| By William B. Burkholder,
on Saturday, 26 January 2008
|
Each of us mourns the loss of our loved ones. Its those times that I write about here.
This article however, are my views and are not meant to disparage or or diminish the
beliefs of those who might differ with my views. MY hopes are that my readers will take a
positive message from this article as it was meant to be.
| We pulled through the gates, past the caretaker's
office and made the slow deliberate drive to my fathers' grave. This was to be my
first visit to the cemetery. The year since his passing, my mother had kept dad's ashes in
a beautiful blue marble box. I was a bit surprised when I called her on the phone
one Sunday evening to find out that Dad had been interred.
"Mom, I said, you could have called and I would have come to the service."
She told me in her usual calm voice, that we had had the service a year before and that my
father had wanted it this way, no big fanfare, no tears at the gravesite etc. and as
always my mother had honored his wishes. |
|
|
She pointed me to a spot where I could park the car along the quiet tree lined road.
The morning dew was still heavy on the grass. As we walked, I helped my mother to
ensure that she could navigate the wet uneven ground. Just a few graves in, I saw the head
stone with my father's name on it and the fresh patch of earth where the marble box had
been buried.
Days earlier, my mom and my sister had come up to plant flowers around the grave and be
the first to pay their respects at the gravesite.
I stood there looking at the headstone, I bent down and touched the brown granite.
Memories of my childhood flashing back all at once, and in an instant I knew that
although this was the spot marking my father's grave, memorializing him, I knew he was not
there.
Yes, his remains were there, safely housed in the blue marble box deposited back to the
earth in which we all come from, and eventually return to, but my father, the man who
raised me, my mothers husband, the man she loved and lived with for well over 55
years, he was not there.
His time on earth had ended his journey was over. What lie in the ground in that
cemetery were the earthly remains of a great man. His soul, his joyous laughter and keen
wit were nowhere to be found, except in my memory. He had been gifted to us by the great
heavenly powers above. His labors had been honest; his challenges had been many.
However, his perseverance, his strength had never waned.
I learned fortitude from my father; I learned that no matter what life has to throw at
you, you could either duck it or catch it. He caught the things in life that had been
thrown at him each time. To this day, he is one of the strongest, most determined
individuals that I have known.
As I knelt at the gravesite, coming to these realizations, I looked up at my mom and
told her that dad was no longer in pain, and that he had graduated life and was in a much
finer place. I did not reveal to her my realizations, fearing that it might upset her.
Cemeteries are places where the living go to honor their loved ones, to remember them
and show their continued love and respect. However, we should never go there with the idea
of feeling their presence around us. This is not a sign of disrespect to those who
faithfully visit these hallowed fields and gardens on the contrary; it is a statement of
on-going respect for my father and my mother, and their son's realizations about life and
his own mortality. The lessons about such things such as life and death I have learned
from them.
I left for Detroit and home the next day, still thinking about my father, my mother and
sisters. Thinking about the time when I would shed these earthly robes and graduate this
life. Would I do it with the same amount of dignity that my father had? Would I show the
strength that my mother had if, God forbid, my other family members, or wife went before
me?
The answers to these questions do not come readily to me however, I do know that in
that cemetery are the mere remains of my father, not the man that he was or is. He is
indeed, in a much finer place than that of a green earthly garden dotted with granite
monuments, he is in Heaven his robes are brand-new his vestments pure and forgiven.
Then what remains on earth? Our memories of him but let there be no mistake. He does
not reside in that cemetery. Therefore, as my father had wanted, I did not cry at his
gravesite, I celebrated his graduation; I counted my blessings for being lucky enough to
be called his son. No, he is not there, but at the gates waiting for us all to come home
and be with him.
|
|
|