STAY.

  • tribute for the living

    Stay. That’s what we want when we’ve lost a loved one. We want them to STAY. If only for a minute, an hour. To feel again their embrace. To kiss their cheek. To listen to one more word of love, or kindness, or wisdom, or humor. Just, stay… and we have to decide what to do with our grief.

    And the pain. Even over the years when it stabs us afresh and reminds us anew of what we have lost. The day comes when we think we are past it and then we read or see something and suddenly are assaulted by a memory and it is as if we are back in that moment, when we lost the one we loved.

    And so we gather at important moments, not only in tribute to grandparents or parents or children or sisters or brothers or spouses or friends but also to figure out what to do with the grief that never fully goes away. So what do we do?

    We listen to beautiful music. To gentle sounds. We recite prayers and still, we do not always know what to do.

    Become that which you have lost.

    For some of us we mourn someone who never gave the love that we wanted and so it is our task in this world to give that love that we did not receive to someone else so that the legacy of love not given will be love given. For others it is all the love that we did receive; all the goodness, all the kindness, all the wisdom, all the help. And we know that only way to honor the memory of the person that we have lost is to give that to someone else to become what we have lost because the measure of our loss is the measure of our blessing. There is no grief without there first being a blessing.

    And there is no sadness without a previous richness. And so it is our task to use our grief as a springboard. Our sadness is a stage and our grief a beginning because we know that sooner or later we will be there, too. None of us will live forever and the question won’t be to what degree or depth of pain did we feel for those that are lost, it will be to what did we evolve; and what goodness and kindness did we express to those who are still here?

    So if you have gathered to pay tribute; remember to embrace the recollection of someone or many whom you have lost, don’t neglect to pay them the greatest tribute which is to be the kind of person of whom they would be proud.

    - as delivered by Rabbi Wolpe and listened to by me at this morning’s Kever Avot services, Mt. Sinai Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills

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    Mother’s Day, Sunday 8:50 a.m. — I raced up Van Nuys Boulevard; death grip on the steering wheel “willing” every light to remain green. The southbound Pacific Surf-liner leaves at 9:04 a.m. and my morning lallygagging has now forced me to pray that someone at the little Amtrak station plants his or her body in front of the conductor and monster of a train begging for them to wait just one more minute before it choo-choos off to San Diego.

    Then I got to thinking about just one more minute and how a seemingly nothing amount of time can often be a critical moment.  So, for giggles I started a list. 60 seconds makes a world of difference when:

    . caramelizing sugar
    . a light signal changes from green to yellow to red
    . kissing
    . holding your breath
    . preparing soft cooked eggs
    . speaking in front of a heckling audience
    . trying to come up with Jeopardy’s final question
    . betting on the Kentucky Derby… heck any race
    . boiling milk (notice I’m in the kitchen a lot here?)
    . delivering a pregnant pause
    . holding someone’s feet to the fire (figuratively speaking!)
    . paying cell phone charges
    . listening to a beating heart

    So? What else? Leave a comment below and help grow the list.

    (Oh, my prayer was answered — we caught our train. The conductor actually waited and yelled out, “Just one more minute!”)

  • family reunion planning tips

    Quite often it is at a Celebration of Life that families lament not having planned any family gatherings sooner.

    So why not start planning one now?

    The Mad Hatter in Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass chooses to celebrate every day! You can think about planning a family celebration now… just because.

    Planning your family celebration can seem to be a formidable task when you consider all the variables and conflicting needs that demand your attention. The logistics of the planning involve bringing distant family members together, each with unique needs, budgets, time constraints, and contributions to the family dynamic.  The rewards of your celebration can be felt for generations in your family, so don’t let these points drive you away from hosting an event. Here are some thoughts of ours, as seen from the perspective of professional planners, that might help you in your planning.

    - First and most importantly, appoint someone in the family as chairman, benevolent dictator, or in the case of a fiscally secure sponsor, as a patron to be a point person and make decisions.   Events seldom materialize out of committee.  The designated celebration leader should be someone with understanding of the family dynamics, and possess the time, patience, and tact to arrange the details.   If you are fortunate enough to have a patron or even a partial sponsor, you will eliminate some of the family’s exclusion due to budget limits and simultaneously diminish the family dynamic of comparative wealth analysis between reunion attendees.

    - Once the wishes and constraints of family members are expressed as to date, place, activities, budget limits, and schedules, then decide what the plan will be.  Once the decisions are made, build anticipation by frequently communicating with attendees about itineraries, shared assignments, and attendance lists.

    - It will be impossible to meet everyone’s schedules and desires.  Not everyone will be able to attend.

    - Create time and activities that enable interactions between otherwise distanced family members. 

    - Enjoy, enrich, & enable. Dilute overly intense family dynamics with activities that bring laughter, light-hearted fun, cultural growth, and whole family participation.  Try to avoid events that restrict cross generational participation or are overly competitive.  Good family activities can be cultural and informative or simply zany and silly.

    - Sibling rivalries, comparisons of achievements, and resurrected past conflicts are a few of the potential pit-falls to the reunion that can lead to disappointments and injured relationships.  The reunion should be a time to strengthen and evaluate relationships.  With a mind set of compassionate tolerance and a gift of generous emotional space, incendiary events will be minimized.

    - Build reunion memories that can be preserved in photographs, videos, T-shirts and other long lasting reunion memorabilia.  We have seen marvelous cookbooks compiled by contributing reunion attendees. Scrap-booking nights, and recordings of family histories and genealogy also make great reunion activities. Consider assigning attendees to bring favorite family photos and ancestral images that can be incorporated into the family history.

    - Finally, remember that the reunion organizer will no more be able to fully satisfy every family member than politicians can satisfy every constituent.  You are serving the interests of the family as a whole.  Through your efforts, the family elders will find joy in their posterity and all will realize the blessings of a more connected extended family.

    If you are looking for additional help with your family celebration planning, Ever After CELEBRATIONS will provide suggestions for locations, themes and more.

  • the-big-lebowski
    by Joyce Gemperlein

    Goodbye, “What would your last meal be?” Hello, “Where do you want your ashes scattered?”

    In idle moments over many years, I have pondered the first question, which amounts to figuring out what my favorite food is.

    This is a difficult proposition because I am pretty much an equal opportunity glutton.

    This endeavor is also compromised by my inability to dwell upon my demise for more than two seconds at a time. This extends to walking to the left in a bookstore if, on the right, sits a display of those warped 100 Things to Do/Eat/Visit Before You Die titles.

    But more and more people are being cremated these days – from 4 percent of Americans before 1980 to 39 percent now, according to the Cremation Association of North America.

    And so ruminations about where one would want to be scattered are cutting-edge. I even found the question on a list of “suggested conversation starters” that includes, “If you could lock someone in a room for a day and torment him, who would it be and what would you do?” and “What vegetable do you resemble?”

    As a result, I’ve been thinking seriously but fleetingly about the scattering of some or part of the five pounds of material that result from the cremation of the average-size human.

    This is particularly true for “wildcat scattering,” which makes the news now and then because it is the term for the rogue, unpermitted distribution of any amount of material that we commonly call “cremains” or “ashes.” For example, in January the executors of the estate of Elaine Kaufman, the famously cantankerous owner of a restaurant on a fashionable section of Manhattan’s Second Avenue that caters to the rich and celebrities, were told by New York City officials that it was illegal to honor the desire she stated in her will to have her cremains scattered on the street near her establishment. About the same time, the family of a murdered Portuguese journalist honored his wishes by (illegally) pouring his cremated remains down a subway grate in Times Square. (There has been no explanation of why he stipulated this grimy site.)

    There’s the phenomenon at California’s Disneyland and Florida’s Magic Kingdom, where the maintenance staffs close down the rides and reportedly use a vacuum specially designed to clean up cremation ashes illegally dumped among the ghosts at the Haunted Mansion; and, presumably with a “yo, ho, ho,” at the Pirates of the Caribbean rides by their friends or relatives.(News reports do not include the “It’s a Small World (after all)” boat cruise in lists of favorite Disney dumping sites. Perhaps its tune is too much of an earworm even for the deceased.)

    Despite my reluctance to embrace the issue, many questions arise when, unbidden, it sneaks into my brain. Should it be a place I’ve been to and where I’ve felt passionate, at one with myself and the universe?

    Hmm… perhaps a certain windswept beach near Monterey, or around the bacon display or in the mayonnaise aisle of a supermarket? Or maybe somewhere I’ve wanted to be, doing something I never dared? The Catskills in the summer, dancing with Patrick Swayze in the last scene of Dirty Dancing leaps to mind because my life would have been very different if I had ever had the confidence to do that, as well as the Mashed Potato.

    Should I use the great power of my death to order my descendants to perform acrobatic, illegal, or dangerous post-mortem activities even if they ignored all sorts of things I had asked them to do while I was alive? Maybe not. A woman honoring her sister’s wishes to be tossed into the sea off the Connemara coast slipped into the ocean and drowned.

    Kelly Murtaugh formed the International Scattering Society (ISS) in 2005 to take the logistical and emotional burdens off the shoulders of the survivors of people who designate scattering. Murtaugh was haunted by her deceased father’s request to “take a little piece of me everywhere with you when you travel.” She and a co-founder put that together with the national rise in cremation rates and the increase in the desire to personalize funeral ceremonies. ISS will research whether a permit is technically required to lawfully scatter ashes at any given site – and then she and her international network of helpers will perform the service.

    But here are her tips for do-it-yourselfers:

    • Technically, scattering a person’s ashes on uninhabited public land is OK, but lots of popular private and public places require a permit or ban it altogether.

    • Requests for permits at ball parks are generally turned down. An unofficial explanation of this is that players would be spooked by the possibility of inhaling somebody’s Aunt Mary as they slide into home base or make a touchdown. Still, the potential to causing a scene or a disruption may be the biggest reason for the denial of a request to scatter ashes.

    • New York’s Central Park is fair game, but if you’re caught flinging relatives into the air at the Grand Canyon or the Statue of Liberty without a permit, you could be arrested. Murtaugh also cautions that the most common hazard of ash-scattering is “blow-back.” “You must always check the wind. In particular, if you happen to be on a mountain, remember that there will be an updraft. Don’t scatter the entire contents [of the cremains container] in one swift motion. Scatter a little at a time. No matter what, you will probably get some ashes on yourself.” Murtaugh says she is eager for someone to ask her to take ashes to the top of Mt. Everest, which suggests another line of thinking. Where do I NOT want to be scattered? Not Mt. Everest, which is too high. Not outer space, where there is too much scary nothingness, or the open sea with scary everythingness in its depths — in addition to the seasickness factor. The only diversion I’ve had from this parlor game I’m playing in my head has come in the form of information that the cremation rate will rise to 60 percent by the year 2025. This means that some 675 tons of cremains could potentially be scattered then. We must get serious about dusting.

    (Image: The Big Lebowski)

  • OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
    Gerontologists and other health professionals who work with those facing death say end-of-life conversations generally are valuable to both the patient and family. They also concede such conversations are difficult and, sadly, rare. Here are some tips they offer on conducting such a talk:

    · It’s up to you whether your talk concerns just practical affairs or deeper emotions. The conversation can range from whether a dying parent wants a feeding tube or ventilator to the music he wants played at his funeral, or if he wants a funeral at all, says Capital Hospice chief executive Malene J. Davis, a former hospice nurse.

    - There are several ways to broach the topic. To a receptive parent, an adult child might open with, “Mom, do you want to talk about this? You know what the doctors say?” suggests Arlington psychotherapist Robin McMahon. The parent could say, “I am dying, I would like to tell you what my life has meant to me.

    - Another option is to tell a story about someone else to start the conversation, Davis suggests. “You tell them you have a friend who is dying and ‘I need to know about what you want, how you feel.’ If they close you out, don’t give up, go back at another time.”

    - A holiday family dinner offers an opportunity to raise the subject, Davis says. An adult child might begin by expressing thanks for the gift he is about to share: explicit instructions regarding his own death. “Instead of starting with Dad or Mom, say, ‘If I got hit by a truck tomorrow, this is what I would want… And don’t you dare dress me in pajamas in my coffin,’ ” Davis suggests. Have pen and paper at the table for note-taking.

    · It’s not always the parent who resists such a conversation. If kids are in denial, McMahon says, “a wise parent fills out an advance directive so the adult child has something.”

    · If parents are in denial, the children can give them a living will, durable power of attorney and other documents and say, “Here it is, read it some time. It’s here for when you need it.” Parents reluctant to discuss this with their children, or to cede control of their assets, might want a lawyer or accountant to take over their finances or give a child limited control over a portion of their funds.

    · An adult child might preface money discussions by talking about herself, explaining who in her family knows about her assets before asking her parents to reveal theirs. That question might be phrased, “If I needed to, where would I find your papers?” Davis says.

    · Remind yourself that, as difficult as it is, an end-of-life conversation can bring peace of mind. Ask a parent “to reflect on the pluses of the last part of their life, to let you be a part of the journey,” McMahon urges. “It’s a very loving thing for parents to do, to leave that for their kids.” She adds, “The worst part of not having this conversation is the child trying to figure out what a parent wants at a point when a parent can’t decide.” - Annie Groer

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    How many times have you heard someone say, There’s no such thing as a stupid question? That may be true, but I’d like to add that there is also no such thing as too many questions either.

    We don’t ask each other enough questions. We get to a certain point in a relationship and think we know all there is to know. I recently spent a few days with a friend visiting from the East Coast. She is a teacher’s teacher. She has a penchant for asking questions that cut through the mundane and head straight for the gut. If I choose to “pass” there are always three more waiting around the bend that are even more cutting. So I listen to them all and answer, some carefully, some without much thought. Then it’s easy for me to ask her the same set or make up some great non-stupid questions of my own.

    And the end result is that our conversations are varied and deep.  Colorful and entertaining. Enlightening and telling. Revealing and interesting. And, the friendship is meaningful. So why don’t more people ask more questions? What are they afraid of?

© 2011 Ever After Celebrations