My job is awesome. Sure the petroleum scene can be high-stress, the hours can be long, and working till seven every night can be limiting, but I’m grateful for it. It’s interesting, virtually never dull, and, most importantly, where I work, no babies die.
My wife’s job is not so wonderful. Rather it is quite dreadful. I can’t tell you how much I’d rather shovel human refuse or process Soylent Green than hang around in her nursing unit for a living. I’ve long said that I couldn’t handle her work for a half hour. Last Saturday I got first hand proof of just how true that is, when I joined her to attend the funeral of one of her patients, a little guy who fought like a tiger but didn’t make the 20 day mark.
Now I’m not stupid. I knew full well going into it that a funeral for a baby was going to be terrible in every way. I prepared myself for boundless depression. Unfortunately my focus was on the macro view of the situation, where, as in life, it was the little details that made all the difference. I was okay pulling up to a funeral home, seeing the dozens of friends and relatives of the unlucky couple, gathered under the cloudy gray sky, passing along sincere condolences. I could handle the Biblical readings and candle lightings, classic funeral hallmarks that were as surprising as passing on third and long. I was not ready, however, to hear the baby’s two year-old “big sister” calling his name during the slide show of him.
That’s the kind of thing that kills you. My wife, of course, was destroyed by it, as were most of the attendees. She had cared for this baby, she’d spent hours with him, trying to keep him alive. I didn’t know single person in the room other than my wife, but even my eyes brimmed. By the end of the PowerPoint, I had pulled off the one-teardrop-down-cheek movie cliché. Maybe 40 minutes in, and I had already technically cried for a complete stranger.
Unbelievably, that wasn’t the toughest part of the afternoon, as that bar was placed pretty darn high later. It wasn’t even set when the baby’s dad thanked people, including my wife, by name, for all they did for his forever resting son. Nor was it when he then thanked his baby son for what he had done to bring so many together, both that day and beyond. (Side note, go ahead and chalk up “burying my 17 day-old son” right above “beating up Fedor” and “outrunning Usain Bolt” on the list of things I know I could never be man enough to handle) No, the most devastating moment of the afternoon and of 09 thus far was watching the parents throw dirt on their baby’s briefcase-sized casket.
I know few people have seen less of the infinite skies of tragedy than I have, but I’m willing to bet a mother’s wails for her baby compete with any of the worst sounds ever heard. It was the song of abject despair, the soundtrack for rock bottom. As we released the baby blue balloons, several never made it past the tall evergreens around the cemetery. Not all hopes make it. Not all dreams come true.
But some do. Driven by the wind, blowing from the East for the maybe the second time in my recollection, the remaining multitude idled far less than balloons tend to. Soaring into the sky, they reached up into the first azure break in the clouds in two full days, inexplicably directly in front of the sun, blue towards blue, light towards light, and hope towards hope.
There was none of that “one teardrop” fortitude this time around.
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4 comments:
That was painful to read. So, it may surprise you that I'm thanking you for sharing it. I think it is situations like these (or narratives, in this case) cause us to really tap into our empathy - which is what truly makes us human. Empathy - mind you - not sympathy. Not feeling bad for them, but experiencing the same feelings they may be feeling. We have the ability to not only tap in to, and share in, people's joy... but also in their pain. The beautiful thing amid all of this painful tragedy is our ability to love and empathize with our fellow human beings. Yes, you'd have not been human to be unaffected by what you experienced (or in serious denial). I'm so sorry for everyone who had to experience the tragedy of a life cut so incredibly short. But, again, I'm glad you shared the experience - I treated it as a quick check of my own empathy. Still human. Still filled with emotion and an ability to feel other's emotions. I'm glad.
Thanks for the comment bro. I hate how your comments are better than my posts. ;p Oh, well. I think you phrased the overall situation perfectly, as usual. It was a rough afternoon, but I'm glad I experienced it, and not just to support my wife.
This one strikes too close to home. My heart goes out to Amanda and the family of the child who put so much energy and love into such a tiny life. Nothing I can say will even scratch at the surface of the pain this family must have felt having to bury their child. It hurts thinking about it, knowing that good, loving people had to endure such emotions. It hurts more knowing that people close to me have gone through this, including my mom, and I can't do anything to help them through such trying times.
I hope Amanda finds some solace knowing that, while her job is incredibly taxing on the soul, she probably means more to those people than any of us may ever know. My thoughts are with you both.
Thanks DB. We are okay.
Reflecting, it was all quite surreal. In a way, it was like I wasn't crying for the baby, but rather for those who lost him. I don't know if that makes me weird or even if it makes sense, but it's how it felt. I didn't know that about your mom. I literally can't even imagine.
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