So teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom. -- Psalms 90:12
This is not my wedding anniversary. I think that will be easier when it comes
along in a couple of months. This was
just our day. I’m not sure exactly how
it started, or, rather, I remember exactly how it started. I was driving that stupid blue Malibu. It cornered like a hog that had been eating
too much sour mash, and the Boss slid over to the center of the bench seat. The next year, I bought her flowers or
something. And every year after.
Last night I drove out to the cemetery with a handful of her
favorite cut flowers. On the shelf on
the island in the kitchen is her stack of Alan Jackson CDs. She liked to get those on the 24th. I usually bought her favorite perfume for
Christmas, like last Christmas, but sometimes, if she ran low in summer
that would be her gift. In the old days,
yellow roses, chosen for some forgotten reason, were replaced by bouquets
of lilies.
This day last year, instead of a gift, we went out for dinner, and she had
prime rib. She had been already been
hospitalized and released three times, and the doctors had no idea why. We had even been to see a specialist at the university
medical center who was as baffled as the local neurologists. I don’t blame them. She knew what it was, and I refused to
believe it. She made me go to the
funeral home where she picked out her casket.
We went to the lawyer to set up our estate. She picked the spot in the cemetery where the
big black stone stands. Miss Organization,
I called her. Even the Lord respected
that.
Vickie was a faithful believer and follower of Christ, in
the extreme, as she was in most everything.
It is oddly comforting to think that the Lord spoke to her, and she heard
and responded as she did. She kept
telling me, “This is my last …”, and I kept saying, “No.” Don’t say that. Yet here I sit alone on this day for the
first time since my age was a third what it is now.
I tell stories so that I don’t live in the past. For me, the present can only be understood by
the past. Not everyone is like that,
maybe it’s the storyteller’s burden, but I don’t mind. If this has been too personal, I
apologize. Sometimes I write something I’ve
planned and hope that it helps a reader.
Other times, like today, I write something I need to know and am helped
by it.
11 comments:
Nothing wrong with being a little personal.
*hugs*
Not too personal when you are among friends. I hope your special day was filled with many happy memories as well.
There is an aphorism I can't find right now. Something having to do with Christianity being passed through testimony and not Scripture (although it was not a knock on Scripture).
Thanks Mush, for sharing your stories.
Thanks, John.
Beautiful tribute, Mush. Thank you for sharing it with us. Otherwise, we'd never have known.
Yes, thanks for sharing, Brother.
Not too personal at all. Rather, it shows how human you are.
I thought he was the fungus among us.
(An oldy but... well, I like it).
"It is oddly comforting to think that the Lord spoke to her, and she heard and responded as she did. "
Something similar happened this weekend. Cousin Rick, one of my few relatives and somebody I really liked but saw maybe 6 times, called me and left a message on Friday. He had never called me before. Didn't notice until Saturday. I called and left a message Saturday night and again Sunday morning. He died on Sunday morning from a heart attack we found out last night. Make of it what you wish. Guess we will chat later.
Thanks, Ben and Rick.
John, I'm sorry to hear of your cousin's passing. Yours is not the first such story I've heard; in a strange way, it's comforting to think that we might be given a last chance to reach out to those we love, no matter how distant. He'll be in my prayers today.
My condolences and prayers, John.
You will indeed chat later.
Aw, thanks Coonrades.
Sorry for your loss, John.
Post a Comment