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Graduation
Day
by Peary Perry |
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I
don’t know about you, but going to a funeral and meeting someone you
haven’t seen in a number of years and saying… “It’s so good to see
you..” doesn’t seem quite right to me…does it to you?
But isn’t that what we do? We go to funerals to honor the departed
person and folks stand around for hours and share tales and stories
about their common experiences. Some laugh, some cry but for the most
part it is a moving experience and one we all participate in at some
time or another.
Let’s say for a moment that you were the departed person, don’t you
just wish you had the opportunity to be present when a group of your
friends, relatives, and other significant members of your life were
gathered in one place at one time to focus upon you? They came to
this event just because of you.
The only person (and he was fictional) that I can recall was Tom Sawyer,
who attended his own funeral, I remember his description of it very
well, as I imagine most of you do.
Mark Twain wrote this: “There was a rustle in the gallery, which nobody
noticed; a moment later the church door creaked; the minister raised
his streaming eyes above his handkerchief, and stood transfixed! First
one and then another pair of eyes followed the minister's, and then
almost with one impulse the congregation rose and stared while the
three dead boys came marching up the aisle, Tom in the lead, Joe next,
and Huck, a ruin of drooping rags, sneaking sheepishly in the rear!
They had been hid in the unused gallery listening to their own funeral.”
Well, of course this would be nice but not very practical. Most of
us share experiences in groups. We go to weddings as friends or relatives
of the bride or groom. We go to family reunions as members of a family.
We go to school reunions as members of one certain class or another.
But there aren’t too many occasions where you can assemble friends
and family from your entire life in one room for the same event.
I did this past Saturday.
Many of you may know that for the past couple of years I have been
going back to college. I only did two years and never got a degree
when I was going way back in 1967. That’s over forty one years ago.
I decided to go back and finish and graduated last Saturday. My kids
all wanted to know why a degree was so important at this stage in
my life and I told them it was for them more than for me. I wanted
them to be able to say to their kids and grand kids that it was never
too late to go to school. If your grandfather can do it at 65, so
can you.
So, I graduated and we had a party. As I looked around the room it
dawned on me that the only time you get to see this many people from
every stage of your life is when they have your funeral.
And you don’t get to enjoy it.
Well, I can’t begin to tell you how much it meant to me to see friends
and family as well as folks I work with all in the same room having
a good time and I didn’t have to be dead to make this happen. Trust
me this was a rare and precious occasion which I will cherish for
the rest of my life.
My family was there as well as friends of mine scattered throughout
the past forty, fifty and sixty years. All had stories to tell and
experiences to share. I loved every minute of it.
Life goes by so fast and the years get away from us before we know
it. I detest meeting people at funerals saying stupid inane things
like we need to get together more often. Certainly not at funerals.
But the truth is, we do need to get together more often. We need laughter
and shared experiences, we need conversation, we need dialog and we
need hugs and kisses and photos of kids and grandkids, but we need
to be alive to do all of these things.
I’m alive and I plan on getting out and seeing some of those folks
who came to see me last weekend. We need more memories of people while
they are alive, not when they die, by then it’s too late.
Tempus fugit. |
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