Goodbye, Mayberry.

Everyday Adventures

Aunt Bea has left the building.

No, not Francis Bavier, she passed from this mortal coil over a decade ago. *My* Great Aunt Beatrice Joyner, the last of that generation of family, the only of that group that I was ever really close to.

Not that it was a surprise, today at least. Last Friday, when Aunt Hazel called, we knew something was up because she *never* calls Mom at the office. Granted, I was expecting to hear that my aunt/cousin (it’s complicated) was in jail or that another cousin was dead because those things are totally expected (and not to be harsh but the one cousin? 3 kids all farmed out to various relatives–adopted out–and heaven only knows where *she* is, though Mom watches carefully any drug-lab busts in the area afraid she’ll see K as one of the arrested). So when the message was that they were calling in the family for Aunt Bea, wow, I was stunned.

It has been a while since I’ve seen her, age had finally caught up with her and she ended her craft-fair business (she sold jumper dresses with hand-made buttons of porcelain–later ceramic because the kiln wouldn’t get as hot–made by her son). I would help her at her booth during Springtime Tallahassee, back when the craft show portion was something to truly behold. Then there was the time in middle school where we all (me, mom, the boys, a couple aunts, an uncle, and several cousins) invaded her home in Winter Park for a weeklong Disney, etc. vacation. Because she lived in Central Florida (and even later when just her family was there and she’d moved back to Louisiana) she would travel to and fro quite a bit and stop by for a visit. There was just something about her that made me feel close to her. She was one of the few family members who came over for my first wedding.

Her contemporaries had either died when I was a little child or were so distant a relation that by the time cognizance hit I barely saw them at the occasional Thanksgiving or wedding or funeral.

And about funerals. When families become spread out like mine is, or when a certain section splinters off, weddings and funerals are the only time you really see anyone. So this isn’t the first time this has happened. Though my paternal grandfather died when I was about 3, my remaining grandparents passed away during high school and afterwards. But they weren’t even the first since my baby sister died when I was 5. Interestingly enough, my baby sister named Caroline died when I was five and my actual maternal grandmother, named Carolina, died when my *mom* was five. Obviously it would be a very. bad. idea. for anyone else in our line to name a child Caroline or any variation thereof. Brothers take note.

Anyway, with the exception of the royal tantrum I threw when the baby died (I remember walking home from the busstop that day after Kindergarten and seeing my Mom at the big main doors to Maw-Maw’s house that we never used. I ran up to her, so excited to see her as most of her time was spent with Caroline at the hospital–her four and a half months were not healthy ones–hugged her, and immediately asked if Caroline was home, too. She’d had another surgery that day and never woke from the anesthesia. I don’t remember what else happened that night, I’m sure there was dinner, maybe playing or television, maybe even homework, but I do remember my five year old body thrashing with righteous indignation as my poor little voice screamed for my little sister. I wanted her back. I didn’t maybe understand death. And my father tried to calm me or at least hold me still until I stopped.) me and death have this strange relationship. I never really get upset.

I mean, I think I’m just too practical. Okay, so-and-so is dead, well that’s very sad but there’s nothing I can really do about it, is there? Apparently the righteous indignation I had at five years faded to resigned acceptance. But I’d be fine… until the viewing. Then it would be this sudden rush of oh-my-god-someone-is-dead-and-that’s-their-body-and-they’re-not-really-in there. But it wouldn’t happen at first. I’d be there seeing everyone else sobbing or red-eyed after they’d recovered, and I’d feel this peer pressure to outwardly show emotion. Something I didn’t do. Something I didn’t feel most of the time. What good were tears, right? Then they would hit, just a little bit, just when the realization would hit and then I’d be acceptable and that would be it.

My step-grandma, Mom’s stepmom, was the last of the granparents to go, six years ago. I didn’t even like the woman all that much. She was difficult to love, not a warm person, and y’all hush about not saying anything bad about the dead. Death doesn’t saint someone who was a prick in life, okay? Deal. But Nell, she was the last one, so when I told my boss I was going to have to leave town (this is while I was a chef which is why I know for sure it was 2000) I got a little choked up. But that was it. I don’t even remember if I cried for her, or for the other people around who were completely losing it. 

So, why then, when I find out this lady who I hadn’t seen in years was in the hospital not expecting to last for long, did I absolutely lose it, at my desk, at work? Not only that, but for the remaining hour and a half of Friday afternoon I couldn’t keep it together. Bizarre. For me at least. See, y’all, I have a heart…

I managed to get over my out-of-emotional-body-experience and made it through the weekend with some malaise but no real outbursts. Monday dawned and there was no news. Tuesday, no news other than she was still hanging on. Mom wondered why, she knew she had to be getting tired. Mom had said her mental goodbyes a while back after one of Aunt Bea’s strokes. Somehow she failed to mention this to me as the only stroke I knew about was 10+ years ago and that actually helped her (seriously, she had been getting absent minded and so forth and this snapped her right back into perfection)! So Mom was prepared in a way for it. But she wondered, with all of Aunt Bea’s kids there, had anyone given Aunt Bea permission to rest.

Mom made the call from my office Tuesday morning. Basically for a modicum of privacy, but I should have really left the room. She asked Judy or whichever daughter it was to put the phone down by Aunt Bea’s ear and told her that we were thinking of her and that we loved her, but that it was okay, when she got tired, to let go. That we understood and that no one wanted her to suffer, so when she got tired, it was okay…

That was the most difficult thing I’ve ever had to listen to. I lost it. At least until Mom turned to me and said, ‘You know, if she dies now they’ll all blame me.’ That’s my mom, laugh or cry… and we prefer laughter.

But tonight, about fifteen minutes ago, Mom called me to give me the news. Aunt Bea had let go, she’s at rest. I’m glad that she’s no longer suffering, and so is Mom, and strangely enough, no tears. I’ll probably be stone-eyed until we actually get back home. The arrangements will probably be for this weekend, so I suppose that was her gift to us. Maybe that was why she held on so long. She hated to be an imposition, so perhaps she wanted to time it so that people who were travelling to pay their last respects could do so on the weekend and not the week. I honestly wouldn’t put it past her.

Goodnight, Aunt Bea. We really do love you.

Music Madness

Everyday Adventures

Yesterday I gave in to the ease of iTunes (angel and devil in one package, I swear) and downloaded KT Tunstalls Eye to the Telescope album. Man… what a good album. I’d had her on my radar for the past few months after hearding Suddenly I See and Heal Over (as well as Black Horse) on radioioEclectic (again, iTunes, iZombie). Literally I keep a list on my desk of songs and artists that I hear on the iRadio (which has the lovely feature of showing such useful information) and she was on it a few times.

Anyway, another gem discovered post-download was Miniature Disasters. Not only does it have an infectious rythym structure the lyrics could be my anthem:

I don’t want to be second best
Don’t want to stand in line
Don’t want to fall behind
Don’t want to get caught out
Don’t want to do without
And the lesson I must learn
Is that I’ve got to wait my turn

Looks like I got to be hot and cold
I got to be taught and told
Got to be good as gold
But perfectly honest
I think it would be good for me
Coz it’s a hindrance to my health
I’m a stranger to myself

Miniature disasters and minor catastrophoes
Bring me to my knees
Well I must be my own master
Or a miniature disaster will be
It will be the death of me

I don’t have to raise my voice
Don’t have to be underhand
Just got to understand
That it’s gonna be up and down
It’s gonna be lost and found
And I can’t take to the sky
Before I like it on the ground

And i need to be patient
And i need to be brave
Need to discover
How i need to behave
And I’ll find out the answers
When i know what to ask
But i speak a different language
And everybody’s talking too fast

Miniature disasters and minor catastrophoes
Bring me to my knees

Well I must be my own master
or a miniature disaster will be
I’ve got to run a little faster
Or a miniature disaster will be
Well I need to know I’ll last if a little
Miniature disaster hits me
It could be the death of me

My KWHSS Update

Everyday Adventures

Now, I’m sure plenty of people could wax on for hours about the classes and, you know, the actual event we were there for, but honestly? I think most people just want to hear about the escapades afterwards in the French Quarter!

I will say, however, that Lady Hillary’s daipering class was very informative and I absolutely adored learning how to cut quills for pens (mine even worked!!!). That said…

I truly, truly, TRULY, adore New Orleans. And, of course, when I say New Orleans, I mostly mean the French Quarter, but there is that whole family living there thing that makes it good too, lol.

Cockroach Karma

Everyday Adventures

aka Be Careful What you Wish for…

Now, I’m a little fuzzy on exactly which eastern religion believes that the highest compliment that can be paid you is to be reincarnated as a bull and the lowest would be as a cockroach, and it may even be an urban legend or a gross paraphrase by us infidels, but whatever. My point is, there are some people I know who would just LOVE to come back as a cockroach merely for the opportunity to annoy the living snot out of others.

So. Last week I was entertaining the idea of altering my schedule a bit to see if getting up earlier to have a leisurely amount of time to shower and futz around the apartment before heading off to work might actually make for a more pleasant start to my day. (I know, it’s brilliant right? I’m Einstein…) Note that, this was purely hypothetical as my usual m.o. is to shower before bed because generally I don’t trudge out from the covers until I’ve got 20 minutes to get out the door (if that). So it’s a nice thought, right? But am I going to actually act on it? Probably not…

Low and behold, Friday morning my eyes pop open to a most unwelcome sound: the skittering of a creepy crawly (CC for short) inside a plastic bag. Now, CC apparently decided to come in from the heat (of which there was plenty to be had outside even overnight) and the unwelcome guest decided to be yet a further nuisance by going through my things (the nerve).

In a most un-Post-like [that’s Emily to the uninitiated] move he proceeded to prowl amidst my yarn stash and, just like a man, couldn’t fight his way out of the plastic bag, but woke me up in the process.So, alarmed at the fate of this poor creature [ahem] I leapt to his aid, gingerly freeing him from the confines and then bashing his brains out for daring to wake me up.

I’m *not* a morning person.

But y’all, I’ll tell you this. It was 6:03 in the morning when this happened. After the search [for CC] and rescue [of myself] mission was complete I was fully awake and got to test out my leisurely morning theory (LMT for future reference). Not only was it beyond pleasant to take a nice long shower first thing in the morning, but I had time to check my emails, freshen the polish on my nails, and still make it to work early. Early I said: the response by the one coworker already at the office was expletive filled in astonishment and those that arrived after wondered if their clocks were slow allowing as to my car already being in the parking lot.

Momma even thought that the sound should be recorded and used as my alarm every morning. I did not find that amusing, naturally, but she recanted her opinion when I started talking computer stuff so soon after 8 o’clock. Her exact words were, ‘Maybe it’s not such a good thing that [she] wakes up so early.’

So I suppose, dear friends, that the lesson here is be careful what you wish for, even in passing, because it just might come as a 2″ palmetto bug.