With the loss of a friend to glioblastoma I reflect on Mary’s pregnancy with a son who will be sacrificed. Both bring to me the foolishness that we can "get over" losing someone.
And both bring me hope.
A now-cancelled
series entitled “A Gifted Man” involved an individualistic, insensitive but
brilliant neurosurgeon who was regularly visited by the spirit of his recently
departed ex-wife, who was, as you might suspect, brilliant but compassionate
and altruistic. The nuance and
effectiveness of the show came through in an episode in which what seemed to be
a brain tumor in a patient turned out to be a chimera, cells of the undeveloped
attached twin. This chimera is a rare
form of something we can all recall.
When I was a boy, there was a story on TV about Siamese twins, and the dilemma of separation surgery. Would the attempt to separate them, allowing them to live a normal life, be worth the risks of surgery? I recall being struck (as a boy in a large family) that they could not get away from each other, that they were without the freedom to go on with their individual lives. How often in our lifelong marriage have Kathy and I freed each other to do things without each other by saying that after all, “we’re not joined at the hip”.
The surface
issue of the cancelled series was the visits by his wife, who completed him. The deeper layer in this episode was the
reality of the connectedness of the “other”; removal of the chimeric “tumor”
was seen as a dilemma. The young boy,
even as he was besieged by the “voice” in his head as the tumor pressed on the
hearing centers of his brain, mourned for the loss of his twin that surgery would
require.
A friend reminded me yesterday that the priest who presided at his father’s funeral had said in his homily “God so respects relationships that when we lose someone we love, he never fills the hole.”
Authentic life
includes these holes, the places once inhabited by the physical presence
of another. In the mystery of life as
this priest, Fr. Norm Dickson, S.J., proposed, grieving is not a matter of going
on with our individual lives severed from their memory, but of embracing the gift
that they remain to us, even as a hole.
Are we ever
alone, really? The word alone is from the Old English words alla ana…all one. We can be lonely, focusing on our sense of
alone-ness, but that is a dangerous delusion.
We are not
alone. Going on is not a matter of going
alone. We are joined at the heart.
Here is a reminder
from e.e cummings – thanks to Bill Hickey for inhabiting me with this.
[i carry
your heart with me(i carry it in]
by
e.e.cummings
i carry your
heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i
am never without it(anywhere
i go you
go,my dear;and whatever is done
by only me
is your doing,my darling) i fear
no fate(for
you are my fate,my sweet)i want
no world(for
beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it’s you
are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever
a sun will always sing is you
here is the
deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the
root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky
of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than
soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is
the wonder that's keeping the stars apart
i carry your
heart(i carry it in my heart)
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