You might not know this about
me, but I am psychic. Well not really psychic, because I can’t read minds or
tell the future or anything, but I do sense things pretty strongly. For instance, I am sensing the presence of
some strong feelings in this room right now.
I’m right, aren’t I? I feel tears
being held back, I hear the laughter of memories, and I taste goodbye on my
lips. Sometimes these psychic sensations manifest physically, and I feel
sharpness in my gut and in my chest. Maybe
it’s not psychic manifestations at all, maybe it’s gastric, or maybe it’s a
little heartache, a small tear, an empty space where something life-giving once
resided.
To memorialize my mom, I want
to say something that will pull on your senses, that will help you feel who she
was, and stir emotions inside of you. I
want to make you laugh through tears, to remind you to never forget, and to
ultimately hold on to the person next to you while letting her go. But I realize that that is not my job to do,
it was my mom’s job to make an impression, and by the number of people in this
room, I sense that she did.
Mom was a teacher, but I
don’t want to talk about her career. In her own words she knew everything and
she had some very special lessons for me, as well as Pat and Jen, of course. She taught me to smile big and laugh loud.
She taught me to be responsible and help others. She taught me that birthday candles are not
near as important as the birthday cake, and that when you are sad, go shopping. She taught me that clothes just look better
if you buy them “on sale”, and that having “just a taste” of dessert doesn’t
count as actually eating it. She tried
to teach me to sew, which only escalated into a lesson on anger management. But
after that, she taught me that the only failure is in not trying.
She taught me that “because I
said so, that’s why” is, in fact, very good logic, and that true friends are
there when you need them the most. She
taught me that dishes get cleaner if you wash them while signing and that
forgiveness just helps you sleep better.
She taught me that if life gets too hard to stand, then kneel. I wish I
could see her now, but I can’t because she also taught me never to look
directly into the light.
Mom taught me that if you
can’t play it on the piano, then it is not a song. Piano keys are black and white but when she
played them they sounded like a million colors.
I think that without a piano, she didn’t know what to do with her
hands. Growing up, I rarely saw her
straight on, only her profile as she concentrated on the music while she
played. Getting her attention away from
the piano was hard, and I admit bolting for the door sometimes when I heard her
start to play that same song over and over again. But I loved her playing, and grew up learning
that music is what feelings sound like.
If prayer is when you talk to
God, and meditation is when you listen then for my mom, playing the piano was
both at the same time.
I know that mom left behind
this minor life for a much grander forever.
I am in a stage of life when I am learning to let go, not because I want
to, but because I have to. My youth, my
looks, my car keys, and my mind are frequently MIA. My mom is gone, and my teenage daughters will
leave soon. Thinking about all of that
brings me down, until I realize that I’m trying to hang on to things that never
belonged to me in the first place. The truth is that after a while your hands
start to cramp and the hanging on hurts.
So I release my hold, and in
the confidence of the firmness of the truth I have based my life on, in the
power of the omnipotent God and risen Savior, and in the promise of the presence
and comfort of the Holy Spirit, I kneel down and look towards the light.
Have been thinking of your family much in recent days, especially as parts of my family were alongside to hear these words spoken. I very much hear the love you have for your mom, and your words, indeed, pull on my senses (as you said). Will continue to pray in the coming season.
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