Eulogy for my Grandmother, Jessie Irene Hamilton (Thompson). 1916 -2005
Delivered on November 22, 2005, Trenton, On.
I stand before you today, with
the knowledge that we are all united, family and friends, not only in our
desire to pay our respects to Irene Hamilton but rather in our need to do so.
Today is our chance to say thank
you for the way you brightened and enriched both our independent and collective
lives.
It
is not an easy task to commemorate the life of a woman with such a rich
character and beautiful soul. My reflections and recollections of my
grandmother are many, and they offer a tapestry of memories rooted in beauty,
wisdom, sadness and unparalleled happiness.
Even in its simplest form, the story of her life instils a
sense of respect. It provides a picture of a life well lived.
Born Jessie Irene Thompson, she was one
of four children born to Samuel and Charity Thompson in Napanee, Ontario. At
times, her life was not easy – she found and lost love early in life, she was
married and widowed at a young age; and left with two small children to raise
on her own.
Love then found her again, and she married
my Grandfather when he was serving in Trenton during WWII. They were married
for 44 years and raised a family of five more children. Now, many seasons have
come and gone and she leaves a legacy of five surviving children, their spouses
and more than forty grandchildren and great grandchildren.
If one were to write a book of her life,
the underlying theme to which the plot plays out, would be rooted in her
convictions, her values and her faith. From her notable work ethic and strong
family values to the strength she drew from her belief that God would help her
climb the highest mountains.
Her
dedication to her community and her sense of civic responsibility is, if
nothing else, what we owe to her to carry forward.
It
is within the story of her life, that I realize that the most important gifts
bestowed upon us are the intangible. They are not the gifts we display in our
homes; they are instead the gifts we receive with our hearts and with our
minds.
I
know that through the course of her life, Grandma inspired, guided and provided
a platform for many different people. What she gave to each person is as
independent as his or her need for the gift. These memories are yours alone.
They are her gift to you, to your heart.
The
gifts, like her children and grandchildren, are also her legacy. They are for
those here today, and for generations to come as her wisdom and strength moves
forward towards eternity through those who loved her.
For
me, there are four very specific and monumental gifts that she gave me. They
came in the form of lessons. They represent the teacher that she was to me, and
the student that my own grandchildren will some day be.
Lesson
#1: The Importance of Simple Truths.
Illustrating
the blatantly obvious moral right in pure poetic form was her inherent nature.
I would guess that not a day passed that an ethical parable did not come out of
her mouth.
Ingrained into my memory and certainly more so to her own
children are her sayings. Some are
profound in the wisdom they offer, others completely silly, and that is exactly
why they are cherished.
I would like to share a few of her simple truths with you;
·
Oh what tangled webs we weave when first we practice to deceive
·
It is better to be looked over than to be overlooked
·
From the time you are born till you ride in a hearse, there is nothing
so bad that it couldn’t be worse
·
It’s only a problem if you let it be one
·
For every stitch sewn on a Sunday, you lose nine on Monday
·
This too shall pass
·
A “can’t” is a sluggard too lazy to try
·
Good intentions like a crying child should always be carried out
·
The road to hell is paved with good intentions
·
You can’t tell the depth of the well by the length of the pump handle
I
know that these sayings will continue to resonate with us. Make her proud and
use them well and use them often.
Lesson
#2: Pride.
Grandma
taught me that when you take care of yourself, you make yourself important.
Vanity, as a mode of pride, implies that my world and all of the people in it
are important to me.
As
we all know, Grandma would not be seen without her hair in perfect form and her
outfit wonderfully coordinated. I adored this about her. When you care about
yourself, you are open to caring about others.
I
also heard that it managed to garner the attention of a few men around the
Trent Valley Lodge. A boyfriend at the age of 89? A woman of my own heart.
Lesson
#3: Solitude.
Grandma
taught me the difference between loneliness and solitude. She showed me that
the path to inner strength is found within the courage to be alone.
After
more than seven decades, filled with the noise, chaos and comfort of family,
she lived alone for almost two more decades. She lived alone and she
appreciated it. She grew to love, to need and to be sustained by it.
Most people fear being alone
because they understand only loneliness. Grandma taught me that solitude is the
joy of being alone, while loneliness is imposed on you by others.
Loneliness is small; solitude is large. Loneliness closes in
around you; solitude expands toward the infinite. Loneliness has its roots in
words, in an internal conversation that nobody answers; solitude has its roots
in the great silence of eternity.
Grandma recognized this and knew
how important solitude is to our morality, integrity, and ability to love.
My grandmother allowed me a sense of place within
solitude. I find that solitude in nature. In the forest, along streams and
riverbanks, on the top of cliffs and in the ground cover of the forest floor.
She led me there and she walks with me there.
Lesson
#4: Privacy.
This
was perhaps the hardest and most elusive of all the lessons.
Many
of us have experienced the frustration of inquiring about the days of her life,
when we were not witness. Often, the questions would go unanswered.
While
initially, I internalized this and found myself not worthy of the answers, I
came to see it differently and accept it as one of the greatest lessons anyone
has ever taught me.
She
taught me that every form of happiness and every experience have within it;
it’s own boundaries and a need for it’s own privacy.
Our
greatest moments are personal, self-motivated, and not to be touched or judged
by others. The things that are sacred or precious to us are the very things we
are allowed to keep to ourselves and can withdraw from promiscuous sharing.
Those personal moments, experiences and choices that we all have, are ours
alone. To be shared only at our discretion.
I
also found within this lesson that I don’t need the linear details of a
person’s life to love, respect and understand them. I knew the woman that she
was. The events that shaped her character and fed the depths of her soul, made
her exactly who she was, and that was the mother, grandmother and friend that
we all admire.
For
these four lessons, I will be eternally grateful and through them, I grow more
and more each day.
It
is also through the wisdom and strength that she has provided that I am able to
find peace today. That I am able to accept that death can be as beautiful as
life itself. That it is in fact a well deserved rest. That it is, most
importantly, comfortable and without pain.
Everyone
has a different vision of heaven. Based on your beliefs, your desires and your
aspirations, heaven takes on a different meaning and different face for
everyone. Yet, in all of these heavens, we find reconciliation and divine
comfort.
Please know that when you close your eyes and travel to your heaven, she is there. In the recesses of our minds, she is in all of our heavens.
In
my heaven, she is dancing with my grandfather.
Following
the service today, and again as each winter approaches, I will invite family
and friends to gather together and light four candles in the memory of Irene
Hamilton.
Four
candles that she will be able to see and feel the warmth of, from all of our
heavens.
The first
candle represents our grief. The pain of losing you is intense. It reminds us of the depth of our
love for you.
The second candle represents our courage. To confront our sorrow, to comfort each other and to change our lives.
The third candle we will light in your memory. For the times we laughed, the times we cried, the times we were angry with each other. It is for all of the silly things you did and said, and for the caring and joy you gave to each of us.
The fourth candle we light for our love. We light this candle so that your light will always shine. As we enter this holiday season and share this moment of remembrance with our family and friends, we cherish the special place in our hearts that will always be reserved for you.
We will light these four candles to thank you for the gift your living brought to each of us.
I
will leave you with one last thought today. A very close friend of mine blessed
my life with a beautiful story that I want to share with you.
As
I mentioned earlier, Grandma believed and held faith that God would help her
climb the highest mountains. This story brings me comfort through my grief, and
lets me see that today, Grandma is on the top of that mountain and has found
her wings.
How often have you stood on a cliff’s edge to watch a
bird soar below you? We all know that we can’t fly, but everyone has had a
thought at one’s cliffs edge at one point in his or her life that “maybe I can
fly”
Are
these little twitches just meaningless glitches in an otherwise clear
understanding? We laugh, shake it off and continue to play out what we know is
real and true. We can’t fly. Our whole world is based on what we know and hold
to be true, that WE CAN”T FLY.
We
can’t until something pulls or pushes you over that ledge and the wind picks up
your very soul, carrying and cradling you to the fundamental truth that, in
fact, we can never come back down.
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