Sunday, May 22, 2011

Into the Light

The past month has taught me nothing except, you never know what's going to happen.  My first birth experience was prefaced by my first close family death experience.   I decided to include here the narrative I shared at Uncle D's memorial last week. 

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The last time I saw my uncle D was my cousin Mae’s baby shower. He rode with my mom and I over to Cocoa, the east coast of Florida, and we stayed there longer than we had planned because he was getting lots of attention from a friend of my cousin’s. I don’t think that he had been doted on my a woman in a some time and we didn’t want to interrupt the attention. It was good to see Uncle D being loved on, though he was loved deeply by many, he also kept to himself enough that these opportunities were not always present. When we were riding back to Tampa, I was sharing with my mom my plans to sometime soon get a larger bed. She remembered that the bed frame I currently have was made by D, originally for his bed. He had measured it out and had plans to create drawers underneath to maximize space in his loft bedroom. Years ago when I was desiring a bed frame for my futon and my mom asked D to help us make one. Instead, he disassembled and reassembled his bed frame at my house for me. Never made himself a new one. When we were talking on the way home from Cocoa, we asked D if he would like to have his bed frame back once I get a larger bed and planned to move it back to his house in the future. I still have it. 
My last interaction with D was in an email, about a month before he passed. I had closed a second location of my business and ended up with an extra 3-way lamp. I had thought of D and wondered if he might need it. The past couple of months I was trying to be in better contact with him. We lived fairly close to one another and occasionally I would bring by some food for him when we had too much, like when we made a bunch of lasagna and our freezer didn’t have enough room for it all. I have been blessed with a life of little struggle when it comes to having money for food and necessities, and I knew his life was a bit different. I have been so motivated to help others who are not as fortunate as me, but I have started to realize that I hadn’t always been this way towards my uncle.  For various reasons, there were some things in my way but I became ready to remove those walls and reach out. So I wrote uncle D an email with a picture of the lamp and asking him if he wanted or needed it. I consciously signed the email, “Love, Nyssa,” not knowing it would be the last time I told him I loved him.  He wrote back saying that he would take it and if he didn’t have a place for it he would find someone who did. He signed it, “Love, D.”  I realize now that this exchange showed the love that was always there, though may not have always been spoken.  I wanted to bring him light, and in some ways he ended up bringing it to me. 
The night that I found out about my uncle’s passing I was in a birthing class. I have recently taken on the process of becoming a doula, a childbirth labor companion. That Tuesday night I was with one of the mom’s I was working with and we had just done a fear release exercise.  I was actually on call for my first birth, but had silenced my phone while we did the exercise. When we got up, I got the news from my mom about finding her brother. Talk about biggest fears! I drove home in shock, having never experienced death so close. It was like an expected visit from a strange guest you have no choice to let in. I kept remembering a line from a poem by Greg Byrd, “The Unluckiest Squirrel in the World” that I used in a poem of my own in high school: “Death comes at us like squirrels, fathers, friends with shotguns and cocaine...” I knew now much more clearly of what this poet meant. 
When I arrived at my home that night, there was a small box on the porch. I had ordered postcards for my workshop coming up in June and though I knew what they looked like I was almost stunned to open the box and see this gorgeous scene of someone in the woods looking up a the light with the title of the workshop “Into the Light,” at the bottom. I felt this was a message from D to say that he is alright. It was surely divine timing. I am dedicating this workshop to his memory. 


I remembered our last email interaction and light was there too.  I still had that lamp sitting by my front door and had even thought about bringing it over the previous sunday. Had I gone over, I would have found him.  I was actually thinking of him a lot that day, when I was making my bed I was remembering what my mom had said about giving me his bed frame - I didn’t know this until we had talked about it in the car that he had originally made it for himself. I started to realize what all he had sacrificed for me, how he was willing to give up something that he had put work into. What self-less love can come from someone whose biggest struggle was loving himself. 
It was hard after he passed to not feel guilty about putting off reaching out to him, but I started to hear him in my head saying, “I understand now. I can see it all from this (big-picture) perspective and I know you love me in your heart. I forgive you.” A few days after he passed, my mom told me how along time ago he told her that he and I “have an understanding.” I see now so clearly that we do and always have. D knows better than I do about what was in my way, and has been sending nothing but love my way and to all of us now that he has crossed over. We hope that this will help all of us to live in the light here until we too absolve in the oneness of light that eventually engulfs us all.