by Laura Crum
Many
people have written lately on this blog of loss and change. It seems to be our current theme. Since I am in the middle of a great loss and period of change, I have
little else on my mind. So you must forgive the sad nature of my posts (or just
don’t bother to read them). And I must warn you that nothing in this post today
relates to horses or writing about horses. It does, however, relate to loss and
change.
There
are always some flowers in our garden. This is what it is to live on the
California coast. Ever since my husband died in November I have brought flowers
from our garden to his grave—a couple of times a week.
Andy’s
grave is in the old cemetery where he used to play his pipes to honor the
veterans on Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day. He is buried right in front of the
biggest oak tree, where he often stood and piped.
I
have placed a bench by his grave and there will some day be a gravestone with a
bagpiper engraved on it. The quote my son came up with was “He played his pipes
for the good of all here.” And that seems to fit Andy.
But
anyway, in the meantime I bring flowers from our garden and place them on the
grave. I stand barefoot on his grave—because he once asked me to—actually he
asked me to dance barefoot, but I haven’t quite got there yet. But I stand
barefoot, whether in the mud or the dust, and I put flowers from our garden
there, and I sit on the bench and contemplate the huge old oak tree and I talk
to Andy.
It
sometimes strikes me that this bringing of fresh flowers from our garden to his
grave is a good metaphor for how I see life right now. I tend our garden for no
other reason than love. There is no practical need to do it. I choose the
flowers for Andy’s grave with care, aware of their beauty, and arrange them in
simple jars. I place them on his grave with love, glad to see that there are
always fresh flowers there.
I know that there is no real
importance to this. Andy’s spirit is with me and at our home as much as it is
anywhere. His bones lie in that peaceful graveyard, that is all. Andy would not
mind or feel less loved if I did not bring flowers to his grave. Like most
things we do in life, it is a relatively meaningless gesture. This would
include most of what I do, or most of what you do. If it does not sustain life
or grow awareness, it’s relatively meaningless. You know, like when you go to
hairdresser to get blond streaks put in your hair. There’s nothing wrong with
this. But it’s meaningless. So is my putting flowers on Andy’s grave
meaningless.
But
it is the love behind it that counts. The love I feel for him that makes me
want to do it—the love I still believe he feels for us that makes the whole
thing worth doing. The flowers, frail and fleeting, from our much-loved garden,
are a symbol of that love. Yes, they die, as we die. And yet they are beautiful
and life brings more flowers constantly. And love endures as the flowers
endure. Constantly changing, constantly there.
I
look at old gravestones in the cemetery. A baby that died in 1800. No one alive
remembers that baby. And yet she was loved. The love endures. Or so I believe.
I
remember my dogs and horses that have died many years ago. I still love them. I
believe I will see them again.
A
hundred years from now we will all be dead. Perhaps no one will remember me or
Andy. But flowers will still bloom. And our love will still be alive and present.
9 comments:
Beautifully written and so true...
It matters.
Never doubt this.
Thank you for sharing.
Bill
I firmly believe that love goes on. It has to. I read this with tears streaming down my face. My heart aches for you.
Lovely post, Laura. More reflective than sad, to my mind.
This is beautiful and so very much what I needed to hear right now.
Such a beautiful post, Laura. It made me think of what my mother said at my grandmother's funeral. Those small, loved-filled gestures are not meaningless, they truly matter. They fill us up. Or start to refill us up, give us the strength to go on, and for all that love to go on. Makes me tearful just thinking about this.
Thank you for sharing these thoughts with us.
Thank you.
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