We receive most of our parents’ teachings in the first
few years of our lives, mostly from watching what they do. We adopt and reject
their customs, behaviors and beliefs based on what we think they got right or
wrong.
There is one lesson I learned from my parents towards the
end of their lives. They showed me how to let go of stuff. The pieces of this world
that we gather along the way. The dirt in our little part of the garden. The things
we cherish.
Mom hung on tightly to life through a long terminal
illness. But once her doctor measured her life in weeks, she began to go
through the rituals of letting go. She asked me to push her wheelchair to visit
each room in the house. Her eyes scrolled over each piece of furniture, pictures,
floral arrangements as if to capture a screenshot for a moment and then delete
it. Cherishing her stuff one last time and then releasing her grip on them. She
said nothing except noting when she was ready to move to the next room.
Dad’s method was different. He started the process years
before his death. We watched him get rid of the majority of his possessions when
he remarried after mom died. He was moving on and his choices of what to keep
were more practical than sentimental. We helped him make several more moves after
the death of his second wife, from apartments to independent living to assisted
living to memory care bedrooms. With each move he wanted fewer and fewer things
to go with him. When he died, except for a few family photos, all his
belongings fit into a few donation boxes. He had already given us everything else
that had meaning.
The two methods of letting go were vastly different, but
both acknowledged the temporal nature of this life and the things in it. Mom’s method
carried the tenderness to honor her past. Dad’s method carried the courage to
walk into his future each time the present ground underneath him shifted. Both
were clear that none of it was theirs in the first place and that none of it
had any eternal worth.
Mom’s method held the gratitude of Psalm 16:5 “LORD, you
are my portion and my cup of blessing; you hold my future.” Dad’s gradual
disrobing of stuff embodied Job 1:21 “Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and
naked I will leave this life. The LORD gives, and the LORD takes away. Blessed
be the name of the LORD.”
Both involved letting the dirt of this earth slip through
their hands. One held the rich soil in her palms and let it slowly sift through
her fingers back onto the earth’s surface. The other scooped the dirt by the
handfuls and pitched it over his shoulder. Neither ever looked back at it.
We all have our stuff with different levels of attachment
to it. How do you feel about yours? What will be your way of sifting through life’s
accumulation? How do you want to let go of the dirt?

We just moved Karen’s mom to an independent living retirement community… very timely!
ReplyDeleteWe are following Job 1:21.
ReplyDelete