On the plane to Philadelphia I got halfway through Metropolitan Anthony Bloom's God and Man. It helped to calm my jitters that had developed since the initial excitement and decision to go to my last remaining aunt's memorial service. I was about to arrive at an event and to enter a house and family where every person was a stranger.
Eeek! What was I getting into? Metropolitan Anthony encouraged me with words about love and life, and before I knew it a first cousin once-removed was hugging me at the airport and driving me to a houseful of other huggers and gracious people. I stayed up with them later and later every night sharing stories of our grandparents and parents, digging up memories and laughing with happiness over all the many connections we have by way of genetics and family traditions.
The realities of The Kingdom I had been reading about are certainly
pertinent to the activity in my heart last weekend, but I'm still
debriefing myself about what happened. I may never figure it out enough
to put it down in words, but it was exciting and glorious.
What I am able to do is share some photographic images of the
little bit of Philadelphia I experienced. Cousin #1 put me in The
Nursery at her house, which is decorated in the most comforting and cozy
way, with pictures of the Teddy Bears having their picnic, and Babar,
and more pictures and items that probably helped me feel that I was
falling asleep with the Sandman's help as when I was a child. Stuffed
animals sat around on the stuffed chair and on the extra bed, and green
leaves were painted on the creamy yellow wood floor.
In the kitchen Revere Ware pots had been hung on the wall - hey! just the
way Grandfather used to do! - and science "experiments" I won't describe
sat on a shelf all ready for the grandchildren, my first cousins
twice-removed. Flowers filled the air with sweetness - We would soon load them in the back of the car to drive to the memorial
service and reception.
See that orange towel on the kitchen counter above? I brought it with
its citrus-y design as a gift to remind my cousin of the boxes of
oranges my father sent across the country to their family every
Christmas in bygone days.
Out back, raised beds were awaiting spring planting, and pussy willows
budded right off the kitchen porch. I sat on the steps going down to the
garden to talk on the phone to Mr. Glad who was still back in California missing me.
The morning of the memorial service we walked a block to the train station to meet daughter Kate who had come from D.C. to be with me. She had never even met her great-aunt whose life we were honoring that day, but she was happy to get acquainted with the cousins, and she slept in The Nursery in the bed next to me.
One night Cousin #3 cooked dinner for the two of us at her place, a very "vertical" row house in South Philly, narrow and rising five levels. She honored the first owners with a photo on the wall showing a very sober and Italian wedding party featuring the bride-and-groom owners. It's a pretty old house of the sort that has (newly refurbished) rosettes on the ceiling in some rooms.
All the long weekend, all the folk I met were amazed at how much I resemble my late aunt; the cousins in our branch of the family haven't been together in a long time, and for most of their lives they had been daily surrounded by people related to my aunt's former husband. I was happy to provide a facial link to her instead. We pored over all the old photos we had assembled, staring at the faces as though trying to penetrate the souls of our ancestors to understand who we are.
I woke up the morning of my departure to see the ground all white, and snow falling. The birds arrived at the feeders, and I even saw a female Cardinal for the first time. I've never lived where this classic red bird does.
After I was dropped at the airport, I wandered around waiting for a flight that was delayed for weather, and wondered at how fast I had made a fast friend of my cousin. Someone told me before I set off on my adventure that a cousin is sort of like a sister, but better in that you don't have the tension that can happen between siblings.
So it seems at this point, and I'm grateful for the gifts of God. He is everywhere, of course, even in the middle of a bunch of strangers. We don't have any love that doesn't come from Him. But that provides plenty.
11 comments:
This was written from the heart, and it touched mine, especially since I have attended so many funerals of late. Tomorrow my husband and I will brace the cool and windy weather of these late March days to attend his uncle's graveside funeral...on Good Friday. I did not know this man well, my husband perhaps has memories from way back...but it is family, afterall.
I loved your story.
And, cardinals! Oh, how I wish you could visit my home and see all "our" cardinals feeding. Some times as many as ten at one time...and that is just the bright red males, the subdued females are there with them too! It is a sight not never fails to delight.
I'm so glad you got to experience the joy of cardinals! We used to have a house surrounded by cardinal couples, about 4 or 5 couples in the spring. My, they were busy home-making. So adorable. It sounds like your visit East was a deep blessing of the kind that only family can provide. Very happy for you :)
sounds like a wonderful time ~ family can be such a blessing. May God remember your Aunt in His Kingdom! Blessings on your week, this second week of Lent!
What a lovely sweet story. I love that orange towel and the story that it makes you remember.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts and the photos are lovely.
It is indeed impossible to describe the whole weekend, but you painted its tone very well here. Discovering "new" branches of family is quite a rich experience, apparently!
What a beautiful post of God's blessing to you. Lovely pictures, too.
I love my cousins. I hardly get to see them, but when I do it's like no time has passed at all.
Saw my first cardinal in North Carolina a couple of years ago. It was exciting for me, too!
Dana
Your open heart made this a beautiful experience. I only ever have seen cardinals on Arizona visits. Stunning, aren't they?
This was a thoughtful and interesting post to read. I am glad your visit was such a blessing, to you and to them. I agree a cousin can be a lot like a sister. I have found that to be true. It is wonderful to have a chance to revisit past happy memories and old family stories, find wonder in the physical resemblances and think about our ancestors and try to understand what their lives were like and to know that all of them are somehow part of what went into making us in our own generation. Perhaps a wonderful new friendship is in the making for you all. Yes, His love is always there at the center of everything.
Precious ...a memorial that is wreathed by closer circles in the family; a worthy tribute.
I am so glad to hear of the journey and how love plowed the path.
Gretchen, although it's been a while since you've been with them, I'm so glad you found solace with your family. Didn't it just please you to be compared physically to your Aunt? I resemble Daddy's oldest sister and it pleases me no end!
Post a Comment