Friday, August 29, 2008

Grief, Change, Re-grouping, Family, Irony and a Little Laughter

A little upheaval seems to be forever just around the corner and, of course, as we all know it seldom comes in little doses but in big, obvious ones!

It has been a rocky few weeks for me for numerous reasons and what I have learned is that I have the most amazing kids in the world, a couple fabulous friends who have been with me for more than a decade and an evolving ability to roll with life's inevitable changes. The good thing about the opportunity to re-group is that a girl gets to let go of people, philosophies and things that just weren't working, renew faith in the universe at large, and get a chuckle or two out of the surprises. In fact, I found that it was when I experienced some "Ah ha!" moments of irony that I could feel myself starting to bob back to the surface.

I'm getting better at not kicking myself for blunders, mistakes and kooky attempted connections which is one of the benefits of age and a bit of seasoning. After all--you just never know what realities of human behavior you will get to see on any given day. People are just people after all and we cannot help but express all the elements of human behavior no matter how petty, short-sided, self-destructive, fearful, inconsiderate and misleading. Who among us hasn't been that person?

Grief is cathartic and there is absolutely no way around it; Change is inevitable and constant; Re-grouping is an opportunity to redefine and learn from the unending lessons; Family is a blessing and a gift and irony can be the little crack that lets you see the light at the end of the tunnel. Of course, laughter is the most healing thing of all!

This has been a full summer--it has whizzed by and I don't feel quite like the same woman who started out in May...

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Grandpa Tuff


Up until yesterday, I could boastfully claim that all of my grandparents were still living independently. Yesterday afternoon my maternal grandfather--my Grandpa "Tuff" or "Gramps" or "Gordon" as I used to call him as a kid died peacefully at the age of 81. He was to be 82 on August 25th. Those people who know me well know that Gramps figures so prominently in my childhood and that I claim him as THE father figure in my life. There were other males and men, but there was only one Gramps. He was complicated, flawed, intense and absolutely human. He also taught me some of the core values I have carried on with me: the true meaning of unconditional love, acceptance, tolerance and appreciation...

I understand that Tuff was different for different people. In his lifetime he was a son, brother, husband, father, lover, employer, employee, friend, nemesis, grandfather and great-grandfather. He collected people and it was his appreciation for the kookiness and genuine humanness of people that fostered his collection. While he appeared to live a relatively simple life--he never ran for office or tried to build an empire in the traditional sense of the word, he also lived with great determination, intensity and independence. He was a character from a Keasey novel or a Shepard play; he WAS the Beat generation as far as I could tell. He could be jovial and loving, but he could also be belligerent and ill-behaved. He was part myth, part fiction, and part legend--all wrapped in a very real, human, accessible man.

He could be impatient and crabby, challenging in his stubbornness and wrapped in his own world. He could also be the first person to show up and help, work an endless day at hard labor, give generously to anyone who asked, was the greatest of story-tellers, and for one little girl growing up on the side of a mountain--her first soul mate.

Grandpa appreciated people and life in all its messiness and chaos. In my last chat with him--only a few days before he died, we talked about ordinary things, history, connections: a road trip he'd taken out to Indiana when I was a harried young mother in my mid-twenties with three babies (He remembered becoming instant buddies with the "good old boy" who lived next door and they sat out in the Indiana humidity sipping coffee or beer and telling stories); we talked about the last weeks and days of his mother's life, he asked how old my kids were and we talked about food. I sat with him while he ate his lunch and he ate everything; I grinned at the fact that he commented on how much he still enjoyed the big glass of milk (something I too imagine I will never lose.) To the very end, he was living completely in the present; completely in the life that was his own and a life that had been full and complete.

I will never know if Gramps had any regrets; I will never know sides of him that other people saw; I know for a fact that different people experienced different sides of him. Even among his grandchildren, we all experienced a different sort of man. For me, just for me, he was a perfect grandfather for me. The most peaceful moments of unconditional love I remember from my childhood were times I spent with Gramps. He was a haven; a man who taught me things and shared skills and stories that went beyond gender and time; he always had time for me when I came hiking up the hillside in search of a chat. He is the person who taught me how to drive, fly fish, butcher a deer, and gut a fish--of course I have not used all of these skills in my adult city life!

He was also the one person from my youth who fostered and inspired my love of language and words. With songs, and stories and poems--endless puns and rhymes, I learned how to play with words from Gramps--how to take possession and twist them around and extract the humor and pleasure from a living and ever-evolving language. I learned from him that everyone had a story and that everyone had not only the potential to be the hero in his or her story, but also the enemy, bad guy, protagonist and minor character in everyone else's story. It was all in how you spun the tale. In the literary world I inherited from Grandpa Tuff, people could be anything and everything and everything that happened in life only made the stories better and the songs richer.

With Tuff, there was always time for a story. "What's your hurry?" he would say and whenever I was with him, I always felt there was a sense of time evolving, unmanipulated--it just couldn't be controlled or organized or managed. We walked, sat in the garden, made something to eat, had a drink. To a little girl, I thought Tuff was the only grown-up in the world who remembered what it was like to be a kid and that made him magical to me. There will never be a therapist who compares.

So, now we have let him go and I am alright with that. After all, the best parts of Tuff are woven into the fabric of my being (and some of the not-so-great parts too). I share him with hundreds of others who each carry a piece or two but I can honestly say there will never be another man like Tuff. Even if it is hard for me to imagine a world without a man like Gramps wandering around in it, I will forever feel blessed to have known and loved (and to have been loved) by the man that was.