Dan’s beloved grandmother is dying. His mom flew back to Madison earlier this week. Last I heard, his mother and her sister-in-law were shopping for a dress.
“Does Mom need an outfit to wear to the funeral?”
I asked Dan.
“No, Grandma needs it.”
“Excuse me but isn’t Grandma going to be dead?”
“Yeah, she needs something to wear in the casket.”
“Oh.”
In my youth I thought that memorials were a waste of time because death wasn’t necessarily a bad thing. You just moved into a new body. That was when I was ten feet tall and immortal. Now that I’m shorter, older and closer to death, I have a compassionate appreciation for memorials of all kinds. I understand the need to eulogize a loved one, to mourn in public, to perform rituals such as purchasing a special dress, to keep remembrances close at hand. (I still have my late father’s tired black car-coat hanging in my closet.)
What is difficult for me to understand, however, is the attraction of burial. Cremation is so much neater, cleaner. I’d much rather have my body purified by fire instead of pickled and powdered.
Everyone has their own memorial style. When my brother and I divided up my father’s ashes, I ceremonially dispersed most of mine into a glorious lake, storing the remaining quarter-cup in an etched granite box on our dresser. On the other hand, my brother keeps Dad in the back of his refrigerator, stuffed into a round plastic Tupperware container with a fluted yellow top. “What if someone thinks there’s food in that container and opens it up?” I ask. “Not gonna happen,” he says. “No-one wants to go anywhere near the back of my refrigerator.”
I really like ashes. They’re appealing, like tiny pieces of seashell. I can touch them and feel close to my dad again. Best of all, I don’t need to visit a cemetery to see them.
My meditation buddy, Michael, died of stomach cancer a few years ago. I loved Michael and truly grieved his passing. To help honor and remember him, I wanted his ashes on my home altar next to Dad. During Michael’s Zen memorial service, I kept my eye on the urn perched next to a statue of the Buddha. After the ritual I sidled over to Buddha, checked left and right, and deftly scooped a handful of Michael from the urn into my coat pocket. Then I scooted back to Dan.
“Guess what?” I asked Dan.
“What?”
“Guess what I have in my pocket?”
“Whaaat?” He looked at me long and hard.
I leaned into him, whispering, “Michael.”
“Jesus, Dawn! Did anybody see you do it?” Dan glanced around the room.
“Nope.”
“Why didn’t you just ask his mother if you could take some of his cremains?”
I stepped back. “She doesn’t know me from Adam. It would seem ghoulish.”
“Oh and carrying his ashes in your coat pocket isn’t?
“Nope,” I smiled, running my fingers gently through the sandy contents. “It’s comforting.”
END