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INTRODUCTION TO GRIEVING CREATIVELY BLOG

Saturday, June 18, 2022

HELEN'S RULES


 "Mom... we need to get together and have a game of Skip-bo and play by Helen's rules."  

* * * 

I enjoy playing card games with my Mom.  One of those fun games we play is Skip-Bo.  Most people that play card games understand that most games come with rules and some have rules cast upon them.  This is one such game.  Mom would play Skip-Bo with two special ladies, Shannon and Helen and each had a different way of playing the game.  So when Mom and I got together to play, the question was... "Who's rules are we playing by?"  I would default to Shannon's rules because it was a far less confusing way to play the game.

 There is a maximum of four piles at a time that we could play on.  With Shannon's rules, all four piles started with the Aces and we worked up to the Twelves.  It was far less taxing on the brain.  But then came Helen's rules.  I guess Helen needed more of a challenge so two of the piles were  built up from Ace to Twelve and the other two piles were built down from Twelve to Ace.  When we play that way, we are constantly checking the piles to see which direction they are going.  It really messes with the mind, so that is why I would rather play with Shannon's rules.  

Helen passed away this June.  The tears didn't flow hard because Helen had a hard life, and it was understood that death was freedom for her.  I still wanted to do something to honour her.  She was a very special lady in my family so I got the idea of getting together and playing a game in honour of Helen.  

I texted my sister and she came by to join in the memorial gave of Skip-Bo by Helen's rules.  We laughed more than we cried, but we remembered Helen and that was what mattered.  


"What we once enjoyed and deeply loved we can never lose, for all that we love deeply becomes a part of us.” — Helen Keller


WHERE THE ROAD KILL RESTS


 

"I may tell myself at the time that I do this for my husband, but really... I do it for me."  

These are words I told my friend of forty years when I shared the following story with her.  

* * * 

Let's back up to yesterday.  My husband and I were driving home from a short road trip, and as we were turning off the highway to our street, my husband noticed first what I noticed right after him.  A rabbit had met its end on the highway right in front of our house.  This was a fresh kill.  It rattled us both.  

We have a family of critters that spend time in our yard. We have birds, squirrels and a couple of bunnies.  They come and they go, but we have gotten attached their presence.  Yesterday morning, the first thought that came into my head, and probably "Mr Bunny!"  

There was no way of knowing what rabbit had been run over.  But it didn't matter at the time.  I told my husband I would take care of it.  Because I took care of the last one. 

It was last year when we "lost" another member of our furry community.  A squirrel was hit on the street across from our driveway.  I needed to do something as we both thought it was Squishy, our friendly squirrel who lived in our tree and had learned to eat peanuts from our hand.  My husband and I  had gotten very attached to Squishy.  

I had disposed of a bird that died in my yard once and didn't feel good for a week after, because I didn't give it a dignified farewell.  So this time, I wanted to bury "Squishy".  We have a Saskatoon patch in our yard that has become quite the bush.  There is a little path into the centre of the patch.  I took the squirrel and buried him in the middle of my Saskatoons.  I cut down a limb from our maple tree and carved "Squishy" in the wood.  I stuck the marker in the ground where I buried the squirrel.  

It was a while later when "Squishy" reemerged in our yard, and my husband and I both concluded that our friend was not the same squirrel that was buried in my berry patch.  But I am still glad I gave the little guy a memorable resting place.   

So yesterday, it didn't take me long to decide that I needed to find another place to bury the bunny.  Something in me needed to put some extra effort into this burial.  My lilacs were just starting to lose their purple beauty and some of my peonies were on the tail end of their blooming, so I gathered some blossoms into a bucket.  I emptied half of the pail into the hole I had dug.  Then the rabbit went in, and I topped up the hole with the remaining flowers, before putting the dirt back on top.  I went back to my peony patch and harvested some more blossoms and laid them on top of the grave.  

I found a branch in the Saskatoon patch that was the perfect size for a marker, and I carved the word "HASE" into it.  Hase is the German word for Rabbit. Another nickname we had for our bunny was Herr Hase.. (Mr Bunny).   Across the highway is some bush land that has Alberta wild roses in fresh bloom.  I harvested a sprig of one of the rose bushes and stuck it in the grave.   

I didn't even make it back in the house, when two rabbits showed up on our neighbour's yard and one of them ventured across the street into our front yard, passing by the Saskatoon patch.  I called to my husband through the window that we had company.  The sight of two bunnies gave us both a calming feeling, that maybe our bunnies that we had become so fond of were still alive.  I imagined that two bunnies had come to pay their respects to their friend or family member. 

I don't know all the details.  There are so many rabbits in our town and we don't have name tags affixed to them.  But it really didn't matter to us which rabbit or which squirrel died.  They were a reminder how fragile life is for us and for the critters that give us joy.  The tears shed for these little bundles of fur were not wasted even if they weren't the critters that frequented our yard.  

My little burial ceremonies also helped me process a painful experience of cleaning the road of their remains.  I am not that tough inside, but the other option is not doing something and that is worse.  So I have created a little resting place for the road kill.  They may have met an untimely end because they were in the wrong place at the right time, but I want them to still matter.  They were life, they were breath, they were part of our world and now... they are a part of the Flow.  


"How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard."    A. A. Milne


Tuesday, June 14, 2022

IMAGINATION AND METAPHOR: GRIEF'S BEST CONNECTION


When I get where I'm going

On the far side of the sky

The first thing that I'm gonna do

Is spread my wings and fly

I'm gonna land beside a lion

And run my fingers through his mane

Or I might find out what it's like

To ride a drop of rain


Brad Paisley:  When I get where I'm going

I enjoy my walks in the rain.  I have since I was a child, but more so since this song came into my life as a tribute to my nephew.  Since hearing these lyrics, I have often imagined Ben riding those raindrops and I want to be surrounded by them.  Every raindrop matters to me now, because it might just be one of those drops of moisture that will carry my nephew to me.  

One of my favourite creative gifts for memorials has been assembling a photo collection of the person's life and putting that to music.  When I did Ben's memorial video, The picture that matched up to the line ""To ride a drop of rain", was a picture of him riding his dirt bike on the gravel road during a cattle drive.  So since then, when those lyrics resurface in my mind, I can imagine Ben on his dirt bike coming down amid the raindrops.  

Brad Paisley wrote a metaphor, not a creed.  He imagined what it would be like for him after he died.  That is beautiful.  But what ruins the whole song is if someone were to take his words and interpret them as a religious belief or a doctrine.  Brad Paisley has no idea what "it" will look like after his last breath


So much pain and so much darkness

In this world we stumble through

All these questions I can't answer

And so much work to do


My best connection to my loved ones is my imagination.  My pictures change with every person.   There is a freedom that came for me when I laid aside the doctrine of "Heaven" and just let my imagination run wild.  I was accountable to no one in my journey of grief.  I could wonder and dream and find myself in the most wonderful places with the people I wanted to be with. 

I have a lot of stories in how I navigated the death of my nephew, this is only one.  I think the harder the loss, the more and different ways I have needed to connect.  

And I'll leave my heart wide open

I will love and have no fear


These are words I need now, in life, so I embrace them for now.  Poetry is like that.  The poet might imagine his words as a picture of the afterlife, and the reader will take those words and interpret them to matter to her now.  I like that.  I want to experience those moments in life where I can be free to leave my heart wide open and where Love drives out fear.  


I'm gonna walk with my grandaddy
And he'll match me step for step
And I'll tell him how I've missed him
Every minute since he left
And then I'll hug his neck


“Come back. Even as a shadow, even as a dream.” ― Euripides

Monday, June 13, 2022

SAM MCGEE AND MY DAD

Dad in the Yukon



There are strange things done in the midnight sun

      By the men who moil for gold;

The Arctic trails have their secret tales

      That would make your blood run cold;

The Northern Lights have seen queer sights,

      But the queerest they ever did see

Was that night on the marge of Lake Lebarge

      I cremated Sam McGee.



There aren't too many poems that I have enjoyed memorizing, but this is one of my favourites.  Call me morbid, but "The Cremation of Sam McGee" is my favourite poem by Robert Service.  

My Dad spend three years in the Yukon in the fifties.  He was single and there was money to be made up north.  He left his parents on their Flatrock farm and headed north to the land of Robert Service.  I wonder if he crossed paths with my favourite poet.  Robert Service died in 1958, so it is very possible.    I don't know.  That was one story I never heard.  

A few days after Dad's death, I sat at a table with my mother, my sister and the funeral director by the name of John.   I first met John at a summer camp I attended when I was fourteen.  He was one of the counsellors. It seemed odd to me that the long, blonde haired biker would end up in that line of work. John, the motorcycling mortician, was also one of my brother-in-law's best friends.  

One of the standard practices given to grieving families at the funeral home is a body viewing.  We all passed that up.  Dad died of cancer and he already looked like death while he was still breathing his last breaths, so viewing a body wasn't necessary or even desired for us.  But I had a request. 

"John, can I see the crematorium?"

I wanted to see the process that would convert the remains of my father into something that would fit in a small homemade wooden box.  I was curious.  This is something Dad would do. I thought. He was always interested in how things were made and how they were done.  

John took me to the back where they housed the equipment for cremation and showed me how everything was done. I got the full tour.  It was enough to peak my interest, but I didn't think past it in that moment.  

In a few days, I returned to the funeral home with the wooden urn that Mom's neighbour had made.  I was to drop it off, and it would come with Dad's ashes in the hearse on the day of the funeral to the church.  

I saw John, and something in me had to ask.

"Is he in there?"

"Yes."

Dad's body was scheduled to be cremated that morning, that is why I had to get the urn to them so they had it when they needed it.  

"Do you want to come in?"  

I was told that the body was already in the oven.  There was no risk of me seeing anything other than the equipment I had already seen on my previous tour. John gave me the time and space to sit in a cold room.  That's right.  It was minus thirty degrees outside, and the oven room had a big hole in the back for ventilation.  Dad was toasty warm, and I was freezing my backside on a cold concrete floor.  

I listened to the furnace and imagined the fire dancing around what was left of my father.  I took the papers down from the clipboard and looked at the name.  I looked at every letter over and over again... processing.  THAT name on THAT paper belonging  to THAT body in THAT oven... was my Dad's name.  It was the only evidence I had that he was gone. 

Then I made a hike, 

for I didn't like to hear him sizzle so;

And the heavens scowled, and the huskies howled, 

and the wind began to blow.

It was icy cold, but the hot sweat rolled 

down my cheeks, and I don't know why;

And the greasy smoke in an inky cloak 

went streaking down the sky.

John had peaked in a couple of times to see how I was doing.  I was grateful for his compassion.  I stayed for a half an hour and went back out into the cold, much like Cap.  But I left him there, unlike Cap, I didn't return.  

I didn't need to see my dad in a casket without breath.  I don't like that practice.  There is no life there for me to connect with and I like to remember my people as they were... with breath.  But that half hour in the crematorium helped me do something that day.  It helped me say good-bye.   I think Dad would have approved.  So would Sam McGee.  

 
And there sat Sam, looking cool and calm,

 in the heart of the furnace roar;

And he wore a smile you could see a mile, 

and he said: "Please close that door.

It's fine in here, but I greatly fear 

you'll let in the cold and storm—

Since I left Plumtree, down in Tennessee, 

it's the first time I've been warm."


"When it is darkest, we can see the stars." — Ralph Waldo Emerson

INTRODUCTION TO GRIEVING CREATIVELY BLOG



It's June 13, 2022... and I woke up feeling "BLAH".  That's right.  It's Monday morning and the week looks to be filled with clouds and rain.  What other option does this Enneagram Four, Fifty something Female have but to feel "BLAH"  

So my first thought was... clean the house; feel productive; do something to shine today.  So I started to clean.  I was cleaning the bathroom when a thought popped into my head.  What do I have in me that is worth sharing?  I seem to be on a continuous journey to find a contribution to the Cosmos that matters. 

And then two words came to my cranium: Creative Grieving.  With the Windex in hand I wondered and I pondered.  If there was one thing that described my grief journey over my fifty some years of living... creative seems to top the list.  It seems that my only way to process the pain in my life is through my greatest gift... my creativity.  

My next thought was... has anyone else thought of this?  So I went into my office to google "Creative Grieving"  and I found the book.  "Creative Grieving" by Elizabeth Catignani.  I downloaded it for a amazing cost of eight dollars.   

And then another thought came to me.  I could read the book... do a blog post on "Ruby gets Real" and leave it at that... or I could start a new blog and share my own creative grieving stories.  

This is exiting for me... so far from being sad.  There is joy in this for me.  Can I invite others into a space of finding creativity in their own grief journey.  Can we all walk though our losses in life with special meaning and added uniqueness.  I don't just think so... I have experienced so.   

The photo I chose for my blog and my introductory post was that of the dandelions that are have been blooming in my lawn this week.  They have a story and a history in my life and it seemed only fitting that I include them.  They are a resilient flower and it doesn't matter what mows over them, they seem to keep blooming.  That is what I want to be... a resilient blooming ray of sunshine.  How can I do that?  Well... maybe I can do that by sharing some of the creative ways I have processed grief and loss in my life. 

I want to make one thing clear.  I don't want this to be solely a solemnly sad blog.  I have found great joy, meaning and healing through my different grief journeys.  I hope that comes through here.    So thank you for joining me and maybe we can find more creative ways to grieve as we celebrate life while we walk through our losses.  

signing off: 

Ruby Neumann:  The Precious Poet