ACCESSIBLE WAKE
All are welcome. A safe, inclusive spot especially for those precluded from attending public memorials for loved ones for any reason. Grief and also humor spoken here.
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Saturday, July 17, 2010
"Five Oaks" at Harriett's Bluff on the Crooked River, about as far south as you can go and still be in Georgia

My mother bought this property with her own money from her job as a telephone operator with Southern Bell. It was a gift to her parents.
My grandmother, Bombombia, called it Five Oaks, for the special live oak cluster that grew there, and she fought with Georgia Power to keep the trees. We sat out under the trees at night and the light would draw in beetles, which Granddaddy would catch to feed to the circle of waiting frogs.
My grandparents would light a smoke pot using moss to keep bugs away, as the original inhabitants of this country did. Granddaddy's cigar smoke curled around his fedora. Bombombia rocked me and sang Shall We Gather at the River.
Once I was outside in this yard with my mother, and she was a short distance away. I think she was unloading the car. I thought I must be a pretty cute teenage girl when I saw a carload of boys slowing down, their heads swiveling. One of them leaned out and said to me, while pointing at my mother, "Who is that?"
In Memorium
Your Mother raised a loving and caring daughter, and I am positive she knows you are with her in every way possible today. She knows you are respecting her memory in a very special way....loving her in your own unique way and in your own safe space, singing her songs in the company of your animal angels. She sees your tears and hears your voice and she understands that you must keep healthy....every mother wants their child to stay safe and well. Although your other family members might not understand your needs right now, your mother certainly does.
I lift up my prays for you, your family, and for the healing of your grief, your estrangement from the family members who, in their ignorance of your health issues, do not understand your absence, and for your illness to let you have peace and normalcy once more....in God all things are possible.
This morning as I am sitting here thinking of you, I put a tape of my flute music on....I don't have my flute anymore, but I recorded this about 9 years ago. The solo is of tears and sorrow, but of hope and resignation, of passion and the soul....it is The Meditation of Thais by Jules Massenet. It has long been one of my favorite flute solos and I play the music today for your sorrow at your mother's transition, and for your pain and grief. The notes of the flute are the tears....and the pray is heard in Heaven.
Be well, stay in your healthy safe space and let your body be okay. Your suffering will pass and your mother's memory will always hold that very special place in your heart that only a daughter can know. Go have some cinnamon toast!
Sweets for the Sweet
Now, I drink black tea every day, and green tea most days. I've been unable to eat much, just fruit and nuts and miso. I used to fast for a couple of days every now and then, but since becoming ill I've not been able to do that, until now. It's a mystery.
My mom loved sweets. Her iced tea was thick with sugar, just the way it is made wherever sugar cane grows. When sugar was rationed during WWII, her step-father, my Granddaddy, was able to get Snickers somehow. Back then they were thick as gold bricks to hear her tell it.
I want to pour old time Snickers at her feet. I want to see my Granddaddy walking up to present them to her. I want to see the look of innocent delight on her gorgeous face when she bites into one, standing there barefoot in the grey sand in her rolled up dungarees, with her upturned nose and hair like a cloud.
Friday, July 16, 2010
Where I was born--I am fairly sure there was a building at that time.
Songs to Sing for Frances
Pennies From Heaven
Green Grow the Lilacs
People Will Say We’re In Love
On The Street Where You Live
Room Full Of Roses
Sending You A Big Bouquet Of Roses
Melancholy Baby
A You’re Adorable, B You’re So Beautiful
Mares Eat Oats
I Get A Kick Out Of You
I Saw the Harbor Lights
Who’s Sorry Now
Birds Do It
Around the World I Searched For You
Up A Lazy River
Take Good Care Of Yourself
You Must Have Been A Beautiful Baby
You Say Potato And I Say Potato
Whispering While You Cuddle Near Me
Maybe I’m Right
Just One of Those Things
Shine on Harvest Moon
By the Light of the Silvery Moon
A couple of my grandmother’s songs:
Shall We Gather At the River (She lived on the Crooked River, a tidal river and tributary to the St. Mary's that forms the border between Florida and Georgia. I always thought this song was about her river. I think she sang it that way. "The River" was a sacred place inhabited by fiddler crabs, transient dolphins running in and out with the tides, and luminescent diatoms. At the river, no one asks what time it is, they ask about the tide.)
The Rose of No Man’s Land (My grandmother loved this one because she was a registered nurse, and there is no doubt about it—it is a compelling and stirring song in tribute to the nurses who served in the carnage of WWI.)
The Day of Burial
I'll just include what I asked my husband to do for me:
"Please put cinnamon in the purple washi envelope. Cinnamon will always remind me of cinnamon toast on the couch in Cleveland watching Captain Kangaroo and the Today show. I can see her moving back and forth, bringing it to me and putting it on a tv tray. Even though I always asked for the same thing, she always asked me what I wanted before making it. My breakfast was made to order, and it was always cream of wheat, bacon, and cinnamon toast with chocolate milk. thx"
I always loved Mr. Moose and Bunny Rabbit more than the Captain and Mr. Green Jeans. The ping pong balls just killed me with laughter.
I will sing for her here tomorrow. I will post a song list for anyone else who wants to sing for her. She had a beautiful voice. One day recently when we were talking on the phone, I said, "I know all your songs, and I sing them." We both understood that I was saying, "I will always remember you." I'm so lucky I was able to say that. That same day, in order to demonstrate to her that I carried her within me, I started a song called Roomful of Roses, and she sang along with me. Her diaphragm was paralyzed, and she couldn't summon a lot of air. It was the sweetest thing for me to be given the opportunity to sing to her and with her. I told her about the cinnamon too.
My voice is not as clear and sweet as hers, but you don't listen to perfect pitch singing every day without developing some kind of ear. When I said that my grandmother, her mother, had had a pretty voice, and an operatic one, she told me that her mother had studied voice. I never knew that. This matriarchy is full of surprises, right up until the end. I love them. I am of them, and I feel that more than I ever have. I wonder if that is a common sensation. It is so palpable, I think it must be.
