words
ordered in the right way. I think I would have been a passionate obituary
writer.
What obits say is relatively standard even for extraordinary
people. Carol’s brothers and daughter had a tough time summarizing who she was
into five paragraphs. And, really, who can blame them? She was clever and
ambitious and decisive and direct. She loved to laugh and have a good time. The
stories we told all weekend bore witness to her strength, endurance,
faithfulness.
Carol was the working mother who had it all: a family who
loved her, friends who adored her, a polished and admired career, and the love
of her life at her side.
But it’s the subtext of the obituary that really matters.
What does it mean to earn the love of your family and friends? It means you
were loyal and kind, steadfast and reliable. How does one build a polished and
admired career? With dedication, sacrifice, a growth mindset and a willingness
to learn.
When do you realize you are on this journey with the love of
your life? Tom and Carol would have been married 47 years this week. They were
perfect golf partners, had a well-scripted morning routine (he grinds the
beans, she makes the coffee), and shared space like two planets orbiting one
another.
After a loved one’s death, we all stand united by that
person’s influence and value in our lives. The obituary writer’s requirement is
to capture that value. It’s such a challenging task that writing instructors
sometimes assign it to students: Write your own obituary or write the obituary
of one of your characters.
My novel about Brian-whose-best-friend-killed-himself
required this exercise. What would Brian put in Tony’s obituary? How would he
tell the story of his best friend, dead at 22?
There’s a part of me that wonders how we measure life
journeys. Do we record how many miles she traveled, how much money she made,
how many things she accumulated, how many people cared for her?
With her life’s ledger finished, the quantity swells but the
quality surges back: Show me the love, the ease with which she navigated her
life, those smiles and smirks, the pride, the duty, the honor, the loyalty, her
own and that which she inspired in others.
It’s the final chapter, the one that summarizes the dash
between the year of birth and the year of death. What would your obituary say
about you?
1 comment:
Thought provoking...Words are useful for everyday living. In the end, they are generic. Try to find the words to explain your innermost feelings, especially when a loved one dies.
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