I am
amazed by the number of people who reached out to me about my last blog. I even reconnected with folks I remember from
those trips to Morehead State back in the day.
I have had a hard time the last few days, as this has hit me harder than
I would have thought. I suppose one does
not really think about such things and how hard they will be when they happen. I am experiencing a weird mix of emotions. Every time I think about it, about her, about
her kids and about her death it just seems crazy and I am unsure how I should act,
what I should do. I have stared at
Google maps looking for where I think it happened, just east of Millerstown
road on Zimmerman is what I hear. I have
zoomed in to look at every foot of that road, not sure what I am looking for, and
obviously there won’t be real time pictures of the accident. There won’t be skid marks I could analyze,
there is nothing, nothing but the trees and fields, same thing that has always
been along that stretch of road.
I
have electronically chatted with her oldest daughter, Caitlin. I think that is cool – I suppose that is more
for my own selfish reasons, trying to hold onto something that was, and is not
there now. Still I think it is
cool. She is the spitting image of her
Mom. From reading some of her posts on
FB I suspect she has a lot of the same attitudes, outlooks and life
philosophies as well. Good for you
Caitlin because those are some of the attributes that made your Mom who she
was. I received a very nice email from
my blog from a friend of Alison’s from Myrtle tree Baptist Church, telling
about the influence Alison had on her. It
was a very touching email. It seems
weird for me to even be thinking about Alison and all the times we had back in
the day and since we started our journey together but each of us have followed
our own very different paths in life.
Her journey took her back to our hometown, mine took me literally around
the world and I could never imagine moving back to our hometown.
Why
is it that we allow the wrong things to dominate our lives? Why are we in such a hurry to go and to
do? Why… why not slow down a bit and
realize the stupid shit most of us are chasing is the wrong stuff! I think Alison understood that better than
most. That syndrome seems to get worse
the older we get, our bodies grow old, we get set in our ways
and we seem to forget the important things in life. I hope each of you can hold onto your
childhood spirit, be young and mischievous, adventurous and light hearted. At least try to be that for one day, just one
day and do it in remembrance of Alison Bodey!
I had to find it but I remembered a quote from John Steinbeck from “The
Winter of Our Discontent” that I liked when I read it and I think is perfect
here:
It's so much darker when a light goes out than it
would have been if it had never shone.”
The
world just seems a little grayer, a darker place without her in it
anymore.
I
suppose the most important question one can ask at times like this is, did they
really live life? I guess at this point
in my life I should know, or at least understand what it means to lose someone
that is dear to me. It never seems to
fail that when I tell myself that, intellectually I know it to be true, death
is the inevitable end of life for all of us.
But loss is not about the intellectuality of things. Loss is about the gaping hole left in one’s
heart when our friends and family pass away.
Sad thing is, one can never really repair the holes this kind of loss
brings. All we can do is to learn to
live our lives around the holes. On more
than one occasion after a loss, I have wondered, wouldn’t it be cool if we
could have just one more conversation.
One more chance to ask the things we never thought we should, one more
chance to ask the things that are important in our lives. Wouldn’t it be a wonderful thing to get one
more chance to make up for the time we think we have?
I
am reminded of a favorite scene from a movie called “Waking Ned Devine” that
Bride and I just watched again recently.
One of the main characters, Jackie O’Shea, was talking at a
funeral:
“Michael
O'Sullivan was my great friend. But I
don't ever remember telling him that. The words that are spoken at a funeral
are spoken too late for the man who is dead. What a wonderful thing it would be
to visit your own funeral. To sit at the front and hear what was said, maybe
say a few things yourself. Michael and I grew old together. But at times, when
we laughed, we grew young. If he was here now, if he could hear what I say, I'd
congratulate him on being a great man, and thank him for being a friend.”
I
think that is how I feel about Alison. She
was a great friend, but I don’t think I ever told her so, at least not so
simpley stated. I want to thank her for
being my friend, I am better for having known her.
“Michael
O'Sullivan was my great friend, but I don't ever remember telling him that.”
That
is a sad commentary really. How many
people in our lives do we consider to be great friends and we never tell them
that, not in a meaningful way anyway. What is it that we can do to ensure our
friends know how we feel about them? If
you have never watched that movie, you must go and rent it, it is on my top 10
– perfect justice all the way around at the end of that movie.
Bride
asked me if I’d like to go to her funeral.
I was unsure of what that answer should be. It really turned out to be a moot point, I
have to travel to Canada for work on the day of her funeral. I wondered if I would want to go if I did not
have a prior work commitment. It has
been a long, long time since we have seen each other. I do not know her kids, her parents are gone. I wondered if it would be just for my own
sense of closure. I am not big on
funerals, even less excited about viewings, although my Sister told me the
casket was done with Pink Floyd which I would have liked to have seen. I did not even go over to the casket at my Dad’s
viewing. I did that once when I was
younger, and then that was the last image I had of that person. For me, I do not want the rest of my days
with the image of what is left of someone I loved, propped up in a box for all
to see. I refuse to remember my friends like
that. I choose to remember them in life,
not death. Would I go, I think I would. While I can use my mind’s eye to remember my
friend and the parts of the journey of life we shared, it would be fun to
listen to others tell their stories and shared experiences with Alison.
After
reading back through this I suppose this is still about me mourning the loss of
my great friend and not yet a tribute to her – I am working on it.
Below is a picture from one of her albums on FB, adorable donkeys – who has an album called adorable donkeys?
Our grief is always about us. I'm not crying because Alison is in Heaven, pain free, reunited with her parents and many other loved ones. I'm crying because I miss my cousin and friend. And that in itself is a tribute to the woman Alison Bodey was.
ReplyDeleteI was a friend of Allison's at work, and while we weren't close, I was shocked by her death. My hands trembled while I attempted to text my wife, who was Allison's supervisor and had known her far longer than I. Allison and I shared the love of Pink Floyd, as well as our humerous take on life. She was a guest at our wedding, and one of the last to leave at the reception.
ReplyDeleteI can't say I was ever close to Allison, but I always liked her, especially given our Floyd connection. It hurts to lose a friend, to think of the hurt of all her family and friends, but most of all it hurts to think that I will never again hear her voice, or see her in the store.
While I can't say we were close, she was definitely a part of the lives of both my wife Lisa, and myself. I consider Allison to be "Inner Circle" in a group that is far closer to FAMILY than coworker.
When I miss seeing where she would have been, what she would be doing, I find myself thinking "She was here. She went through those doors, she moved those boxes, printed those labels." No matter what else changes, Allison is not someone I will ever forget.
She lives on so long as we remember her, and honor her memory, but we shouldn't let the mourning get the best of us. We need to remember her, but at some point, we need to just let her go. Every one of us will find that time, that point where we can say "I'm sorry she is gone, and I miss her, but the best way to cherish Allison is to move on."
Remember her warmly, share your memories, keep her in your heart, but don't forget that there is an ordinary world out there you can still affect, people you can still touch when you tell them you love them, and friends you can pat on the back and laugh with, and do that while they are still here.
Eventually I will forget the teary faces I saw at the funeral home, I will forget what color the carpet was, and I already forgot what the face of the man in the suit holding the door open looked like. I was there to pay my respects to Allison, her children, and my friend Kevin Sanderson.I still have no idea what to say to any of them except "I'm sorry".
As far as the Sheriff's report, that is always cold and clinical, and I hate that, but that is exactly what they are supposed to do. Not to say that Matt Melvin isn't a complete douche, and he can sue me for saying this, but he is a goddamn douche who didn't deserve to be the one on the scene on January 31st.
For the rest of us, it's most important that we find a way to connect our old life WITH Allison to the everyday world we now have without her. Share what she loved, like the day we all wore Floyd shirts to work. Remember her every time you see something at work with a horse, or a frog, or any other animal. Now we just need to remember her, and stop mourning her. We can be sad that she is gone, but be thankful that she was part of our lives.
The firewood was put to good use as Keith sometimes uses it in the see-through
ReplyDeletefireplace between the kitchen and living room to
grill or cook in the hanging Dutch oven. "The rule for collecting antiques and collectibles is never throw anything away,"
said Miracle, "but that doesn't mean that I'm going to sell junk items that have no value or appeal to anyone. He frequented the nearby Audubon Society sanctuary in Sharon, where he took great interest in all the birds.
Feel free to surf to my site ... sheds for sale