Thursday, October 1, 2009

The Last Goodbye for Grandmother

At a very early age, I became aware of death by hearing stories of the passing of my Grandfather, George Stuart.

The raw emotions of losing someone close terrified me. To my six year old mind, I assumed Grandmother would be the next family member to die. I began imagining myself at her funeral so that I wouldn’t be overwhelmed by the sadness of the event. There were many nights while visiting Grandmother in Henderson that I would cry myself to sleep after envisioning me and my family standing at her graveside.

The moment I’ve tried to prepare for after 40 years has finally come, and I fear I am woefully unprepared.

Grace Stuart was born Grace McBee on June 9th, 1910 in Hugo, Oklahoma. She passed away last Sunday, September 27 at the age of 99.

She was preceded in death by her husband, George B. Stuart, her step-sons, Lindell and Bert, and a step-daughter, Marjorie Powell.

Survivors include:

daughter, Judy Martin and husband Ray of Bryan and

Janna Litton of Ft. Worth, seven grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and 8 great-great grandchildren.

Some knew her as Ms. Stuart, Grace, Mother Grace, Grandmother Grace, Mother, Fancy, the hat lady.

I knew her as simply Grandmother - and, for me, she fit that title better than any other. She was never Granny, or Grandma. Grandmother always sounded so formal. To me it was a way to show the utmost love and respect to an elegant lady.

I’ll speak of my experience as her grandson, my wife, Angela will sing; then Diane and Clete Browne will share their memories of Grandmother Grace. There will be some more singing and then we’ll then invite others to speak.

Grandmother's house was the only constant place through my entire life. At last count, I had lived in over 30 different houses - but Grandmother's was always the same, so it is difficult for me to remember specific visits or summers I spent in Henderson. They were all the same.

My favorite place at Grandmother's house was her kitchen. We would arrive, many times very late, enter through the backdoor and up 2 steps to the kitchen where all the greeting took place. From then on it seemed all activities centered in and around the kitchen. Food was the constant topic of conversation at Grandmother's house. At lunch, we talked about supper. At supper, we talked about dessert and the malts Lindell would fix just before bedtime. For those of you who have had the great fortune of eating a meal cooked in Grace's kitchen, I don't have to mention the rolls, meatloaf and banana pudding.

A few words about Grandmother as a person. Selfless, guileless. She did not have the capacity to deceive or manipulate and would never presume anyone else would either. Eckhart Tolle and Oprah have been encouraging people to live in the now. Grandmother couldn't imagine living any other way. Every moment was perfect and she meant to enjoy it to the fullest before it passed.

My least favorite place at Grandmother's house was the driveway, because that usually meant we were leaving. The one thing Grandmother hated was saying goodbye. Every time I would approach her at the end of the visit to say we had to leave, she always had this pained expression when she said "no." Then would start the long goodbye as we would gather our things and slowly move toward the backdoor. Once everyone had exchanged hugs, we would enter the car, roll down the windows and start to wave. The waving continued until all possible visibility angles had been passed and there was no possible way for any participant to see the wave of another.

Sunday morning at 10:45 am, I got to wave goodbye to Grandmother for the last time. Last Thursday we made the decision to take her home to be assisted by hospice. We made her as comfortable as we could and then started telling her that we loved her and would miss her, but it was time to say goodbye. In her usual fashion, she wasn't ready for anyone to leave. She loved life and her family - she didn't want that to end. Just as she always did, she wanted to drag out the goodbye. After some struggles on Friday and Saturday, Sunday morning she finally appeared to be at peace. We were all together as she passed - just the way she would have wanted it. And looking forward to the next time we're all together and will never again have to wave goodbye.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Hewing Agag, Part I

My church recently celebrated Purim - an ancient Jewish celebration to remember the events of an Old Testament book called Esther. You may have seen a reference to it in the movie "For Your Consideration." Esther takes place in Persia during the reign of King Ahasuerus and tells of a multi-generational feud between the Amalekites (Haman) and the Children of Israel (Mordecai).

In preparation for the celebration, we read the stories of the other battles between these picture-perfect enemies. One such battle is described in the book of I Samuel. In a nutshell, Saul, king of the Children of Israel is commanded by God to "utterly destroy" the Amalekites, including every man, woman, child, livestock, and their king, Agag. The Children of Israel are victorious but decide to spare Agag and the best of the booty. God tips off Samuel of the violation of the command, who then questions Saul. Saul then tries to excuse it by claiming that the best of the stuff was saved to be sacrificed to God. After declaring to Saul that his kingship has been ended by God, Samuel "hewed Agag in pieces before the Lord..." (I Sam. 15:33)

If the Bible was a TV show, you could only see it on HBO.

So what the heck is going on? What could possibly be wrong with saving the best of the stuff for God? And then God's prophet butchers a POW?

To understand, you have to see as God sees. We have to see that God doesn't care about stuff, he cares about a people who trust Him completely, who recognize that His diety is all encompassing and that there is nothing else to do. Those of you who attended Sunday school may remember another scripture that appears in I Samuel 15 - "And Samuel said, Hath the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the LORD? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams."

In Hewing Agag, Part II, we'll try to understand who the Amalekites (Agag and Haman) and the Children of Israel represent.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Hawaii

I applied for a job in Hawaii. This is one of those things my preacher refers to when he says "Push all barriers, have no regrets." I have finally seen why Hawaii is so desirable for me - exclusivity. I want things that only few have. I should know by now that even living in Hawaii would ultimately disappoint me. I wanted to live in log cabin on top of a mountain in Colorado and write software - I did that and there was no lasting satisfaction. I lived in a brand new house in an upscale community, still no satisfaction. Then a small duplex in the hood with a bunch of losers (including me) - while I find rest here, part of me still thinks I'm supposed to live on an island. At least until I look at the price of houses in Hawaii. I found a 585 sq. ft. house on a 5,400 sq ft. lot about 10 mins. from the beach for $400,000. Wham - back to reality. Maybe if I pray to the gods of lotto...

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Anna's Gone


"Just read the news today, oh boy..." Anna Nicole Smith (not just Ann Smith) was found dead in her hotel room.

As far as pictures of "vain and emptiness", we could not have had a better illustration. Why did we watch her? The same reason there are "onlooker slowdowns" at accident scenes.

I'm really depressed - the Hollywood tv-tabloids will be running "All Anna - All the time." It will be like Princess Di. God save us.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

The Beginning of the End...

The purpose of this blog is to find out if everything is truly vain and empty.