Showing posts with label Rhoda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rhoda. Show all posts


Here’s the thing about angels. They don’t like me. I shouldn’t be surprised. Why would any angel cozy up to a spiritual-but-not-religious, non-churchgoing heathen like me?

I wish I could talk to my sister Rhoda about this, but she died in 2009. She was a lot like me spiritually. Chalk it up to Catholic school education, with Mass six days a week, for many years in Latin. I got sprung from Catholic school after fifth grade. Rhoda stuck it out through high school, but I think that had to do with the cute guys in her class.

Rhoda and I both believe in God. We’ve just never connected with him or her in church on Sunday.  Give us a forest, a mountaintop, a starry night on the beach. That’s where we find our God. Or even in a baby’s smile or the sweet tenderness of a puppy’s soft, downy-pink belly.

Anyway, back to the angels. Rhoda loved angels. She collected them. Lots of them. Ceramic angels. Wooden angels. Crystal angels. Angels formed of wire and tin and papier mâché. And when she died and I inherited the primary responsibility for settling her estate and distributing her belongings, I had all these -- angels – to deal with.

I kept a few, gave some to family members I knew would like them, and sold the rest in a yard sale. Maybe the angels were offended. Maybe I priced them too low. Maybe they didn’t appreciate being separated. But really, there were just so, so many of them, and I had a lot to deal with. Sorry, seraphim. Really, I am so, so sorry.

Here’s how I know they don’t like me: one of them took a nose dive off the top of my Christmas tree. Her head exploded. Seriously, an angel suicide. Another gave up her halo. Her tiny, golden glass halo, just inexplicably came off her little head.

I try not to take is personally. I mean, it could be considered hypocritical of me to even have the angels, right? I mean, wouldn’t they be better off on someone else’s tree? Someone who goes to church, someone who knows the correct words are “angels we have heard ON high” and not “angels we have heard ARE high.”

But then I gave in and actually bought an angel! For four days I have lived with a tree that is fully decorated, bedecked with angels and Santas and snowmen and random souvenirs of various vacations, glass balls and Christopher Radko collectibles and lots of crystal doo-dads. But it was naked on top, its pinnacle bare in homage to the gilded martyr now buried in the trash can.

It just didn’t look right. I kept moving ornaments around, seeking the perfect balance of bauble and beads. And then it struck me, it needed an angel on top. So when I saw one on sale at CVS, where I stopped to stock up on buy-one-get-one Osteo Bi-Flex, I threw her in the cart and brought her home.

She’s beautiful, with a white flowing robe, a harp, and golden-glittery wings. But you know what? She doesn’t fit. She won’t stay put. She lists to the side, and threatens to fall, bringing snowmen and Santas and even the Mr.-Potato-Head-dressed-as-a-toy soldier with her!
That’s the thing about angels: they just don’t like me. Just sayin.

 

 

Right around this time last year, I was headed out to Missouri to check on my sister Rhoda, who was fighting metastatic breast cancer, and had just been hospitalized. Little did I realize that I was headed to her death bed, or that I had already had the last conversation I would ever have with her. I have written before how I spent this last week of her life with Rhoda, but will never know if she knew I was there. Her cancer had spread to her brain, and caused her liver to shut down. She was a shell of herself. Her body was barely recognizable, wrecked by chemotherapy -- devoid of hair, muscles and skin slack from malnutrition. Her spirit, normally boisterous, was not in evidence. No husky chortle, not smart ass remarks, no baudy humor.

For a week I begged her to talk to me. Tell me a joke. Give me an order. Just say my name. Smile. Laugh at my stupid jokes. Tell me to shut the hell up. But she didn’t do any of that. She couldn’t – or wouldn’t. Basically, she had nothing left to give.

Toward the end, when we knew it WAS the end, we started calling people. The family rallied, driving in from across Missouri, as well as Alabama, North Carolina, and Texas. And friends arrived. One cleaned out her checking account to buy enough gas to get there from Houston. Two others bought costly last-minute flights from Dallas. Another gave up a badly-needed work assignment and drove in from Tennessee. High school friends streamed in.

I’m not sure what everyone expected. Did they hope for conversation? Or recognition? If so, they must have been devastated. Still, they sat with her, sang to her, read to her, applied moisturizer to her parched skin, rubbed her back and held her hand. They brought flowers and cards, aromatherapy aides, silk butterflies and prayer cards and other talismans. Cousin Larry went to the beauty supply store in search of formaldehyde-free nail polish in the perfect shade of pink so she would die with pretty toes! (I am still unclear if they talked him into the frequent buyer discount card.) All of these people dropped everything just to be with her one more time.

At the time, I was touched. Hell, I was blown away, but I couldn’t have said why. Amidst my haze of emotional exhaustion, I could not have identified exactly what I felt about that bedside vigil. A year later, it’s all a little more clear. I felt wonder, and uncertainty. And now, commitment and resolve.

How wondrous that my sister inspired so much love and devotion, such friendship and generosity! How uncertain about the state of my own life, and loves and friendships. Who would be there at my bedside? What would they bring, and what would they say to me, and how would they feel? In the course of a year, I’ve thought about those questions, and I have a pretty good picture. I know who will be there and what they might bring (pie, baseball memorabilia, wine, stuffed animals, music by James Taylor and Janis Joplin, lavender candles and yellow roses). I think they will tell me stories about the good times, and laugh through their tears, and remember what a pain in the ass I could be. More than one of them will probably say, “Yeah, she really did say that out loud.” Maybe they’ll remember a meal I cooked, or how they helped me move, or beat me in Scrabble, spades, darts or kick-the-can.

Yeah, I know who you are. And I’m grateful. I resolve to be a better friend, or sister, or aunt or cousin or whatever. I’m committed to using my time and talents and energies to pay it forward, serving those who have been here for me through thick and thin (I know, I know, I have never been thin). When you stop to compose that list of who will be there in the end, you get some perspective. Maybe I can forgive the stranger who cut me off in traffic or threw a cigarette butt out of their car window, or even my dumb ass ex-husband, or the stupid bitch who “eliminated my position” at work. Ok, maybe not. But at least I can spend less energy hating them. Maybe I can channel that emotion into affirming what my sister Rhoda taught me, from her death bed, when she couldn’t even say my name. She taught me one more lesson about life and love. She taught me to choose joy and positive abundance. I’m just sayin …

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