Thursday, March 13, 2014

Back To Basics

Sometimes I feel like a pathetic zombie going through the motions of everyday life. I have panic attacks that come from Alberto simply not being here. Memories only go so far.

It's funny how something can take center stage in your life. If you ever have had to be a caregiver for someone who is ill or in the hospital, the routine of that care takes over your life. When Alberto was in the hospital in Canada three years ago, I called the daily routine that evolved "hospital culture". The same thing happened when I cared for my sister when she was hospitalized. Your life and schedule and vocabulary all revolve around doctors, tests, nurses, medications, care giving, the hospital cafeteria, and other families and patients you meet. At the end of very long days you collapse into worried half-sleep.

And so it goes with planning a funeral.

Amy Cunningham, a former magazine writer, is now a funeral director and writes about the industry on her blog, The Inspired Funeral. Photo by  Karsten Moran for The New York Times

Like so many of us, Alberto and I casually talked about our wishes, but made no concrete plans. Don't be quick to judge. Many people plan, but many do not.

So along with our dear friend Jessica, who was by my side the whole time, we were thrust into a whole new world of "funeral culture". This was not totally unfamiliar. Sadly, I "buried" many dear friends at the height of the first casualties of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s and 1990s. I did my mother's funeral along with my siblings nearly twenty years ago.

But this was so different. It was Alberto.

It all boiled down to things that seem grim. Where? Cremate? Bury? Embalm? Viewing? What kind of service?

I chose a family run funeral home in business for 140 years and steeped in the traditions of New Orleans. New Orleans is a place that has a unique bond with its dead. If ever an experience could be made"nice", the gentle man who was my consultant made it so, and guided me with warmth, grace, humor, experience, and New Orleans charm. He loves his work, and this made the experience positive.

There were certain things I did not want. There were certain things I wanted. He never judged my choices, and made it all happen with the least amount of trouble for me. He was conscious of budget, always working it in my favor, never trying to up sell me.

I chose to have Alberto laid out for a viewing. His children had to come from far, and I wanted them to have closure in the most positive way. Embalming never renders a person looking their best. But Alberto looked more presentable than being seen by his children in a morgue-like setting many days  after he died.

Once the children arrived, they got involved with the arrangements. It was very hard for them at first. They are young adults and have little or no experience with death. Again, our gentle consultant made their journey into "funeral culture" easier for them.

One of the things that I requested was to have Alberto's whole body showing. He was a dancer, and I just could not abide one of those half casket things hiding his legs. His daughter hated the idea of renting a casket (we had opted for cremation, so one rents a casket for a viewing). As I said, I hated the idea of those tufted satin cookie cutter caskets that only opened half way. I asked about a plain, elegant wooden casket that could be opened fully. I wondered if the one used for cremation would be okay.

Our consultant was great, and referred us to a local abbey that makes lovely hand made wooden caskets. It looked like something that Alberto would have enjoyed making. He was able to be viewed wearing his signature red socks (and dance shoes) that he wore when we performed or when we taught workshops. I had his feet crossed at the ankles.

I also asked that only two spectacular and very large flower arrangements be displayed. I asked our friends Nancy and George Seegers at Tommy's Flowers in the French Quarter to do them. There was a slide show of photos that his children and I chose over days and days of editing. The funeral industry is tech savvy now, and includes slide shows, and Internet legacy sites. I had recorded music of tango (the orchestra of Osvaldo Pugliese) playing during visitation.

After visitation the standing room only service took place in the simple, lovely chapel of the funeral home. The pallbearers consisted of Alberto's son, and five other men who are friends from our tango life. The processional music was the tango "Recuerdos" ("Memories") played by Osvaldo Pugliese. Pugliese was one of our favorite orchestras and was someone we revered, and loved to dance to.

Though we are Catholic, we are lapsed. I asked a minister who has a church on the corner near our house to do the service. He knows us as neighbors. He is Baptist, and he calls it preaching the service. And preach it he did. It was personal and dynamic and not all fire and brimstone and woe. It lifted everyone up. His wife and their children sang gospel. Two of our tango dancers who are glorious singers sang. One sang "Ave Maria" at the beginning, and another sang the aria from Madame Butterfly when the lovers say goodbye. Another dancer who is a beautiful singer had to cancel because tragically her own father died suddenly days before Alberto's funeral. Jon (Jessica's husband) and Jessica did the eulogy as partners, to emulate the partnership of Alberto and me. Some people got up to share a memory. Jon and Jessica also wrote Alberto's obituary.

After the service, everyone came back to our home for what is called the repast here. Several tango ladies had all the food prepared and arranged. My sister and my dear friend Michael Pelkey had the house all ready and did all the serving and clean up. Michael also did some cooking.

I had Alberto's favorite Jazz band come and play. In New Orleans there is the tradition of the second line at the funeral. A Jazz band walks from the church or funeral home to the cemetery in front (the first line) or behind the funeral car with the casket. The family and friends walk behind, forming the second line. The procession weaves its way through the neighborhood of the departed, stopping in front of places he/she frequented, and playing at each location for a few minutes.

We could not do this traditional second line, so I asked the musicians to play in front of our house. They played the very traditional "Just  a Closer Walk to Thee".  Another dancer who is a beautiful singer sang the hymn. It's played as a dirge first, and then segues into a joyous Jazz rendition. A crowd gathered, and some second line dancing broke out. Afterwards, the band came in the house and set up in the living room and blew the roof off the place. People danced in the room we used for private tango lessons. Alberto would have loved it.

I am sharing these details as usual to inspire you. It seems like there are going to be a lot of funerals on the horizon as we baby boomers write our last chapter.

There is an apropos article in today's New York Times, called "The Rise of Back-to-the-Basics Funerals" by Susan Chumsky. It is interesting how I am drawn to reading about this now. A couple of very sweet girls left a gift on my doorstep. It was the book "The Year of Magical Thinking" by Joan Didion. Another friend had recommended it, but after checking it out on Amazon I felt too queasy to get it. I didn't want to read about something so close to my fragile home. But once the book arrived on my doorstep I took a deep breath and ended up reading it in one setting.



I also have been reading a lot about the mourning customs of the Victorians, who made grief and mourning into an art form. Jessica gave his children and me beautiful antique Victorian mourning pins, and I have a black wreath on my door very much inspired by the Victorians. I had a Victorian style locket with Alberto's photo and a lock of his hair in it made for Jessica. I also am strangely drawn to the beautiful blog "The Inspired Funeral."

Mourning wreath on my front door

Why am I writing about this? Well, I am a writer. Most of these days are spent going through empty motions of "living". I am starting to work again (a good thing). There are many chores and paperwork involved in this process that I numbly attend to. I often rush back to the house when I have to go out. It's my haven, but then that haven becomes my torment as night falls. I miss Alberto so very much. I try to "do" things to distract my heartache and longing. Often I am rendered paralyzed and drained. If I am lucky I will lapse into a depressed state of sleep with a nap. I only sleep in segments.

Remember that Alberto pushed and encouraged me into writing my blog when I was depressed after Katrina. That blog has lead me to writing and design jobs I love to do, and to extraordinary friendships. Remember Alberto and I published and wrote our tango magazine El Firulete for many years. Remember we wrote a tango book (Gotta Tango) together, that was started before Katrina, interrupted by Katrina, and finished after, becoming a better book because of that interruption. Alberto encouraged me to write what became my first design book. So here I am again, using the blog to help me, using my creativity and the sweet memory of Alberto's unconditional support to save me, and needing all of you to be my side in the hopes that we can share and inspire.

Here's a link to Alberto and I dancing the tango Emancipacion played by the Osvaldo Pugliese.

26 comments:

  1. Valorie, I am sorry to say that I know exactly how you feel and what you are going through, to some degree. My sweet husband died, suddenly, at home, on October 20th.
    I was so unprepared and in shock and wretchedly heartbroken, that I can only be thankful that he and I talked about such things over the years.
    We both agreed we did not want a funeral, we wanted cremation and that we did not want anyone there but our children.
    And so it went.
    It was a heartbreaking week of official things that had to be done and sad children and sad me.

    I am still heartbroken and I don't know if that will ever mend.
    But as impossible as it seems, there are days that you will not cry and days you will not lie there and think that the world has ended.
    Well, the world as you knew it ended but there is still a world out there .. it just takes time.
    Time .. I wanted to sleep and wake up in 5 years .. or 10.
    But has been almost 5 months, I can pretty much go through a day without tears and there are days that I can think of the future without fear. I married my husband when I was 20.. he was everything to me.
    For now. . just work on getting the important stuff done and then just feel the way you want to feel. No one can hurry grief along and no one can just turn it off.
    I only know our neighbors, a little, so having friends and people who are comforting to have around is very important.
    You can't see Alberto anymore, but he is there with you in everything you do and think and say .. all those years together .. it is natural for it to be that way.
    much love. Candice

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  2. I said this to you before on fb, but I am truly sorry for your loss. It takes time to get used to the new "normal." I wish you peace during this time.

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  3. Valorie,
    You handled Alberto's "until I see you again" with incredible grace. After my dad passed, I couldn't sleep without dreaming about him. I received the call at 2 AM that he had passed, and it awakened me, and I was in bed...listening to my brother say, "Well, he's gone." My bed seemed to absorb this sad news, as if by osmosis.. So, I slept on the couch, with the TV on all night, just to feel something, not to think, or drift too far. I was obsessed with watching, "Everybody Loves Raymond" for some really odd reason, a show that wasn't on my radar prior. Sometimes my daughter would pull her mattress out to the living room, so I wouldn't be alone. I eventually ventured back to my room, but the dreams kept coming night after night. The couch was no longer a comfortable option, albeit the dreams wouldn't occur (probably because REM sleep was illusive on that lumpy couch). So, I went back to my bedroom, but moved my bed to the other side of the room. The dreams stopped for awhile. Now, they're drifting back to that side of the room, and I catch dreams of dad once again. Not bad dreams, but they remind me how I touched his head the last time, hours before he passed, and it's just too vivid. The dreams I can do without. Time to move my bed again. And so it goes, the mourning, the blackness, the obsession with all things death for awhile. No one can tell you when to stop, how to look at life, but it's on your own terms, just as you said goodbye to Alberto the only way you could. As you knew him. None of us could have done his ceremony the way you did, and none of us can grieve for you, or begin to understand your journey of understanding. And, I totally understand why the Victorians wore black, put a mourning wreath on the door to alert others to "tread softly." It's amazing that if you tell someone, "I just lost my dad" they often don't even offer condolences. Even my best friend of years, albeit miles away, didn't send a card, didn't say much. People are very uncomfortable with the subject of mourning. It's much easier to ignore feelings, which is so wrong for so many reasons.
    I'd say you're quite normal, given what you're experiencing 2 months in. And that's why we read what you write. You speak for so many of us.
    With love,
    Margaret

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  4. Valorie, this was a wonderful post. Most people are inquisitive but afraid to appear nosy and you have wonderfully given us details of what we were all curious about but were afraid to ask. Thank you for this. Unfortunately, this is something that all of us face and it helps to hear what others have done and the decisions they've made and felt comfortable with. Take your time in your grief and remember that you have those who are thinking and praying for you out here in blog land.

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  5. You are amazing Valorie... and I know that Alberto would have enjoyed every single moment of his "send off"...
    I can't imagine the feelings of loss that you must have but I do know you will be comforted by the wonderful memories...
    Thinking of you, xv.

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  6. Once again I'm so sorry Valorie and no words can heal but know that our hearts are with you. Thank you for sharing this with us. It sounds like Alberto would have been so pleased with his funeral. You've somehow made me smile today sharing your grief and your love. And your love is and was so special. I'm glad to see you back to work and writing. I'm sure Alberto is too.

    Much love,
    Kwana

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  7. May the soft and warm Spring winds send you comfort and peace.
    Libby

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  8. I'm so sorry for your very very BIG loss. I recently lost my mom, and as you say, if you've ever been a caregiver the language you develop and live in is not "coffee room conversion". And I'm sure my friends are tired of hearing about my woe's. I find myself in tears at the most unusual times. The encouragement Alberto gave you to write, is his gift to all of us. You do say so much that we all need to think about. I don't ever want to forget, I want to remember the gifts my mom left me, and some of the nuttiness prior to her death. She was very much a victim of dementia, and while it was very frustrating at first, I sure learned a lot about human behavior. I loved watching you two dance. And that too is a gift we all share, even if we can't feel his gentle glide across the dance floor. How lucky you two were to have found each other. You must do as you feel during this difficult time. There is no right or wrong, and keep writing to us. We never tire of your posts.

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  9. Valorie your post is exquisite and the comments so far are so beautifully written that I would not dare to add anything more. You have shared with your friends and readers some of the most intimate moments of your grieving. Sharing this may become one of the most significant pieces of writing that you have ever done.

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  10. Valorie ~. Your post is so touching! I love my best friend and husband like you love Alberto! He supports me in my crazy design passion, we do everything together! I can only imagine how you are feeling and what you are going thru! I commend your efforts to get on with your new normal and keep Alberto's spirit and your passion alive through your blog! I just bought your book on amazon and can't wait to read it! Love to you! Melissa

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  11. Valorie -
    I'm so glad you shared this. I think so many people today don't know how to grieve. I grew up in a small town where funerals were attended by the whole town so I was familiar with how funerals help to heal. How everyone gets together and says goodbye but then shares stories of the departed and then all eat together after the funeral. I've found my city friends have no idea what to do when someone dies.

    When I lost my father suddenly....his body was taken to our home town funeral parlor. I was comforted by the fact that my Dad was being cared for by people we'd known our whole lives. They also run the local ambulance service too and heard the call come that he had been killed in an accident. Their first response was..."Oh...no...not our Jimmie."

    This funeral parlor is also their home. And during the week my father was there...funeral delayed for relatives to get there. I would come in and collapse on their sofa in their living room crying. Sitting next them as they watched tv.

    I know exactly how you feel...at night. After my fiance left me and again after my father died...I could not bare the dark quiet house. I kept all the lights on and played music. I did this after Newman died too. But one night after a time...I forgot to put on the music and turned off the lights. I don't know when. I would visit my father's grave every morning and every night...but one day I just stopped. Eventually, you will move on.

    You are so lucky you had him. Celebrate that. I know you are....I love you very much....your thoughts here will help many.

    I do think running a funeral parlor is a higher calling. If done correctly. At my father's graveside...I stayed after everyone else left and watched the back hoe fill in his grave. I stayed with the funeral director. A life long friend. He'd been a neighbor at one time. Funny thing was my Dad never liked him much. He thought he was a blow hard. This big burly man looks nothing like what you think of as a funeral director. His father came home after World War II, a war hero and not finding work...went to work for the family business. This man who buried my father was a big burley guy who you'd imagine as a truck driver over funeral director. He was the mayor of my home town for many years. That day after we finished burying my Dad and I said to him, "I don't know how you do this." He had taken off his suit coat and was sweaty profusely on that hot August day. I asked him this as we drove back in his pickup, back to the funeral meal at the house. He said to me. "It's an honor and a privilege."

    Take care my sweet Valorie! Love you so!

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  12. I also found your article wonderful. I have someone in my life that I can not imagine living without .
    I love your post . You are an inspiration. :) I hope you have a very blessed weekend. You inspire so many.

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  13. Our dear friend Valorie -- how we appreciate your taking time to share your grief with us and so eloquently too. May sharing with us lighten your load, if even for a moment.

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  14. Valorie, thank you for sharing some of the details about Alberto's visitation and funeral. You put so much real thought and love into the planning of it all...it is strange, how in our most fragile, heartbroken, surreal times, somehow we get the strength and courage to make all these decisions..your deep love for Alberto (and his for you) pulled you through it all. It sounds like it was a lovely (and loving) visitation and funeral. This is a very hard time for you now - please do take good care of yourself, go at your own pace. I adore your book - excellent (will be a favorite in my rather large collection of decor books) and great reviews, too! Take care.

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  15. Hi Valorie, I lost my first partner to AIDS in 1986. He was one of the first to go at the beginning the epidemic, back before there was any treatment. He was a physician. You can imagine his frustration. He was brilliant and too young to go. I was very young then. I went through those first days much like you are going through your own now. I found that I started to breathe again after about a year. It took going through all four seasons, without him, to get used to doing the seasonal, ritual things on my own. Then, I started to heal. Many years later, I have someone to walk by my side again.
    We wish you all the best during this difficult time,
    Jeff and Steve

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  16. Beautiful post. Just beautiful. Thank you. Barbara

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  17. Hi - I am just visiting your blog for the first time in a while - I am so sorry to read about your loss. All the warmest wishes to you.

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  18. What a heart felt and beautifully written post. I can't even begin to imagine or understand what you're going through right now. I still have the most important people in my life with me - both parents, my husband and my children. I'm so sorry for the pain you're going through and I pray you'll find the comfort and strength you need to get through this difficult time.

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  19. Echoing some of the comments above, I appreciate the transparency of your grief. It lets us know how you're doing and removes any awkwardness we might have had about reaching out to you. You've made us feel at home, the intimacies and quirks of coping with loss are flowing in both directions.

    I'm grateful to read you are finding ways to find your way. And yes, the woman you are now has a lot to do with Alberto's love and encouragement. I think you were rather remarkable already from what I know of your past creative accomplishments, but Alberto nurtured and coaxed the good seeds that remained inside of you.

    Continued comfort to you, Valorie, and to all of you who shared your stories.

    -Carey


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  20. I'm so sorry for your loss. I'm a long time lurker who has admired your work for quite a while, thank you for sharing that, it's been an education, but mostly for sharing this:

    Alberto and I casually talked about our wishes, but made no concrete plans. Don't be quick to judge. Many people plan, but many do not.

    I love that people want to lessen the stress for their loved ones, I don't judge those who plan, it's just that - well - death doesn't seem to work like that. My mother's own plans were so rigid, and so uninteresting (she was definitely the former, but hardly the latter), that I still regret carrying out her wishes these five years later. I feel her memory has gone unhonored. People change, circumstances fluctuate wildly, and in the end final wishes are only those - wishes. Funerals are for the living, those of us who remain. Suggestions are thoughtful and loving. Orders are burdensome. You can't know what you can't know until it's upon you. There's no "plan" that changes that.

    Peace be with you.

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  21. Dear Valorie,

    Can you ever really get back to basics, or normalcy after the loss of the other half of you? I cried when I read your post, Valorie, as it brought a flood of personal memories back to when I lost the brightest star in my universe April 2, 2007. It seems like yesterday, still. John and I had been married 45 years.

    I remembered how all of my family sat around the table selecting photos for a montage that would help portray all the things he loved: neurosurgery, history, dancing to Dixieland jazz, good bourbon, good wine, good friends, family and good times. We laughed and recalled the time when each picture was taken. Good catharsis.

    I too, selected all the music for the visitation and chose a huge single arrangement of brightly colored flowers reflecting his love of life.

    Beside the bouquet was displayed a 15 x 19 picture of John when he was king of Hermes (his favorite Carnival krew)

    Things are still pretty “raw” for you, but they will become more bearable with time. However, something out of the blue will still trigger tears for me.

    This is what I’ve learned about grief and can share with you.

    Everyone grieves in their own way and at their own pace

    It’s all right to laugh and have fun. Alberto would expect you to tango again just to enjoy the dance. I recently went on a cruise and spent one evening dancing with an Australian gentleman who was married and traveling with a group of friends. He was a complete stranger. His wife was feeling seasick, he was a terrific dancer and I enjoyed a completely innocent evening

    It’s all right to cry.

    Weekends are the loneliest times. Get dressed, get out of the house, go to a movie, meet friends for brunch on Sunday, go shopping!

    It may sound silly, but I assigned John the Evening Star and feel he’s watching over me from above. I sometimes, but not as often as I used to, look up and greet him with, “Hello Love. I see you!” It’s comforting.

    Let go of personal things when you are ready, but DO let go. Designer suits with matching shirts and ties were given to friends’ sons. My son, sons-in-law and grandsons along with friends selected ties from John’s extensive collection. I kept a Benetton sweater that I love to wear on cold days. Everything else was donated to charity to serve some good. Medical books and surgical instruments were given to physician friends and colleagues. I changed the bedroom and master bath. No longer is it OUR bedroom and bath. Now, it is MINE and the décor is completely different.

    The hardest thing was going through all his file cabinets (4), saving what was important, setting aside what needed to be shredded, and what could be pitched. At times I cursed him for not having done all that before he died but then realized he never gave up. He never accepted death. If he had sorted through things, it would have been an admission of the inevitable and that was unacceptable to him.

    So, not only do we all grieve differently, we also all die differently and those who are left behind must respect that.

    My best wishes to you,

    Lorre Lei

    P.S. I love the tango and I’m so glad you included the link to you and Alberto dancing.

    Lorre Lei Jackson
    Casart & Casart coverings, llc
    Slipcovers for your walls!

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  22. Dearest Valorie,

    I think I'm in love. With you and your blog! I found my way to it through my own blog's analysis (thanks to WordPress) of where people visiting TheInspiredFuneral.com had come from. I'm the funeral director profiled by the New York Times last Thursday.

    Among the many things I'm wondering is whether I could write an item about your beautiful mourning wreath. how you made it and what the outcome of hanging it was. I have been longing to see this tradition resurrected, but people are so concerned about security and privacy these days. I say: hang the wreath, let the truth be known!

    I'm so sorry about the death of your dear beloved Alberto. I'm not quite clear on how long it has been, but I feel very much we are kindred spirits in our tastes and our thoughts on celebration, commemoration and ritual. I have subscribed to your weblog and will keep in touch.

    More than 3500 people came to TheInspiredFuneral.com after the NYTimes article was published but I have not received a single funeral call! This is a good thing.

    Yours most sincerely,

    Amy Cunningham
    Brooklyn, NY

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  23. Valorie,
    So well said. Plans made or not, it is something each of us have to come to grips with and saying Goodbye and planning a funeral hardly seems inspiring but honoring a life well lived and those we love require us to connect, to mourn and to cherish life.
    I cherish you and the day you and Alberto came to brunch at my home. Pleasant memories of our drive back from Eddie & Jaithan's to get you to the train on time. The highlight was for me when you corrected my pronunciation of "New Orleans" -
    Keep on creating, inspiring and correcting us. Teach us to keep moving even when it's hard and our bodies and our hearts hurt. I try to tell my own children that as we go through life, we are reduced to "mostly love." It's true.
    Sending heartfelt love to you. Thank-you for sharing your heart.
    pve
    pve

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  24. Clicked today, finally, to let you know thru this crazy wonderful blog world you have been in my heart since your loss.

    A mentor married 60+ years had already lost her husband when I met her, she's now gone too, yet I feel like I did indeed know her beloved John. She described the black cloud of sorrow for months/moons and its weight.

    One morning she awoke, that cloud had lifted. She knew instantly.

    The few years she had remaining enriched my life greatly. She, Mary Kistner, is part of my blog to this day. How could she not be?

    Her funeral was at a museum, standing room only. So many also spoke of Mary AND John.

    The estate attorney walked with me to my car & asked me out. Priceless.

    After I hit the publish button for this comment I'm going to watch ya'll TANGO !

    Garden & Be Well, XO Tara

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  25. You are one wonderful lady, and Jeff & I are so happy we have crossed paths. May the new Spring season fill you with more comfort and love. xo

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  26. Valori I am so sorry for your loss. My husband had a pulmonary embolism a few years ago and amazing lived to tell the tale, however the panic and grief I felt in those few days is something I recognized in your words here. I hope that when my time comes I am able to conduct myself with composed and thoughtful dignity, as you have, through out the funeral proceedings. I am filing this post away in my mind to refer to when that time happens.
    Hope you find comfort, peace and happiness soon.
    xx

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