There is a certain amount of power struggle in all family occasions, but particularly in the events and ceremonies surrounding a death. Grief is a very personal thing, and people tend to assert ownership: who has suffered the greatest lost, where one is in the hierarchy of mourning, all exacerbated by emotional intensity.
In my years as a hospice volunteer, I often had a front-row seat to this. I remember puttering in the small open-plan kitchen at Victoria Hospice one late winter's afternoon, when two warring factions of a soon-to-be-bereaved family exploded into confrontation in the lobby. I froze, and don't remember if I had the presence of mind to run to alert the staff, but they would have heard the shouting anyway.
I was determined to avoid similar scenes in the weeks leading up to my mother's memorial service, knowing how much it would have upset Demeter -- and knowing how easy it might be to trip the wire.
It didn't take my non-existent powers of prophecy to predict that Double Leo Sister would want to run the show. I am, after all, a survivor of both her weddings, both ambitious pageants with items, displays, performances, and minute details being continually added, up until the last possible minute.
This means I was not particularly surprised when DLS didn't log in to the ZOOM meeting for planning the service with the minister. She said she slept through it: "I've been through a lot."
The minister forwarded transcripts of the meeting to her with handy-dandy ways to add comments and annotations; DLS said she'd been "denied access to the files".
To be fair, she's always had a deep distrust of (and impatience with) computers, ironic, given how important they are in the lives of the men in her life, two Zoomer sons and a husband in IT. Even before the internet took over, she had a self-proclaimed phobia of paper. This was her justification for never responding to letters, and must have made record-keeping for her work a nightmare.
As someone who's known her since her birth, I'd say she simply doesn't want to be pinned down, but I'm hardly an objective witness.
Her computer-literate husband and younger son eventually ironed out the "denied access", after I'd copied and pasted notes to send through email. I tried to explain that the church group for Demeter's neighbourhood would, by tradition, being organising the food. She told me she would provide the food -- just as she had done for her best friend's memorial service, which she had put together during the pandemic.
By this time, seventy people were expected, so I quietly made arrangements with the volunteers anyway, most of whom I knew from my own days with the church, which DLS had left as a teenager.
My mantra became I'm doing this for Demeter. I said it under my breath and repetitively.
DLS was now heavily involved in designing display tables for the reception, which she hoped to use as a conversation "activity", to "get people involved".
I decided not to say that, at late afternoon on Valentine's Day, those people kind enough to show up would probably want to go home, and set about my most pressing duty -- writing the eulogy.








