Crossposted from Blogetary 2.0
First created on Blogetary 1.0 around Nov. 5, 2015. This is a paltry
re-creation of my father's death announcement and a little bit about our
memorial, which is why I have it dated Nov. 12, 2015.
On Mon.,
Oct. 26 my sister called in the middle of the premier of Super Girl. I
answered with, "Do you know what's on right now?!?!" She told me to sit
down. Dad had died. I turned off the TV and spent the evening listening,
talking, and not quite crying. Not yet.
After we hung up I knew my world had changed, but it hadn't hit me yet.
A couple of days later, my stepmom Meeg asked me to write Dad's obituary.
The entire time I was writing it, I kept wanting to pick up the phone
and ask Dad about things, verify things with him. I tried to make sure
it was good, that I got everything correct, on my own. I learned
afterward that I hadn't, but we weren't able to fix it. It is what it
is, I guess.
A week and a half later, I was on my way to San
Francisco for Dad's memorial, where a rag-tag, motley crew of family
members were gathering to remember him and comfort each other; figure
out where to go from here.
There
we were, all of us family in one way or another, all trying to help
each other. All trying to cope with the loss somehow. My cousins Simon and Sarah
had made the trek from England. My half-sister Elizabeth had come with
her husband Will and son Jon from Nevada. My sister Heather and Meeg,
Dad's life companion, Gunilla (Meeg's best friend) and Ed, basically
family, with Monica their daughter and her daughters as well as other
long time friends — we were all there.
We didn't always know what
to do with each other. Part of the time we were getting to know each
other. Other times we were telling stories about Dad. Sarah and Simon
would chime in with stories about Uncle Tony
and some about Dad — stories they'd told us about themselves and each
other. Then there was the shooting in France around the same time. And
in the beginning we were wondering if we'd even have a memorial as Dad's
doctor had forgotten to sign the death certificate, so the morgue
couldn't cremate the body until someone tracked down said physician and
got her sign it (and I think I remember there was more than one office
she reported to).
Wed., Nov. 11 was a holiday in the rest of the
U.S., and probably in other parts of the world like Canada and the U.K.
But for us, it was Dad's memorial day. We were taking his ashes (and all
his various kitties' ashes) out to Half Moon Bay, where we all gathered
on a boat to toast him, remember him, and say farewell.
It was a
perfect day. The sun was bright on the water and the wildlife — whales,
seals, herons, ducks, gulls, etc. — gathered around us, as Dad would
say, "like a god-damned Disney movie!" It felt like they were paying
tribute to a man who loved animals, despite his often prickly exterior.
And then the send off lunch at the restaurant.
I
remember holding myself tightly through it all, but realized I could
relax. I was with people who knew me, even if they didn't know me. I met
Blake, who had known Dad since he'd first come to the U.S. I loved
spending time with Monica and her daughters. John and Sally, Cheryl,
Julie.
Sarah and Simon and Elizabeth had all already experienced
the loss of a parent and knew what to expect. It was comforting to have
them around while Meeg and Heather and I stumbled around trying to cope.
That
night back at Dad's place, we ate, we drank, we went through photos and
tried to figure out what we were going to do with all Dad's things,
redistributed some of them to people that evening. But it wasn't all
logistics. There was magic. Simon found a guitar in a corner, picked it
up and began to play it. We discovered old photographs of family we'd
never seen. Heard stories we'd never heard about our families. It felt
like Dad was there. I kept looking around for him. He loved large
gatherings, being the pater familias, even though he didn't like to admit to it.
One of the things we figured out was sending some of Dad's ashes back to England to rest with his brother Tony and niece Kate.
I
miss my dad — oh-so-much. But despite that, I was glad of the time I
could spend with a few of the people from my tribe. I felt loved, like I
belonged, and like each of us had a little bit of Dad in each of us.