Memorial Day
Version:1.0
StartHTML:0000000182
EndHTML:0000010320
StartFragment:0000001515
EndFragment:0000010284
SourceURL:file:///MacBook/Users/macbook/Desktop/Memorial%20Day%205%2F31.doc
Memorial Day and my grandson’s birthday/5/31 to Linda
Our
Memorial Day celebrations do not include decorating graves anymore.
Yes, we hold those who have entered
a new dimension of their lives in the Light just about every day we talk about
their exploits, like they were the Viking Sagas, and some of us talk to them
all the time if necessary.
Around
Memorial Day or on the day we celebrate Life. My grandson’s birthday, spring, by
having a huge family and sometimes friend’s picnic. The Highlight of which is
Games.
Not
tennis, softball, Hunger Games, but games of laser tag, maybe, paint guns, etc.
Number one grandson writes a playbook all year long. He has lots of notebooks
with every conceived move in every game he has thought up. He then divides the
entire guests into two teams. He sets up forts, cardboard figures, all sorts of
things I know nothing about. Dogs are chained up, those that aren’t already
hiding under beds because they have suspected something in his pre-game
preparations.
Son-in-
law and daughters mowed yards, pick up trash, cook, carry in food, and try to
remove any ungame debris. Collect chairs for the non-combatants and the
combatants when they wear out. Sometimes a radio for music. My son-law cooks
the hot dogs; hamburgers and whatever else can go on the grill. I’m pretty much
a vegetarian, except on this day. By the time food is ready I will eat
whatever. I am tired and hungry.
I sometimes clean house in case it rains
or someone wants a drink of water or use the facilities. This year I only got
the kitchen and bathroom unpiled. The rest of the house is being used for
sorting books for the Book Room, which I hope to open next Thursday, Maybe. So
I just told the gang, only two rooms. It didn’t rain which was good. Very Good.
On that day we
play, eat, and talk and share. We don’t always get together the whole entire
bunch at Christmas, Easter or Thanksgiving anymore because no one’s house is
big enough. So this is our bash.
On the day of the
big event grandson holds a strategic meeting with the combatants. He assigns
teams, explains the rules, the strategy, through I understand that each team is
allowed to make their own rules. The little ones, from barely able to walk, set
in awed silence and listen and on every word. He is their leader. They respect
him and want to do well. He
assigns them accordingly. This year the youngest in the games was 7. A younger
child just ate.
There is break, maybe, to eat. My grandson
never eats. Once in a blue moon. We usually don’t have them on Memorial day
anyway. Then they play. Until everyone is beyond exhaustion. Mean while my
son-in-law cooks and cooks. We eat, drink pop and iced tea. We don’t drink much alcohol. Never at
family gatherings. This is too serous for that. Most of us don’t drink anyway.
But if we did we would put up a sign, no drinking allowed. I mean minds must be
clear. The horses hide in the woods. The cats scatter somewhere. Sometimes it
is days before they appear again. The squirrel’s stay in trees, the raccoons
and rabbits stay in their little lairs, the birds get as high in their trees as
they can go. They tweet, out warnings and I think a lot of cursing.
The final act of the day is to gather
around a fire and fix somemores, or toast our own hot dogs, and talk, tell
stories, have grave political, food, or health, conversations, exchange
recipes, ghost stories, or just plain bitch about the world. One by one people
disappear into their cars and go home.
I
am always the die-hard. I sit around the fire until the fire burns out. This
year my grandson stayed awhile and we talked about the world situation and why
local, state and federal politicians do not listen to our wisdom. Some new friends arrived and we talked
about religion and how they are the same and different. They left. He and I
talked a long time. The he left. He works long hard shifts and we don’t get to
talk much. I value his opinions and his love. I always sit up until the fire is
out. Sometimes it is almost daylight.
I sit up because I think
of all my family who aren’t with us in physical form any longer. There is no
longer any relative that I know who is older and still alive than me. No one to
call to ask how they fixed that pie or cake of if they remember what grandma or
uncle so and so said at Christmas or Memorial. No memories of my family to
listen to.
So I think of them and
discuss them with their Shades that come to sit around the fire (don’t deny it.
We all do it.) And I remember. My memorial and their Memorial is their lives as
I observed them growing up, the wonderful things they taught me. The genes I
think I inherited. Reproduced in
my children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and the fact that we gather for our own Memorial
day as part of a celebration for a grandson, nephew that some of them never held
in their arms, sang a song to, told stories but somehow has a little of the
tribe inside him. So do we all. Happy birthday to anyone having birthdays
around this time. Happy Memorial Day who all we remember in our family and to
every man and woman who fought and died for this country. Also, since I am a
Quaker, to all of those who died for peace for everyone who worked so hard to
bring food, clothing, jobs and everyone else people need to survive and have
peace. And who died in prison for their faith and beliefs. Such simple
humanitarian beliefs, like not taking off their hats to any man because no one
man was better than another. Not swearing on the Bible because the Bible said
you should not do that. Being against slavery because no one should own another
person. And maybe one of the most controversial, not fighting in war. They
taught kings make war. Men don’t. In those times all of these beliefs took courage. Some still do. Some seem so ridiculous now. You have to wonder if they didn’t help freedom of religion in this and other countries, make the world a beet
place. We don’t swear on the bible
anymore in court we affirm. Men don’t have to remove their hats, in the
presence of “their betters”. We don’t believe, at least o openly, in our
betters. And war is still with use. But kings still make wars and men and
women fight them is still with us.
It all depends on who the kings are.
Shalom.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home