Someone on my friends list (it was a locked entry, so I won't say who) had a post concerning a grandmother who had recently died, and this person admitted not feeling any grief, but only relief because the relationship had been so toxic. I said:
I feel very lucky.
I am sorry for your loss. And by that I mean not the usual condolence thing, because your grandmother has died, but the loss in your life of never having a grandmother you could love in the first place. I loved both my grandmothers, and the relationship with each was good. I'm sorry that you never had a grandmother like one of mine, one who played Chutes and Ladders with me, who had me sleep overnight in the Rose bedroom, who taught me how to make a Gentleman's Sandwich Loaf, who took me sailing, who showed me her beautiful porcelain tea cups, who gave me an extravagent doll every year on my birthday, or who gave me a sterling silver spoon, each in a different pattern and engraved with my name on my birthday, who called me "Lambie."On thinking it over, I want to say, yeah, my relationship with both my grandmothers was really special. And I'd like to take this opportunity to thank my parents for picking pretty cool moms of their own, and for fostering those bonds of love.
I am so sorry you never had that.
I feel very lucky.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 12:48 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 01:36 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 01:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 01:47 pm (UTC)I don't think I ever really had him to myself, as a result of being one of so many, but I do have a fond memory of going to visit him with my family when I was only about four years old and finding an Etch-a-Sketch to play with in the living room of the apartment he lived in above his office. When it was time to go I sadly put the Etch-a-Sketch back (having never seen such a wonderful object before in my life!) and my grandfather could see how much I loved it and insisted that I take it with me. I didn't ask for it at all but did accept it without hesitation. I remember thinking that my parents seemed reluctant about it, and years later I realized that it was probably donated to the Village for the orphans. Perhaps my grandfather knew that, even though I wasn't an orphan, my parents didn't have a lot of money to spare, with five of us, and I had never actually received a new toy or clothes at that point in my life but hand-me-downs only. (My sisters' old toys were carefully re-wrapped in their original boxes for my Christmas presents.) I know that my grandfather didn't have a lot of money either, because he drew a very small salary and received free housing at the Village in return for being the director. But that Etch-a-Sketch was still the only gift I ever remember receiving from my grandfather other than the two one-dollar bills I received every year in my birthday card from him.
I treasured it for many years until my mother made me give it to my nephew, but I sort of wish I still had it, just because of how I got it. When my grandfather died the traffic on West Chester Pike was tied up all afternoon during the trip from the funeral home to the cemetary; all you could see in either direction was an unending line of slow-moving cars with their headlights on. He was very loved by so many people, not just his descendents, and I will always remember the way his very death stopped traffic and affected others' lives, but the way he affected others' lives while he was alive was even more significant. I can't even remember how many of the orphans from the Village were at that funeral, people who loved and claimed him with as much right as those of us who have his blood in our veins. All in all, not a bad crowd in which to be lost, even though I never had the sort of close relationship with my grandfather that you had with your grandmothers. It was still good. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 01:52 pm (UTC)And yes, I have to work to get outside some bitterness in my own head when I say that, but I can do that, and I am truly glad for you.
And I can also, when I clear my head, be glad for myself. I had one grandmother who took me places, and talked with me as though I was an interesting person to know, and gave /me/ a doll for every Christmas, and let me know she loved me. And I had another grandmother who read me the Just-So stories and showed me the treasures she had hidden away in her attic, and spent time admiring the shells I found on the beach outside her house.
The first spend much of her life - before I knew her - as an alcoholic, and probably contributed to my father's being emotionally stunted and unavailable in a lot of different ways. The second was almost certainly actively and horribly abusive to my mother. These are things I know in my head, and yes, they matter. They can't ever not matter. But I still have the memories of dolls and Just-So stories, I remember feeling secure that I was loved. In a way, it doesn't even matter if I was right or not: I felt it, and that's what was important.
It's complicated. So many things are. But I'm intensely glad you were lucky - and just maybe lucky enough that things may be a little less complicated, I would like to think that - and I'm glad that I have things to feel lucky about too; you reminded me of that on a not-very-good morning and I thank you for it.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 03:01 pm (UTC)On days when I feel like chucking motherhood and running off to Canada, I blame their genes ;-).
But my maternal grandparents were wonderful. Grandma taught me how to knit, and I think of her every time I make something; she'd be incredibly proud of the shawl I'm making. And Grandpa had a great sense of humor; I especially remember the rose story. I still miss them.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 03:29 pm (UTC)When my maternal grandmother died, my mother tried to tell me that I had no right to feel grief over her death. (My mother hated her mother and acts like she hates her daughters much of the time as well.) The grief I felt wasn't over any relationship I actually had with her, because I never had a chance to have much of one, but instead was over the fact that I never really had the chance to really get to know her. My mother's attitude, distance, and the fact that my grandmother was a Jehovah's Witness who was very strident about promoting her religion all interfered. Luckily, my relationship with my paternal grandmother was always wonderful, up until the time when she sunk into dementia.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 04:03 pm (UTC)But I do begrudge the fact that she was crippled the whole time I knew her (both by the arthritis and by her emotionally abusive husband). She was miserable. And I never knew the vibrant, imperious woman she once was.
I have other grandmothers -- my father's mother and my stepfather's mother -- but, alas, they're not worth talking about.
Yes, you are very lucky indeed.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 04:18 pm (UTC)Missing ancestors
Date: 2005-09-29 04:46 pm (UTC)As far as grieving the loss of something you never really had -- I attended Adult Children Anonymous meetings for five years, dealing with the legacy of my toxic father (who got me started on both writing and music, but also tried to beat me to death with a cane when I was 8 and had actually been violent from my early childhood through my early teens). One of the things I found out is that it is very common, when the abusive parent dies, to feel absolutely nothing. And the important thing to do at this point is realize that you are under no obligation to miss someone who abused you or simply wasn't there for you. You can miss what might have been, but you don't have to miss what was. And I think petal_pusher came down on you a bit hard -- your post may not have made your original friend feel better, but I don't see how it could have made things worse, and it's the usual kind of sensitive and caring post (on a variety of topics) that I have learned to expect from you.
Nate B.
Re: Missing ancestors
Date: 2005-09-29 07:34 pm (UTC)I went from an abusive family to an abusive marriage and I write a lot about it in my LJ, because I'm actually turning my story into a book. And one of the things that I find helpful is people sharing their own abuse stories. I know I'm not alone. But I also find it helpful when people like Peg share their good memories, because it helps reaffirm my belief that abuse is not the default. I knew I was miserable in my household, but it wasn't until I began writing about my life that I realized it was actual abuse. I started writing about it and people started reacting with horror and pointing out that it was, in fact, abuse. Until then I discounted it because, you know, kids who get burned with cigars and beaten with electrical cords are abused and that didn't happen so mine must not have counted and it was all my fault for not being a better kid and wife.
I appreciate the condolences I've received, like Peg's, recognizing that my loss was much earlier in life, in not having the kind of grandparents and parents that I *could* mourn honestly.
I also appreciate you mentioning that my reaction of feeling nothing is not out of the ordinary in these situations. I suspected as much, but it is good to know that again, I am not alone.
Mildly confused
Date: 2005-09-29 08:18 pm (UTC)Regards,
Nate
Re: Mildly confused
Date: 2005-09-29 09:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 10:14 pm (UTC)It was a difficult problem, knowing what to say. A standard condolence would not do, and yet I wanted to say something because she was a friend, and I felt a loss there, tho' it was not the standard loss. I think that this is exactly the sort of worry (I'm sure I'll say the wrong thing) that makes people tongue-tied and embarrassed in the face of death.
You may have noticed that I have a lot of icons made from phrases from Lord of the Rings. A speech that Merry makes in Return of the King occurs to me: (I should make an icon of some part of that.) Another one I use a lot is "I told no lies and of the truth all I could." (see icon) All I could do was to hope my wish for her: I wish better for you could be taken as a truth, and one that was kindly meant. I am glad that it was. Sometimes that is all that we can do.
Re: Missing ancestors
Date: 2005-09-29 10:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 10:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-09-29 10:55 pm (UTC)I did however have a wonderful adopted grandfather. He couldnt stand his own grand kids, so adopted me. I had the most wonderful relationship with him, and miss him every single day.
Anyways what I was trying to say was this. While talking about grandparents and relationsips with them, one of the Latino mothers I used to babysit for told me this "It doesnt matter if you were related by blood or not, you have had the experience of a true grandparent, and THAT is the memory you should treasure."
She is right of course, and THAT is why I have a picture of Buster in my bedroom, along with a small Shiva statue that I bought to honour him.