July 19, 2000 – Lockport, New York
As
I walk in the back door to the apartment where Gram lived for the last 12 years
I almost forget why I am here and expect to see her
sitting in her favorite easy chair in the living room. I almost call out,
"Gram, I'm here."
Three
days ago, she died unexpectedly in this apartment and was whisked away, but
everything waits for her return. Onions and bread on the
counter. Plants by the window. Placemats on the table.
I will be staying here in Gram’ apartment with Mom
who has put fresh linens on Gram's bed for me. I will sleep in her room, in her bed.
My
brother Dave (who lives nearby in Rochester) brings in my suitcase from the car and asks me if
there is anything of Gram's that I want. A few minutes later, my mother also
asks me that. It is a practical request, as the apartment will need to be
emptied soon, but I am upset by the thought of poking through Gram's
belongings. It is too soon, too personal. They are her things.
And
yet later, I do it. I lift off lids to jewelry boxes, pull open dresser
drawers, and look at the teacups in the china cabinet. I riffle through the
clothes in her closet, peer into the bags of yarn and fabric, and open
shoeboxes.
Partly
I am curious. Faced with Gram’s death I
wonder how she lived. My visits didn’t
provide enough clues. So, I look at the
comfortable elastic-waist polyester pants, the lotions in the nightstand
drawer, the bits of china collected over a lifetime. I marvel at all the
vitamins and herbal supplements. I linger over the photo albums of Gram as a
young woman posing with girlfriends and beaus. She was stylish and beautiful
and the photos show scenes of beach outings, house parties and concerts in a
park.
I
have made it back in time for the second viewing at Lange's Funeral Home. For a
few minutes we chat with the funeral director Amy whom, it turns out, went to
high school with Dave and me. And for a few minutes I forget that my
grandmother is in the next room, dead, fixed up for display.
Gram
looks so small in the casket and indeed she had been losing weight all spring.
Blue was her favorite color and she will be buried in a periwinkle blue dress.
Her wedding and engagement rings are on her hands as always, though they will
not be buried with her, but passed along to her daughters. Amy has polished my
grandmother's fingernails a delicate coral color.
Mom
and I comment on her smooth skin and Amy mentions the effects of the embalming
fluid. From most angles Gram looks like herself and I long to touch her hair
and hands. I almost do but something in me recoils. I have never touched a dead person. Suppose her skin feels hard or cold or sticky
from makeup?
There
are a dozen or so bouquets in the room. Mom purchased flowers for my brothers
Dave and Dan, and me. It is a huge arrangement with white and pink flowers and
makes a grand display. It is pretty, but not what I would have picked. I would
have selected a nosegay of violets, for that is the flower that will always be
connected in my mind to Gram. At one time she had hundreds of African violets
in the north-facing windows of her house.
In
a quiet moment I ask Amy the request that has been passed along from my oldest
daughter Natasha. I ask for a lock of my grandmother's hair. I have no idea
where Natasha got this idea, but it was of great importance to her and she
beseeched me several times before I left not to forget. Amy was happy to oblige
and the lock is later passed along to me in a little box.
I
had wanted some token from my daughters present. Tasha
drew a picture of a lion with the words; "The Lord has spoken." She
had thought of this on her own. Throughout the viewing Natasha's drawing has
been propped inside the casket. The picture will be buried with Gram.
Family,
friends, and church members visit. I chat and even laugh once or twice. I am
touched that Cindy and Nancy, cousins on my father's side of the family, visit.
Members of the King's Daughters conduct a brief candle ceremony at 9:00 p.m. in remembrance of Gram's many contributions to the
organization. I did not want the viewing to end knowing that this is the last
time I will see her. But it is time and we are all tired.
I
sleep uneasily. I have come here with a cold and the medication makes me
jittery. And I am sad. And the ticking clock is loud. And the funeral is
tomorrow morning. And I am lying in Gram’s bed, surrounded by Gram’s things,
thinking this is all wrong.