This post is not about Uncas or Chingachgook or Hawkeye in James Fenimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans, it concerns my uncle's funeral last week and really when it all boils down to it, my father.
Seems there has been a lot of funerals in my family for the last nine years. The older generation is dying out, my parent's siblings and one of my grandmothers. All my grandparents are gone now, may they rest in peace. Of my uncles and aunts who are left, my father is the last of his brothers and he has only two sisters left; my mother has one younger brother left and two sisters; mom is the eldest. In the last nine years I attended some of the funerals and others I could not. Some relatives died near here and others far away. My father has lost three brothers and one sister in the last two years. His eldest brother who was 90 died in January, and week before last another of his brothers died after battling prostate cancer for many years. He had been scheduled to receive rigorous chemotherapy at Emory in Atlanta because nothing else could be done for him in the hospitals here. One of my aunts called one evening week before last to tell my father that my uncle was passing way, "waiting on God" to use her exact words. He had stopped speaking or doing anything. We missed her call until later that night at about 1 AM. I happened to spot the light blinking on the phone for the voice mail and got her message. The next day my uncle died at his home.
My father did not have a good relationship with his family. Jealousy and malicious gossip destroyed any sense of love. Dad never tried hard enough to make peace with most of his family. Being essentially a person who will never admit that he is wrong until it is far far too late, his pride did not allow him to go to some of them and say that he was sometimes wrong as well. He so much wanted praise from his family for his successes and often did not receive it, even from his own father.
My father and his family were extremely poor growing up like most black people in the South and all over America. His mother had fourteen children to survive out of eighteen pregnancies. My father had a twin that died right after birth. Under such circumstances and with a father who was cold and could become violent when he drank, many people would have become discouraged and beaten down early in life, but my father did not. He was highly ambitious. Many of the black people in his generation were like that unlike today. Poverty and oppression could be smelled in every aspect of their lives, but they were determined, and some did go to college and became successful.
Dad had to give up his dream of going to Morehouse College and studying to become a physician, but he become a business man instead, first starting an upholstery business in our home and having a job during the day. He took a correspondence course training himself to be an upholsterer. After putting up a sign in our front yard, he began to get customers. He did all of his work in our car garage until he decided it was time to take the plunge, quit his job, and open his business in town. He always expected his family to praise and be proud of him, but only two brothers and one sister ever really did to his liking. They had all come out of such poverty that he expected them to be happy for him, but dad does not understand human nature very well and still does not. He still believes that reality ought to be the way he wants it to be. That is not real life. In the past I also felt that if I was good, decent, and kind, happiness and what I wanted would come into my life. The things I've wanted the most have not, and for many years I gave up and felt that if I could not have what I wanted, there was no need to try very hard. I am happy that I have finally learned to pretty much accept life as it is. But for my dad, being 75 and still not willing to accept reality, I never expect any change.
These days my father has built a shrine on his desk to all of his dead immediate family members. He has framed photos of them lined up along with the funeral programs of two of his brothers. Every night at about the same time he goes to his desk and sits there silently gazing at all of them. Then he drops his head and stares at the floor a long time. I really feel sorry for him because he must have a great deal of guilt that he did not get along with most of them. My mother says that he can deal with them better now that they're mostly all gone. I don't know about that. I believe he is experiencing extreme regret that he will have to live with for the rest of his life. He did not even bother to go to most of their funerals including my grandfather's. He cannot deal with the idea of death and getting old. Also at the time he had so much rage against most of them including his own dad.
Last week mom and I went to my uncles' funeral. We try to go to the ones we can because we know dad will not. In the last two years before his eldest brother who lived in Detroit died, they often called each other. Dad had plenty of respect for his oldest brother because he often encouraged my father and said nice things to him. This uncle of mine used to come down here on the bus from Detroit and stay with us for several days when I was a little girl. My father respects anyone who is old because he believes that with age comes wisdom. Well, sometimes, and it should, but last week a certain famous old woman died here in America who was an indicator that wisdom does not not always arrive with age. Wisdom is a gift from God, so there are some young people who are old souls who are actually quite wise. Remember King Solomon in the Bible who asked for and acquired his wisdom through prayer to God? I've met some older people who aren't very wise because they won't allow themselves to be. They cling to the past and dream of being young because American society honors youth and ignores or scorns the aged.
So my uncle was buried last week. I saw relatives I know and did not know. One of my social studies teachers from middle school was there and I went up to him and asked if he remembered me. He told me he remembered my face and that he often recalled his former students faces, but not their names. It turns out that he and my uncle had been childhood friends and had maintained their friendship throughout their lives. He is a little older than my uncle who was 80. I think it is very difficult for today's people to hold on to friendships for so long. Mobility and selfishness often get in the way. The old people got so much right that we now get so wrong.
One of dad's old childhood friends called this week. He hadn't heard about my uncle's death until after the funeral, so he called to express his condolences and to chat a bit. My father told him that he was "The Last of the Mohicans" because all of his brothers are now deceased. He tried to attach a little laugh to it, but I am sure he is hurting. I doubt he will ever admit to his hurt, but when I see him go and sit every night before the shrine he has made of his family I know it must be a terrible feeling to never have the chance again to reconcile with some of those he was biologically the closest to.
Personal stories, commentaries on life, society, current events, book reviews, advice
Showing posts with label Death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death. Show all posts
Friday, September 12, 2014
Saturday, May 26, 2012
Walk Into that Midnight
On Tuesday I left Turkey, and on that same day my uncle, one of my mother's younger brothers, went through surgery. I arrived in my hometown, the same place he had the surgery on Wednesday. It takes about fourteen hours or so to fly from Istanbul to the east coast of the US where I live.
Friday, yesterday, my uncle died. Like my aunt said tonight, and my mother agrees with her, it is almost as if he was killed. He left his home, even drove himself over 25 miles to the hospital on Monday. He probably had no idea that he would not return alive. He was concerned with his packing, that he take everything with him that he needed, his medicines, etc. He was about 66. He walked into that midnight yesterday.
I am shocked, appalled, suspicious because I know that America lies about it being superior to all countries in medicine. I fear negligence. I fear experimentation because America has a history of experimenting on the poor and the black. My uncle had just retired. America is a hard place that I fear more and more as I get older. I have moved from distaste, dislike, loathing, to out right fear now.
We will all walk into that midnight one day like my uncle did. Some of us will go happily. Some will go with get fear and regret. Others will go suddenly and will not know what hit them. Others will go through profound suffering before they make their exit, and they will either remain blind or learn some or all the mystical secrets that God could never teach them fully when times were easy and good.
I was speaking with my mother tonight before we both went to bed. Then I prayed in the darkness while I lay down for insight and peace in this terrible society and time. Yes there is a God, and He is not just the gift giver of things that so many, especially in such a society as this feel they are entitled to. He is also the absolute and final judge of us all. Some of us He has given insight to. This insight is called wisdom, and throughout the ages God has created various degrees of special ones who used their minds in ways most of humanity was too shallow or afraid to. In the last decade my insight has grown, but like I told mom tonight, my acceptance of what happens in this world is lacking. I hope God will help me to accept things, not as in agreement with, but as in halting the worry and constant questioning so that I may be at peace.
It is very difficult for me to accept things the way they are. I don't understand and yet both understand why there is racism, war, hate, petty minds, sheep that go in the flock to various types of slaughters. The answer is sin. I have read all of my Bible and even a number of the extra Biblical books, so I know, yet... Then I think of Jesus, other prophets, and other men and women of insight and courage who could not rest or remain silent in the evil ages they lived in. I am not the only one, but many are beginning to agree now that we live in a very evil age, the most evil and the biggest hidden agenda to make everyone the same, a robot, a zombie, comes from the Western world. Here is so much selfishness and ugliness, but unless you have insight and wisdom you will overlook the extreme ugliness and futility of this time. But there are some who have great power and beauty in their minds. Most are not famous or are trying to come into their own. I follow a few on Twitter, a few of them are my Facebook friends. My mother is one of the great ones. It goes beyond book learning because some of the wisest people I know are not highly educated. Ignorance and narrow-mindedness reside in both the educated and uneducated. This is something much more bigger and timeless than the average person can comprehend. We are connected to each other and history has not ended, but some segments have created a bastard and a monster that has encircled us all, and they want the good and wise remnant cloned into being like everyone else or eradicated.
Some of us in my family want answers about why my uncle died. He had blood clots and low blood, and it was many weeks before he was operated on. Why did it take so long? Why did he appear to be recovering on Thursday, but had passed away on Friday? If he had been an animal, since we have so many in this society who value animal life over human life, would they have rushed to take care of him? I have to ask these questions because of the place and time I am in. I must ask these questions because I am a black person.
I had wanted to take mom to the hospital so we could be with him, but mom told me not to go since the weather was so hot and like most places here, the hospital would probablu be like a deep freezer. I am sicken by too much air conditioning.
My father and my uncle were feuding, but I feel my dad was in the wrong. I had warned months ago that it was not good to be angry over such petty business since both of them are not young, and people can die unexpectedly. Once they are gone, the guilt of what could have been said and done will linger much longer than the anger. This is what the wrong kind of pride can do. I see a lot of it in too many people. It is almost encouraged in this "culture:" Dad is like most Americans, whereas mom and I understand the interconnectedness of humanity and are unselfish. However, mom and I will not tolerate bigotry and evil. We don't believe that we can change the ways of the evil, dishonest, and selfish by example. I don't know if mom was idealistic once, but I was once and believed that people were basically good. I don't now. I've been hurt and betrayed too much.
I hope my uncle had made his peace with God. I told my mother perhaps it is best he died when he did because terrible times are coming to this country. I believed in 2008 that the US would not recover from its economic woes, and it has not. You can't go around the world and level countries and kill their leaders, make yourself judge, jury, and executioner above God and don't think you will not suffer a similar fate to those you killed or oppressed. I don't care if the oppression happened a few hundred years ago because sooner or later God will be the judge even if it hits your children or great grandchildren. I do believe in the sins of the fathers being visited on the children because often the children are just like the fathers. Call me cruel or heartless, but the truth tellers of the past always said "hard" things. Take some time to read what Jesus and others said. They did not mete out ear candy and junk food for the soul and intellect. The charlatans and quacks of today do that, and we have plenty unknown, less known, and well known of that troop. There will be great bloodshed coming to this new Sodom and Gomorrah. People call this Rome, this is the second Sodom. Perhaps it's good my uncle is gone so he will not have to witness what will come within the next 5 to 10 years or less. I believe it is coming.
Rest in peace my uncle. Rest in peace all the good and innocent who died recently and on back. God is merciful in the end, and He knows when is the best time to take us away from this place and permit us to walk into that midnight.
Friday, yesterday, my uncle died. Like my aunt said tonight, and my mother agrees with her, it is almost as if he was killed. He left his home, even drove himself over 25 miles to the hospital on Monday. He probably had no idea that he would not return alive. He was concerned with his packing, that he take everything with him that he needed, his medicines, etc. He was about 66. He walked into that midnight yesterday.
I am shocked, appalled, suspicious because I know that America lies about it being superior to all countries in medicine. I fear negligence. I fear experimentation because America has a history of experimenting on the poor and the black. My uncle had just retired. America is a hard place that I fear more and more as I get older. I have moved from distaste, dislike, loathing, to out right fear now.
We will all walk into that midnight one day like my uncle did. Some of us will go happily. Some will go with get fear and regret. Others will go suddenly and will not know what hit them. Others will go through profound suffering before they make their exit, and they will either remain blind or learn some or all the mystical secrets that God could never teach them fully when times were easy and good.
I was speaking with my mother tonight before we both went to bed. Then I prayed in the darkness while I lay down for insight and peace in this terrible society and time. Yes there is a God, and He is not just the gift giver of things that so many, especially in such a society as this feel they are entitled to. He is also the absolute and final judge of us all. Some of us He has given insight to. This insight is called wisdom, and throughout the ages God has created various degrees of special ones who used their minds in ways most of humanity was too shallow or afraid to. In the last decade my insight has grown, but like I told mom tonight, my acceptance of what happens in this world is lacking. I hope God will help me to accept things, not as in agreement with, but as in halting the worry and constant questioning so that I may be at peace.
It is very difficult for me to accept things the way they are. I don't understand and yet both understand why there is racism, war, hate, petty minds, sheep that go in the flock to various types of slaughters. The answer is sin. I have read all of my Bible and even a number of the extra Biblical books, so I know, yet... Then I think of Jesus, other prophets, and other men and women of insight and courage who could not rest or remain silent in the evil ages they lived in. I am not the only one, but many are beginning to agree now that we live in a very evil age, the most evil and the biggest hidden agenda to make everyone the same, a robot, a zombie, comes from the Western world. Here is so much selfishness and ugliness, but unless you have insight and wisdom you will overlook the extreme ugliness and futility of this time. But there are some who have great power and beauty in their minds. Most are not famous or are trying to come into their own. I follow a few on Twitter, a few of them are my Facebook friends. My mother is one of the great ones. It goes beyond book learning because some of the wisest people I know are not highly educated. Ignorance and narrow-mindedness reside in both the educated and uneducated. This is something much more bigger and timeless than the average person can comprehend. We are connected to each other and history has not ended, but some segments have created a bastard and a monster that has encircled us all, and they want the good and wise remnant cloned into being like everyone else or eradicated.
Some of us in my family want answers about why my uncle died. He had blood clots and low blood, and it was many weeks before he was operated on. Why did it take so long? Why did he appear to be recovering on Thursday, but had passed away on Friday? If he had been an animal, since we have so many in this society who value animal life over human life, would they have rushed to take care of him? I have to ask these questions because of the place and time I am in. I must ask these questions because I am a black person.
I had wanted to take mom to the hospital so we could be with him, but mom told me not to go since the weather was so hot and like most places here, the hospital would probablu be like a deep freezer. I am sicken by too much air conditioning.
My father and my uncle were feuding, but I feel my dad was in the wrong. I had warned months ago that it was not good to be angry over such petty business since both of them are not young, and people can die unexpectedly. Once they are gone, the guilt of what could have been said and done will linger much longer than the anger. This is what the wrong kind of pride can do. I see a lot of it in too many people. It is almost encouraged in this "culture:" Dad is like most Americans, whereas mom and I understand the interconnectedness of humanity and are unselfish. However, mom and I will not tolerate bigotry and evil. We don't believe that we can change the ways of the evil, dishonest, and selfish by example. I don't know if mom was idealistic once, but I was once and believed that people were basically good. I don't now. I've been hurt and betrayed too much.
I hope my uncle had made his peace with God. I told my mother perhaps it is best he died when he did because terrible times are coming to this country. I believed in 2008 that the US would not recover from its economic woes, and it has not. You can't go around the world and level countries and kill their leaders, make yourself judge, jury, and executioner above God and don't think you will not suffer a similar fate to those you killed or oppressed. I don't care if the oppression happened a few hundred years ago because sooner or later God will be the judge even if it hits your children or great grandchildren. I do believe in the sins of the fathers being visited on the children because often the children are just like the fathers. Call me cruel or heartless, but the truth tellers of the past always said "hard" things. Take some time to read what Jesus and others said. They did not mete out ear candy and junk food for the soul and intellect. The charlatans and quacks of today do that, and we have plenty unknown, less known, and well known of that troop. There will be great bloodshed coming to this new Sodom and Gomorrah. People call this Rome, this is the second Sodom. Perhaps it's good my uncle is gone so he will not have to witness what will come within the next 5 to 10 years or less. I believe it is coming.
Rest in peace my uncle. Rest in peace all the good and innocent who died recently and on back. God is merciful in the end, and He knows when is the best time to take us away from this place and permit us to walk into that midnight.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
A Class Activity With Two of My Youngest Students
It has been a while since I last posted. I began writing a serious post this week which I hope to finish in the coming days. Today an a...
-
I am going to write things here that some are not going to like or want to accept, but it needs to be written. I feel I am the person who s...
-
This is not a criticism of everyone, but a mediation on a few. Perhaps I'm no better than they are of whom I am writing about. I did af...
-
Robert Merle's book Ahmed Ben Bella was written over forty-five years ago. I finished it a few days ago. Ahmed Ben Bella was a freedom ...