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  <title>remembrance</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/395"/>
  <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/395/atom/feed"/>
  <id>http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/395/atom/feed</id>
  <updated>2007-11-26T01:09:16+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Six years</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2008/03/six-years" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2008/03/six-years</id>
    <published>2008-03-19T11:51:59+00:00</published>
    <updated>2008-03-19T11:53:25+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="cancer diary" />
    <category term="death" />
    <category term="parents" />
    <category term="remembrance" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Dad - </p>
<p>I didn't really call you that while you were alive, and it feels strange to call you that now, but I didn't know any other way to start this letter.</p>
<p>I've become a person who grumbles at roadside memorials for victims of traffic accidents but who writes something about you every year on the <a href="http://domesticat.net/node/530">anniversary of your death</a>.  I wondered about that for a number of years before I realized that I was closer to your death than I was to your life, and I've spent the years since trying to come to terms with your absence.</p>
<p><a href="http://domesticat.net/node/899">This entry</a> covers it better than most:</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Dad - </p>
<p>I didn't really call you that while you were alive, and it feels strange to call you that now, but I didn't know any other way to start this letter.</p>
<p>I've become a person who grumbles at roadside memorials for victims of traffic accidents but who writes something about you every year on the <a href="http://domesticat.net/node/530">anniversary of your death</a>.  I wondered about that for a number of years before I realized that I was closer to your death than I was to your life, and I've spent the years since trying to come to terms with your absence.</p>
<p><a href="http://domesticat.net/node/899">This entry</a> covers it better than most:</p>
<blockquote><p>We each had our own worlds, with our points of intersection, but for the most part we lived separate lives. I met some of my father's work friends for the first time at the visitation after his death, names I had heard of for years but whose faces and handshakes I had never known.  He talked <em>about</em> us, it seems now, possibly more than he actually talked <em>with</em> us.</p></blockquote>
<p>We make our place in the world we are born into, and through work and luck and personality and presence, the world gives us a space -- for a time -- before taking it back.  When we go, our absence leaves holes in the fabric of the living, but in time, those holes close, and the world begins to seem once again right on its axis.  The timeliness or untimeliness of our passing becomes irrelevant, for the world has moved on.</p>
<p>Mom is remarrying this year.  It is yet another on the list of things that would not have happened had you lived.  I am happy for her, but uneasy about what my new place in this moving-on will be.  Amidst my friends from a dizzying variety of families (separated, blended, whipped until foamy) there was a constant:  two parents, my sister, myself.</p>
<p>Not any more.  My mother, my mother's fiance, her two grown daughters, his three grown sons.  There are stepbrothers and stepnephews whose names I need to learn.  </p>
<p>The wedding date is just a few days after Jeff's and my tenth anniversary.  The photos from that decade-ago wedding are still there, in Jeff's and my hall; me in my tie-dyed Veasey Luau shirt at the rehearsal, pointing down at my feet to remind you not to step on them.  My mind finds it vaguely incomprehensible that I'm going to fly directly from a trip celebrating my tenth anniversary to my mother's remarriage, because I've been back to Arkansas so few times since that ceremony and it seem by rights, nothing <em>should</em> have changed.</p>
<p>(But I'd be wrong.  Very wrong.)</p>
<p>Relationships change over time.  I told a friend earlier this week -- one of my few friends remaining who remembers you -- that I wondered how our relationship would have changed if you had lived longer.  We weren't close, not by any stretch of the imagination.  I want desperately to believe that you were proud of me, and that despite your words you saw potential in me, but barring some stupendous, dumbfounding letter from the grave, I will live the rest of my life without knowing.  I would like to believe that if we'd had more time, perhaps we would have had that giant, air-clearing fight that I wasn't ready to have in my early twenties.  </p>
<p>I want to believe our relationship would have changed for the better, but there's no way to know that, is there?  There's only the sinking feeling of watching your friends' relationships with their parents change as everyone ages, and feeling robbed.</p>
<p>I cried a few days ago when I realized it was mid-March.  Not so much for the date but because when I tried to conjure up memories of you, there was so little I could point to for remembrance.  I remember so few real conversations between us -- mostly it's arguments, frustration, and absence -- but my inability to remember your voice this past week made me sob so hard I thought my chest would burst.</p>
<p>In September, my photography will be shown for the first time.  I do vividly remember that it was you who first put a camera into my six-year-old hands.  I have never been able to match my sister's or my uncle's ability to photograph landscapes, but over the past six months I've managed to prove even to myself that I have an eye for composition and a definite photographic style.  </p>
<p>I find myself saying this a lot:  I wish you could have seen it.</p>
<p>We'll light a candle for you at Mom's wedding.</p>
<p><em>(...and today it rains almost as hard as <a href="http://domesticat.net/node/533">the week he died</a>.  A different year, a different state, and yet so strangely familiar.)</em></p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Paint it black</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2007/11/paint-it-black" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2007/11/paint-it-black</id>
    <published>2007-11-26T01:08:10+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-11-26T01:09:16+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="atlanta" />
    <category term="death" />
    <category term="funeral" />
    <category term="remembrance" />
    <category term="techops" />
    <category term="trips" />
    <category term="wake" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Loss came through tweets and emails, a drip of information at a time.  First a note from a tech staffer saying that someone had died, with a pointer to more information, including the name.  </p>
<p>I saw it at work, and I wondered who it would be, whose name had to take on a different status.  Death is so final it seems that we should all be able to feel it when it happens, to know that something is missing that wasn't missing ten minutes ago.  But it's not like that.  We have to be told, and for me it was via email.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Loss came through tweets and emails, a drip of information at a time.  First a note from a tech staffer saying that someone had died, with a pointer to more information, including the name.  </p>
<p>I saw it at work, and I wondered who it would be, whose name had to take on a different status.  Death is so final it seems that we should all be able to feel it when it happens, to know that something is missing that wasn't missing ten minutes ago.  But it's not like that.  We have to be told, and for me it was via email.</p>
<p>I didn't know Phil as well as many of my friends did, but his was a presence I enjoyed, and would not turn down if it was offered.  Phil was memorable, flamboyant, outrageous; he earned his 'ink pad' nickname through an exploit at dragon*con that we still talk about today.  Most of tech staff couldn't make it to Phil's funeral, but we decided to have the wake at Kim's the day after Thanksgiving.  Black Friday?  Sure.  Seemed oddly appropriate.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060196805" title="DSC_0726"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2389/2060196805_d0ee1b9a01_m.jpg" alt="DSC_0726" title="DSC_0726"  class=" flickr-photo-img" height="161" width="240" /></a></p>
<p>I will tell you this.  We cried.  It was easier to look around at the other people in the room through the lens of the camera, because the grief was there and palpable and rubbing raw at the throats of every person in the room, and the lens of a camera can sometimes provide the illusion of distance, while giving your nervous hands something to fidget with.  I watched my friends in front of me hold each other as they cried while Crispy spoke, and I thought, how sad it is that we never find out how we're going to be remembered.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060152127" title="DSC_0691"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2332/2060152127_5d9f1a231b_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0691" title="DSC_0691"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060198377" title="DSC_0727"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2381/2060198377_3f1414d472_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0727" title="DSC_0727"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060981570" title="DSC_0728"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2010/2060981570_d41082b040_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0728" title="DSC_0728"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060983272" title="DSC_0729"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2056/2060983272_109057259b_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0729" title="DSC_0729"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a></p>
<p>But we'll also remember Phil's wake as the night that Ogre proposed to his girlfriend:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060188135" title="DSC_0720"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2315/2060188135_a3f8b6ad1f_m.jpg" alt="DSC_0720" title="DSC_0720"  class=" flickr-photo-img" height="240" width="161" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060194095" title="DSC_0724"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2032/2060194095_9442826605_m.jpg" alt="DSC_0724" title="DSC_0724"  class=" flickr-photo-img" height="240" width="161" /></a></p>
<p>...and silliness and camera-clowning we'll all probably regret when our grandchildren see these:  </p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060170269" title="DSC_0704"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2403/2060170269_cb84bdf553_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0704" title="DSC_0704"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060963272" title="DSC_0715"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2394/2060963272_a5f7821d57_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0715" title="DSC_0715"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060999250" title="DSC_0739"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2100/2060999250_418c0b4100_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0739" title="DSC_0739"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060253745" title="DSC_0764"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2020/2060253745_513fe4212e_s.jpg" alt="DSC_0764" title="DSC_0764"  class=" flickr-photo-img" width="75" height="75" /></a></p>
<p>(Michelle via IM today:  "Why are we all always grabbing each others' boobs?  Were we all bottle fed or something?")</p>
<p>Life's like that.  It's a blend of sorrow and magic, tears and joy, and all the mundane bullshit you go through with your friends on a yearly basis.  I've felt so out of the loop over the past year as my day-to-day life has been eaten by my job, but this group is home in a way that no other place has ever been.  We button our shirts and our lips and our opinions when we're on the clock, but this group of people sees the unfiltered version:  glorious highs, warts, hangovers, and all.</p>
<p>I missed them so much it ached when I walked in the room and saw so many people there, and that made it worse to see them grieve so much.</p>
<p>But then the stories came, then the photos, and then the remembrance, and I realized that I want to stay a part of a group that can take a moment like the one on the left and turn it into the one on the right:</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060152127" title="DSC_0691"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2332/2060152127_5d9f1a231b_m.jpg" alt="DSC_0691" title="DSC_0691"  class=" flickr-photo-img" height="240" width="161" /></a> <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/2060940514" title="DSC_0695"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2365/2060940514_1757613351_m.jpg" alt="DSC_0695" title="DSC_0695"  class=" flickr-photo-img" height="240" width="161" /></a></p>
<p>I stayed up until four a.m., curled up on the couch with a friend, talking, watching; one by one everyone left until it was just us, the glow of a computer monitor, a never-ending trance mix and a dying fire.  Before I closed my eyes, I thought two things:</p>
<p>1) <em>God, Chocobunny, please stop snoring</em> and<br />
2) <em>Whenever my time comes, I want it to be like this.</em></p>
<p><em>(In fact, <a href="http://domesticat.net/node/1193">I wrote about that once</a>.  Instructions included in that 2005 entry.)</em></p>
<p>The full photoset <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/domesticat/sets/72157603283036768/">can be found on flickr</a>.</p>
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