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Was not just being named for my uncle, but sharing a BIRTHDAY with him. He attempted to 'rescue' me from my grandmother -- anyone remember those disc players from the early 80s? The ones that tried to vie with Betamax and VHS for the market... about the size of a laserdisc, but was in a sort of cassette casing, 2-sided? He had one of those players. I remember him coming over and informing my grandmother that I was going with him to his house for a while (when my mother was away)... |
We spent the entire 7 days and 6 nights eating hot wings (then called 'Wings of Fire' from Tyson -- where he worked) and other junk foods... ice cream, really drippingly greasy hamburgers, BLTs (hold the lettuce, hold the tomato), and he taught me the secret to really be able to cook an egg to order (lots of butter). And watching movies. Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and the NEWLY RELEASED gem of his collection Return of the Jedi were among the top on the list. Superman. About 9 hours worth of Popeye cartoons. His three daughters were gone to their grandmother's for the summer, and it was just me and my uncle and my aunt. They even let me stay up late on Saturday and watch my first ever SNL (Saturday Night Live, for you non-US folk).
I found out years later that he had used his entire vacation (low-level employees only get a week) to just see if he could make me forget how horrible my life was and get me to smile, just for awhile. The horrible thing... I didn't get to say goodbye. I was in the area from just before Christmas to mid-February. I didn't go see him. Not once. My lovely lovely Aussie girlfriend didn't ever get to meet this paragon of my family. The proof that the entirety of my genepool wasn't just waiting for chlorination. Oh, I make excuses... He wasn't well, and was in hospital nearly the whole time. -- True, but I could have visited in the hospital. My aunt (his wife) was watching all the 10 grandkids by herself and I didn't want to get in the way. -- Also true, but I also didn't want to chance meeting the grandkids' aunt who stole the money the kids from my brother's school collected for my mother when Michael died because I'd simply throttle her (10 grandkids, the eldest of which is 11, my aunt now has sole custody of now that my uncle is gone... their mothers each have 5 kids and are both in prison for drug convictions). The truth of it was... I didn't want to think he wouldn't always be there. And now it's too late. Too late and I'm horrible. The only one of my mother's brothers worth anything to me... and I just... forsook him along with them. And there's no way I'd be welcome at the funeral, being who and what I am. When I was 14 and told the family that I was a girl, he was the only one present who both took me seriously and accepted me ("Well, if you're a girl, I can't very well call you *******, then. What do you call yourself?"). Even as recently as last month... my mother pointed out the similarities between me and my uncle as far as temperament and personality. This world is an emptier place already, and it's only been 10 hours since his death. It's only been 6 hours since I found out, and I feel as though there's a piece of me that won't recover. Retrain of the Jet-Eye. Our own little code to mean that everyone sees things wrong sometimes, and you just have to laugh at yourselves and go on. The first time he saw the title, that's what he saw it as, and we joked about it even up to the last time I talked to him on the phone in August for our birthday. He taught me the joy in being a geek among the mundanes. His geekery was motors and car innards, and his movie collection (Besides his Disc Player, he had Betamax, VHS, Laserdisc, DVD, DIVX, PSP, DVD-HD... whatever was new and movie oriented, he got... he was saving up for a Blu-ray...). I don't know if his daughters will even really miss more than the shell of the man, their built in fall-back plan. But I will miss my uncle. With him dies the last vestiges of any joy I ever gained from being mislabeled as a boy. If there IS any kind of afterlife... I love you, Uncle Fred... |
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Edeyn Hannah Blackeney |
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Wasn't it Jim Henson who said, "Without faith, I am nothing," after all? No, wait, that was God... Sorry, common mistake to make... |
Comments
Easing the pain
The truth of it was... I didn't want to think he wouldn't always be there.
Edeyn, that is probably the most common form of denial of reality, that those people we love won't always be there. Something we all have to face up to at one or more times in our life.
Which does not ease the pain of your loss, I know. It just says you are human, like the rest of us. All you can do is keep on keeping on. Live your life as though your uncle is still watching you, and make him proud.
Karen J.
"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin