Saturday 29 October 2016

4 - FUNERALS ARE FOR DANCING - Chapter One - I Want to Be a Mummy


I was just a kid when I knew.  I knew it for certain.  It was as clear as the little pug nose on my five-year-old face.  The desire to be a mother first struck in 1949 while watching my mother when she went into a sort of reverie.  Wherever it was she went at breastfeeding time, I just knew, I wanted to go there, too.  While she cuddled my baby brother, Artie, I mimicked her moves with Cuddles, my much-loved teddy bear.  Trying to feed Cuddles only tickled and made me giggle.  I could not get to where Mum was but I did recognize, in those nursing moments, my yearning to be a mother. 

When I think about Mum and me feeding our babies, everything in the living room of our Rhyl Avenue home in ‘The Beaches’ area of Toronto comes clearly into my mind’s eye.  I can see the swirling pattern on the burgundy carpet and feel the prickly green couch on my skin.  The bubbles from Mum’s iron-rich stout tickled my nose as I breathed in its pungent aroma.  It was my job, at breastfeeding time, to fetch our drinks.  I was sometimes allowed chocolate milk on these occasions and on this day it was particularly smooth and delicious.  

Mum would have had Mario Lanza playing in the background.  One of her favourites back around that time was … “Be my love, for no one else can end this yearning; this need that you and you alone create.  Just fill my arms the way you’ve filled my dreams ... there’ll be no one but you for me, eternally.  If you will be my love …” The words do make a wonderful love song to sing to a baby.  However, for Mum, the words "there'll be no one but your for me" were not accurate.  Artie was the fourth child of the eventual six children produced by my parents.

Watching my mother’s face made me long for whatever it was she had.  The only way to become a mother at that age was to imitate Mum’s every move.  So, I did just that, either with a doll or with my precious teddy, Cuddles.  We took care of our babies together.  Whatever Artie got, Cuddles got too.  When Mum nursed, I nursed.  Cuddles was my absolute favourite pretend-baby but, he didn’t do well in the bath, he just took too long to dry.  The story goes that I would sit under the clothes line waiting for him to dry while clutching a paw  in one hand and sucking my thumb on the other.  That would have been the thumb that tasted like brown sugar.        

So, when it was bath time for Artie, my doll came into play for me.  Side-by-side Mum and I walked our charges in their carriages or had our babies take their afternoon naps outside on the veranda in the fresh air.

Perhaps because I enjoy movies so much when I think of my life in earlier times I see it in movie scenes.  I’ve often created this book’s movie opening in my mind.  The credits start to roll over a sepia coloured background.  As the camera pulls back we realize we are looking at a helium-filled balloon.  The camera continues to pull back and we see that the balloon is tied to the handle of a five-year-old girl’s doll carriage.  Beside the girl is her mother pushing a larger carriage.  

We watch them from behind as they continue their walk along a sidewalk and approach their home.  Together they lift their swaddled babies out of their prams and carry them inside their home.  At this point, the opening credits have completed and colour has been introduced to the scene which picks up where I started my story, in their living room at feeding time.  The girl now clutches her balloon along with her teddy.  Her balloon is green.


Emails welcomed at funeralsarefordancing@rogers.com

Monday 24 October 2016

3 - FUNERALS ARE FOR DANCING - A Scene From a Funeral



I have made death a messenger of joy to thee.  
Wherefore dost thou grieve?
I made the light to shed on thee its splendor.  
Why dost thou veil thyself therefrom?”


It was a clear, crisp, spring day in late March of 1983 when we buried our infant son, Dana.  What if I told you it was one of the happiest days of my life?  If you’re surprised to read such words try to imagine how astonished I was to feel a sense of peace and yes, joy, fill my soul on that day.

He was but eleven months and four days when his body could no longer withstand the many assaults.  His organs began to fail as a result of damaged lungs.  “It’s kind of like the domino effect,” we were told, “one damaged organ affects another and so on.”  We knew this day was coming and had preferred death for our son rather than him living his life in a body whose mind had been stolen away almost three months earlier when a cardiac arrest wiped out all hope of a normal life.  Had Dana lived, he would have spent whatever precious time was allowed him, in a vegetative state.  We certainly did not want that for our son.  We also had come to realize Dana’s fate was out of our hands.  

Many of us can imagine all too well the sorrow that would engulf the hearts and minds of grieving parents at the news of their child’s passing.  So, for Dana, we planned his funeral in advance with the hope of demonstrating to ourselves and to our guests a glimpse of the joy suggested in those introductory words.  

We did not know how our baby’s inevitable demise might affect our emotions and our ability to take charge at a time when we may be too emotional to function.  

We searched our minds and hearts for how to portray the joyful aspect of death and put our ideas down on paper.  We consulted close and trusted friends for their input.  We then filed those plans away and wondered when and if we might have to put them to use. 

As life would have it, we did have to put those funeral plans into play when on the 28th of March in 1983 the call came early one morning from The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto informing us that our dear Dana had indeed left this world. 

We had decided to use a nearby funeral home but only as a gathering spot for our guests.  Remember we were trying to focus on the joyful promise of death and funeral parlours had never particularly evinced a sense of joy within either of us.

Upon entering the chapel room it was not festooned with flowers as one might expect.  We had asked that instead of flowers those wishing to, might consider donations to The Hospital for Sick Children (commonly referred to as Sick Kids’) or a charity of their choice.  In spite of the fact our funeral director had advised that our guests would still send flowers, not one blossom had arrived.  Our directors had also asked, “Perhaps an arrangement of flowers from you, Dana’s parents, would be appropriate for your son’s casket?”  

“No, but thank you,” we had said, “we would like balloons and our baby’s teddy bear to take the position of honour”.  You can well imagine an eyebrow or two might have lifted.   

So, what caught the eye of those entering?  At the front of an otherwise stark room sat the tiny white casket with Dana’s bandaged bear sitting atop. The teddy clutched three helium-filled balloons … one yellow, one red and one green.

How these keepsakes look today.  
  
As the guests arrived they signed a guest book and seated themselves in one of the pews.  At the appointed hour we arose and made our way out the door and into our cars.  Dana’s casket took up every inch of space on the front seat of a black limousine beside the driver.  The teddy bear was still securely positioned on top with the three balloons. 

Guests at the funeral parlour.
Guests at the memorial.

Dana’s father, Michael, and I and our two small children, Emma, age four, and Ben, just turned two, all sat in the back seat for the final family-of-five ride together.  

There was barely an inch between the casket and the steering wheel which made it necessary for the driver to drive at a slower pace than normal in a funeral procession.  It must have been quite the sight for those passing by.  They could see clearly it was a funeral procession without a hearse and the lead limo displayed brightly coloured balloons.  People stopped and stared as this odd sight passed.  

My friend, Shar, (I’m certain her name will come up again) later said, “I was about midway in the procession. When I looked ahead and back, it appeared to be very long.  One might have thought it was the funeral of a dignitary”.  

Our first stop was at Mount Pleasant Cemetery.  We gathered around the open grave where prayers were recited and Sacred Writings Read.  One of the prayers said was also reproduced on a card that every guest received as a memento. This meaningful prayer spoke directly to our desire for baby Dana. 

        “O God!  Rear this little babe in the bosom of Thy love and give it milk from  the breast of Providence.  Cultivate this fresh plant in the rose garden of Thy love  and nurture it by showers from the clouds of Providence.  Make it a child of the  Kingdom and lead it to the divine world.  Thou art powerful and kind!  
         Thou art the Giver, the Bestower, Whose blessings transcend all else!”

We had kept in mind children when making Dana’s funeral plans.  He was, after all, a baby and we knew there would be children present.  The youngsters around the grave got in close, as children would, so as not to miss anything.  It was noticeable when the following passage was read everyone closed in as did the two funeral directors.  It was interesting and heartwarming to see these words act as a magnet to our families and friends.  Here is how that somewhat magnetic passage begins.

“And now concerning thy question regarding the soul of man and its survival after death.  Know thou of a truth that the soul, after its separation from the body, will continue to progress until it attaineth the presence of God, in a state and condition which neither the revolution of ages and centuries, nor the changes and chances of this world, can alter.  It will endure as long as the Kingdom of God, His sovereignty, His dominion and power will endure.  It will manifest the signs of God and His attributes, and will reveal His loving kindness and bounty.   … The world beyond is as different from this world as this world is different from that of the child while still in the womb of its mother.  … Wert thou to ponder in thine heart the behavior of the Prophets of God thou wouldst assuredly and readily testify that there must needs be other worlds besides this world. …

Should you wish to read the entire passage go to http://reference.bahai.org/en/t/b/GWB/gwb-81.html

The day was quiet, the wind was still so these beautiful words were able to reach the ears and hearts of those who had gathered to support us as we said our physical goodbye to Dana.  

Our two-year-old son, Ben, had managed to scoop Dana’s teddy from atop the casket and wound its key.  This old man, he played one, he played knick-knack on my thumb, with a knick knack paddy whack give a dog a bone.  This old man came rolling home …  The tune tinkled its way into the cool spring air where the notes and those sacred words drifted into the atmosphere along with many of the hearts that had opened to the moment.

My heart was most definitely opened to receive those healing words.  What did it take in life to get me to the moment of so-called separation from this precious infant to be able to face it with an opened heart that was filled with joy?


Hopefully, the chapters to follow will help you, as well as me, understand how I got there from where I started.


Emails welcomed at funeralsarefordancing@rogers.com.  

2 - FUNERALS ARE FOR DANCING - Table of Contents

PART I

Chapter 1 I WANT TO BE A MUMMY!
Chapter 2  "YOU'D BETTER BE HOME BEFORE THE STREET LIGHTS COME ON ..."
Chapter 3  WHAT WAS IT ABOUT BEING SEVEN?
Chapter 4  WHERE DID MY CREATIVE BENT COME FROM? 
... more childhood chapters being added

following to be revised
Chapter 2 IS THIS THE MAN TO FATHER MY CHILDREN?
Chapter 3 MEANWHILE BACK AT ‘THE COURTSHIP’
Chapter 4 HOW’S YOUR BELLY FOR SPOTS?
Chapter 5 HEALING OF THE PARENTAL RELATIONSHIP
Chapter 6 MUM’S BURIAL
Chapter 7 LIFE GOES ON
Chapter 8 MEANWHILE BACK AT THE WEDDED BLISS
Chapter 9 I MEAN IT!  I REALLY WANT TO BE A MOTHER!
Chapter 10 MORE ABOUT THE MARRIAGE BREAK-UP
Chapter 11 IT’S A BOY!
Chapter 12 BUT I WAS NEVER TOLD ABOUT THE SORROW
Chapter 13 MEETING MICHAEL
Chapter 14 THE HONEYMOONS ARE OVER
Chapter 15 BECOMING A BAHÁ’Í
Chapter 16 WHAT NEXT?  TO PARENT OR NOT TO PARENT?
Chapter 17 AND, LIFE GOES ON … AGAIN
Chapter 18 NURTURING NATURE
Chapter 19 I’M WHAT?

PART II

Chapter 20 THE FIRST TRYING TRI-MESTER                                                              Chapter 21 WHAT ROSE GARDEN?                                                                            Chapter 22 I HAD A DREAM                                                                                     Chapter 23 a work in progress …  

1 - FUNERALS ARE FOR DANCING - An Introduction

There is a book inside of me I've been carrying around for a few decades.  It needs to come out!  For my lifestyle and age, (I turned 73 in August) I've decided to blog it, one chapter at a time. 

Much of the story is already written but, like a lot of writers, I work best with a deadline.  This self-imposed deadline is what's needed to get me off my keyster and onto the keyboard.  Now, doesn't that bring an odd picture to mind?  

Speaking of pictures, photos will be sprinkled in where appropriate.  That, because of the expense, could not be done in a published edition.    

My plan is to clean up at least two chapters a week for posting while adding chapters on to the story for future posting.  Next to be posted will be my Table of Contents which, as mentioned, will be a work in progress.  So, for those who like to see what's coming up, you might want to check in from time to time with said Table.   

Because I see my life in movie scenes, I'd like this to be fairly interactive so, with that in mind, I'll be posting links wherever possible to songs of my life and for any partial Writings I've quoted.

Thanks go to a publisher who has shown interest in seeing my completed manuscript but somehow, I just cannot seem to get it together for you.  Could it be fear of rejection?  Hopefully, my story will unveil much of my inner being to all of us.