Tomorrow it will be exactly one month since my mother took her last breaths, with four of her five children gathered around her hospital bed, shortly after hearing the voice of her one missing son (her firstborn) on speaker phone. All five of us were able to spend the week-and-a-half before she died with her almost constantly, reminiscing about our history as a family and telling her how much we loved her. And she died peacefully, without pain, after 89 years of living a rather blessed life.
We all have to go; and that being the case, she had an extraordinarily beautiful death--one you might plan out for yourself, if given the option to do so.
I did the second reading at my mom's funeral, Corinthians 15:51-57. I'm sure you know it, this part at least: "Death is swallowed up in victory. Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?" (Getting through that reading without breaking down entirely was a victory for me that day, I'll tell you.)
Yes, it was a beautiful passing from this earthly life, which is so very short compared to the eternal one into which Mom has entered. But still, it does sting. For those left behind, it stings indeed.
I think about my mom all the time. About how she lived. And how she died.
I mostly feel fine, staying dry-eyed more often than not and getting on with life...but in spite of all this "fineness," tears are always lurking, hidden right beneath the surface. And the most random, unexpected catalysts can set them off when I least expect it.
I have great hope that my mother is in Heaven already, and my dad is there, too, so happy to be with his best girl again. And that she's continuing to enjoy her great-grandmother role with the five tiny little Pearls none of us ever got to meet down here (what a comforting thought!). But there's still that stinging sensation.
While my husband and I were up in NY for the funeral, on our way out of daily Mass one day we picked up two free copies of a book called 33 Days to Eucharistic Glory, a guide to Eucharistic Consecration. We are reading through a chapter each day, and we often discuss our thoughts about them afterward. On the second day, the readings and reflections had to do with this question: Are you a pilgrim or a tourist? This chapter was filled with reminders that this world is not our home, that we are just pilgrims passing through, on a spiritual journey to a sacred destination. "If you go on vacation for a week, you don't consider the hotel you stay at to be your home. You know it is a brief stay. In the context of eternity, your life [on earth] is like that hotel stay. Brief." I try to remember this all the time, that life on earth is fleeting and it's the next life that will last forever. But we do get caught up in what's going on in our lives here, don't we? We forget all the time that this isn't all there is. We forget all the time that the purpose of this life is to live it in such a way that it brings us back to God for all eternity.
I'm human, though. And I do enjoy so many things about my ridiculously blessed life here on planet earth. I love my home here in VA. I'm trying, as best I can, to make it a reflection of Heaven for my family. To make it as beautiful, cozy, and inviting as it can be, so that they always feel happy to come and spend time with us here.
Yesterday, I had glimpses of Heaven when two of our boys and their families came for a little after-Mass lunch gathering, and the nine kids they brought with them spent a few hours playing together (leaving our house a good bit less beautiful than it was when they got here--ha ha!).
Seriously, though: nothing makes us happier than seeing the grandkids hanging out together in this basement playroom that my husband finished off for them about five years ago.
When I'm in there, I feel a little closer to Heaven. Maybe our kids do, too.
I can't remember crying yesterday. I think I was distracted by getting all the food ready for our visitors, and then filling cups with chocolate milk and ice water, running upstairs to get computer paper from the office for the little artists to draw on, cleaning up spills, snuggling with five-year-old girls who are not only cousins but besties, and...well, you get the picture: it was a busy day, in the best possible way. And by 9:00, I was falling asleep in my chair, so we went to bed much earlier than we usually do.
That's the key, I guess: to keep living life to the fullest, but as a pilgrim and not a tourist, always remembering that the home I've made for my family here (however cozy it might be) is not my real home. My mother has completed the pilgrimage, but I'm still on the journey to that real home. I hope I get there.
And if I do, and I hear, "Hi, Pussycat," I'll know she's there already and she's been waiting for me.
I love this! And I was fine until "Hi Pussycat", that brought on the teary eyes! 💔
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ReplyDeleteOf course you will always miss her...you loved her so much...it would be a shame if you didn't! Plus I think missing someone reminds me to pray for them, which I might forget as the years go by. You are the second person to mention that book to me recently, I must get my hands on it.
ReplyDeleteColleen, I was so close to my mother-in-law--whom I met when I was 15 and who was truly one of the most influential people in my life--that when she died, I grieved deeply and thought I knew how it felt to lose a mother. But when it's your own...it's just so different. I should have known how much harder this would be, no matter how great that other relationship was. Your own mother has such a special place in your heart. I will always miss my mom, so much! (And like you said, that's a good thing, because it will help me to remember to pray for her!) Also, that book is really good--a great extra prayer devotion for Lent.
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