Boy to the World: What Would Grandma
Say?
“I sure do miss Grandma!”
“I do, too, honey.”
“Mommommom! Remember Grandma?”
“Yes, of course I do!”
“I wah-ah-ahnt my Gra-ah-ah-ma!”
“So do I, love, so do I…”
These are all things my youngest has said at least on a
weekly basis during the past year: the first two being matter of fact and
cheerful and usually followed up by a fun or funny story, the last
reminiscent of Grandma’s memorial service, the Saturday after Thanksgiving
last year.
He was three at the time and had cried himself to sleep
while sitting on the lap of one of his preschool teachers’ who had come to
the service. Today he cries for his Grandma when he is indignant over
something his brothers have done, looking for a second opinion about a
consequence I’ve doled out, or just plain tired.
Grandma had become a more or less constant presence in
our lives for the almost-year prior to her passing, when she had moved back
from California to be near her “grandboybies.”
And now a year after her death, she was still that
steady presence. Just about every night my middle son asked for
“meditations” – bed-time recordings Grandma had made, which I had
transferred from cassette tape to CD, not only so each boy would have his
own copy, but also so we’d have a back-up source.
We all still talked about her as if she had gone on a
long weekend trip somewhere and left us behind, in a collective huff that we
didn’t get to go.
Even now, there were times that I’d spontaneously snap
a picture with my cell phone camera of the kids doing something that only
Grandma would appreciate – like my youngest eating Froot Loops® with his
toes – and then delete it because I had no one to send it to, my heart
feeling empty as I confirmed “yes, delete photo” and watched the clock icon
ticking as the picture evaporated into nothingness.
Hardly a day passed that one of us didn’t muse, “What
would Grandma say?” or “Grandma would be so proud of you!”
“Well, she is, Mom!” my oldest reminded me. “Don’t you
think she can see us from heaven?”
“Well, yes, of course, honey, I suppose she can…”
We celebrated Grandma’s birthday in late October with
orange-frosted cupcakes. A couple of my best friends brought or sent me
flowers and several others sent me notes to commemorate Grandma. Some of us
wore her jewelry or flowers in our hair.
“Why did Grandma have to die!?” my middle son demanded.
“I don’t know, angel, but if we keep her in our
thoughts and prayers, she is alive in us and alive in heaven, right?”
I often wondered, where is heaven, exactly? Is
it possible that it is right here among us? We can’t see or hear everything
in the electromagnetic spectrum; in fact the portion that we can see and
hear with our human eyes and ears is just a small percentage including
certain colors of light and radio waves. We can feel some things that we
can’t see, such as infra-red light. Perhaps Grandma really is here with us
sometimes. Would that explain the sensation that she’s standing beside me or
the dreams I have about her, or my youngest telling me that he talked to
Grandma on the phone last week? Or how sometimes my friends will pass
messages from her (“Your mom doesn’t like that pumpkin”) or say things to me
that only she has ever said (“Well, my dear…”) in precisely the same tone of
voice.
“I can’t wait to go to heaven!” my youngest told me.
“Oh, I can wait – I’d miss you too much!” I wondered if
Grandma missed us the way we missed her, or if “missing” was just a one way
street.
“Well, not if you’re already there!” he pointed out.
“Oh, but I’m not ready to go there, little dude. I can
wait!”
“I’m not afraid to die,” my oldest chimed in.”
Is that just what all people under 30 say or is he
truly unafraid of the unknown? Because I am not looking forward to dying any
time soon, personally. I’ve had to fight off tendencies toward hypochondria
during the past year. I cling fast to the reminder one of my friends told
me, “When it’s your time, it’s your time,” imagining that it can’t possibly
be yet since I don’t feel like I am done here, though deep down, I know
that’s not really up to me.
At a basketball scrimmage recently, another mom relayed
the story about her seatmate on an airplane who told her she’d had a brain
aneurism, died, gone to heaven, and came back as doctors resuscitated her
body. In heaven she had seen her father, and he told her he loved her, that
it was not yet her time, and that he would see her when she died again. The
mom said that this woman now lived peacefully, unafraid, and with a spirit
of gratitude.
Grandma, too, lived her life peacefully, unafraid, and
with a spirit of gratitude. I hope and pray that when it is my time, I feel
the same way. After all, isn’t dying a form of rebirth? Isn’t tomorrow just
a big unknown, anyway? Would the eternal aspect of heaven make it seem that
our time on earth was just a “long weekend”?
Will all our questions be answered when we die?
Still, I can wait.
The mother of three sons, Caroline Poser lives
with her family in Groton. She works full-time as a software marketing
professional and moonlights as an author. Her work has appeared in numerous
anthologies, most recently in Chicken
Soup for the Dog Lover’s Soul: What I Learned from the Dog.
www.CarolinePoser.com.