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Photo Credit- George Poellot
leave of absence, week two - the immediate · Apr 3, 10:23pm
his body was still warm,
no longer burning with fever.
i stroked the peach-fuzz on his head.
his eyes had been closed for two days.
i gently repositioned his jaw,
closing his silent dry mouth.
as my remaining family
shuffled briefly from his side,
seeking out coffee at this early hour,
i quietly recited kaddish over his body.
my traditions would not play
a role in the coming week.
nor would his. he was an agnostic.
he had experienced the divisiveness
of organised religion first-hand.
he taught us right from wrong, but
always stressed independent and
critical thought. ask "why?"
he could not openly protest as
he had less than a week ago,
as the hospice "spiritual counselour"
had us join hands around his body,
reciting prayers now foreign to me.
i stood next to her. all decisions to follow
would be of comfort to her. within her faith.
the hearse arrived to remove the body.
i will never forget earl. the archetype of
funeral parlour employee. his appearance
made me fight off giggles; he was right out
of general casting at any large studio.
in his over-sized black trench coat, head bowed,
he solemnly asked us to leave the room.
it seemed we were only in the bedroom
for seconds. but when we emerged, the body
was gone. bed was stripped, a soft blue cotton
blanket professionally draped across it.
her body shook with more sobbing.
i held her close, supported her,
as i had promised him i would do.
everyone else went back to bed.
she and i drank more coffee,
between her crying jags, we began
to organise. the week ahead of us -
a series of events to coordinate.
no sitting shiva for me.
"It has to be said that it's hard to know what to say to someone recentlybereaved because, as Pat says, nothing will take the pain or hurt away or changeanything however eloquently it has been expressed.It's hardlysurprising then that some people just avoid the bereaved person altogethersimply because they don't know what to say and will actively go out of their wayto avoid them.I don't actually blame them because it's so trickyto offer condolences at all.Having been told in all sincerity, not 24 hoursafter my husband died,'Never mind, he's gone to a better place now!',I replied without thinking,'No, he's not ~ he's dead!'Even though Iwas numbed beyond belief by grief and booze, I felt the collective gasp ofunease ripple through the room as I said what I said and I immediately feltguilty which I know in my heart is not what the person who uttered those wordswould have wanted.I still feel guilty about that years later and in my mindI know that person still see's me as someone who doesn't 'take prisoners' orsuffer fools gladly and I feel somehow the 'guilty' party for my instinctivereaction.It's a shame that I think this way but that's just me, we allreact differently but I'd rather have had that person's company and misguidedattempt at comfort than not at all because at the end of the day, it washeartfelt and his heart was indeed in the right place!It's important toknow that there are NO right things to saybut you can never know how muchthe bereaved needs and appreciates your support and company....even if it allcomes out wrong,just being there is enough.We all lose somebodyclose to us in the end,it's a fact of life we'd rather not face. " -T.D.