Demeter was advanced in years when she died, and made quite extensive notes about twenty years ago about her memorial service preferences. It was a time when she was attending lots of memorial services at her church, and it must have been frequently on her mind.
As a result, it was much upon my mind as well, as she mailed documents and poems to our house in Hades. I often thought fleetingly about what I might say at her memorial, and imagined it would be about my loss and how each of us loses a different person when a particular loved one dies, because we're all multifaceted in our relationships - never the same person to those around us.
I wrote about this in my blog a decade ago, when I attended the memorial of a friend's husband, and wondered at the varied perceptions of him, reflected in the testimonials. Which one was accurate? All of them, in a way.
As it turned out, I, as the eldest child, was assigned Demeter's eulogy, and that's a different business, because it meant I had to tell my mother's life story in ten minutes, which didn't leave much room for going on about my own particular sense of loss.
I was actually pretty grateful for that. I was also grateful for what I'd learned from being a hospice volunteer, and making family history presentations for BIFHSGO.
Hospice taught me many things, but chiefly, that grief may be universal, but it is not, by any means, identical, and varies wildly even within a single human experience. I didn't journal at all in the week preceding and following my mother's death. When my entries resumed, they contained a certain amount of sorrow, guilt, and rage -- not always, and not always at the same time. Fortunately, I knew this was not abnormal, because a tenet at Hospice was: "Anger is a secondary emotion."
The primary emotion isn't always grief -- but it often is.
Doing presentations for a family history society is good preparation for taking on a eulogy. You have to be organised, clear, reasonably entertaining, and accurate.
But not too accurate. That's why they call it a "eulogy".
So, just as I had for my presentations, I wrote in chunks, edited, and reshaped. I read it out loud to myself, and timed it. I pushed aside the rage and irritation, knowing it was the grief talking, and repeated to myself: "I'm doing this for Demeter."
The rage and irritation was, of course, largely a result of how Double Leo Sister was manifesting her own grief, i.e. almost frantic over-busyness, not only wanting to run most of the memorial service, but fretting about emptying and cleaning up Demeter's condo. (Demeter owned her condo outright, and there is no deadline to vacate it.)
DLS was anxious to bring friends with her from her up-Island community to help with the condo-clearing, friends whom I don't know, and who did not know our mother.
"You've done so much already; we want to take some of the burden off you," DLS declared.
I kept my retorts to myself. I was doing this for Demeter.
I engaged in defensive condo-clearing ahead of my sister's arrival for the memorial service. I knew I couldn't sort through everything on my own, but I had some idea of where Demeter's private and personal stuff -- her toiletries, her journals -- were stashed, and went in for ninety-minute sessions to dispose of some items and to ferry others out of the reach of relative strangers. It made me feel better, anyway.
And I hit pay dirt. Not only did I find photos, documents, and keepsakes that brought my mother's life more sharply into focus, but I found the Once Upon a Lifetime workbook, and an accompanying notebook - two items for which I'd been searching diligently since Demeter's death.
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| Still available online! |
Back when I had two really young children, I had somehow snatched an opportunity to browse at Bolen Books one afternoon, when this item caught my eye. I believe I gave it to Demeter as a Mother's Day present. I was not prepared for how seriously she took it.
She meticulously answered each question (except for the military section - she didn't serve) over the next few years, using, as suggested, a supplementary notebook in order to go into detail. She added and updated over the next decade.
I now had a tool to help me step away from myself and my perceptions, and steer the eulogy towards what she thought was important. At least I hope I did. She would have had some feedback and corrections. Fair enough. It's her story.
Delivering the eulogy promised an extra benefit. My part would be first, after the minister's introduction and the lighting of the chalice.
So, I found myself, sitting in the front row of the sanctuary, listening to the pianist play "Suo Gan", and for the first time since my mother died, suddenly feeling overcome.
I sternly put my tears aside.
I'm doing this for Demeter, I thought.








