Fun At Funerals

Funerals. Bad word. Right up there with shingles, scabies, dog poop and malaria as unwanted life events. Ew.

Yet, they are inevitable. People we love will die. People we don’t love will die. Lots of people we don’t know will die. And we will die.

Here I am borrowing loosely from the LGBTQ anthem: “We’re here. We’re queer. Get used to it.” I say: “We’re here. We’re mortal. Get used to it.” Admittedly not anywhere near as mellifluous.

But are funerals the absolutely worst occasions we have to take part in? That pretty much depends on the above associations. Did you love the deceased? Did you hate the deceased while s/he was living? Did you even know him or her?

The answer to these questions will definitely inform the tone and your emotional response to the funeral you are attending. Although it begs the question, if you didn’t even know the person, what were you doing at their funeral anyway?

My mother used to regularly visit funeral homes in her home town whether she knew the deceased or not. She always stayed afterwards for the free food and baked goodies.

A nutritional mainstay of her diet for a good number of her later years actually. But this is not about my mother so I won’t go there. Not directly at any rate.

I am trying to say that not all funerals are bad. Some engender relief. Some engender gratitude for the release from pain and suffering. Some have unwelcome but noteworthy comic elements.

I have the worst funny story about my great-uncle’s funeral back in the last century. To say Great Uncle Leigh was not a religious man would have been a dramatic understatement.

He worked nearly his whole life as a logger in the backwoods of provincial New Brunswick, Canada and later as a carpenter and house builder. Leigh deftly managed to dodge the marriage and kids trap as a young man. However, as old age and decrepitude started to set in, he apparently felt it wise to give up his bachelor status.

He tossed his single lifestyle in favor of a comely widow hovering in about his age range. A comely widow whose baking and cooking skills were locally renowned. It could be said Uncle Leigh knew exactly which side his bread was buttered on.

The only gaping and discernible gap between them was Millie’s feverish commitment to God, and the Baptist church and Uncle Leigh’s religious avoidance of all of it. Not only did he avoid church as an attendee but he also avoided any of its teachings. Uncle Leigh was a proudly devout heathen through and through.

So he and the widow did the deed. Got married, I mean. Some years and many, many apple pies later, Millie passed. In due course, Leigh got older and sick and soon followed Millie on the path into Heaven’s kitchen. (Though, heathen that he was, that point is certainly debatable.)

A funeral was arranged. Without a church to call home and no preacher who knew him personally, there was no religious eulogist familiar enough with him to summarize his life and character. The pastor of Millie’s church was summoned.

Now as an audience member in the family pew, it certainly seemed to me that the ad hoc preacher did not know anything at all about what – or more precisely – who he was talking about.

Then the preacher man’s eulogy launched into a passionate anecdote about sitting – for a time – beside Uncle Leigh on his deathbed. The preacher fairly swooned as he shared his ecstatic news with the assembled gathering.

According to him, our beloved Uncle Leigh, “in his waning hours,” “had accepted salvation and the Lord Jesus Christ as his personal Savior.” Apparently this happened just as Uncle Leigh was hovering on the brink of passing over to his “final reward.”

Sitting amongst other relatives in the family pew, including my mother, I did not take this news well. The image of sweet but tough and resolute old heathen Uncle Leigh accepting the Lord Jesus Christ into his house, let alone into his bedroom and heart, hit me entirely the wrong way.

I struggled to suppress a chuckle. As the preacher droned on about the salvation of dear Uncle Leigh’s immortal soul, the rising chuckle gained momentum.

It was everything I could do not guffaw out loud, in what I knew would have been a most inappropriate and shameful outburst.

Still I was doubled over in my seat in the pew, holding my sides, rocking quietly, in an attempt to regain some self-control. At a point, I just jumped up and fled the sanctuary. The laughter exploded out of me once I was safely out of anyone’s hearing in the hall outside.

If you had actually known Uncle Leigh, the absurdity of the preacher’s announcement was too ridiculous for words. It took me several minutes to compose myself.

But compose myself I finally did. I slithered quietly back into the sanctuary and settled into my seat in the family pew – once again, the very model of grief and decorum.

The little break I took meant the funeral had moved on to another speaker, blessedly. My composure and the family’s dignity were intact.

Then, on my shoulder, I felt a gentle tap. I looked around and saw a white glove covered hand and behind that the sweetest and most compassionate-looking elderly lady with tightly curled blue hair and a tender expression of sympathy.

“There, there, dear,” she comforted me. “I know that grief can be overwhelming when you lose a dear one.” I should have been happy she completely misread the reason I fled the sanctuary.

As it happened, her overture had the unfortunate effect of forcing me to once again repress laughter bubbling up within me. Admittedly, I was pretty emotional. But in the entirely wrong way for the occasion at hand.

I smiled broadly, patted her gloved hand still on my shoulder, and whispered sincere thanks for her kindness and concern.

It may have been Uncle Leigh we gathered to bury that day and whose life we celebrated, but, in retrospect, I feel I dodged a bullet.

At the very least, I managed to save the family’s dignity and my own on that sad and sombre and august occasion.

Seriously close call.

Sacred Space and Place

The word “sacred” is done to death. The word is bandied about with what seems like very little spiritual ballast to help us access it these days.

As I have come to understand sacred space, it is a place we carve out to commune with ourselves and with Spirit. Or more accurately perhaps, the Spirit within ourselves. Or, as in some traditions, a Higher Power.

Now there’s a lot of assumption going on right there. “Communing with Spirit” is off-putting to many. You can’t taste it, hear it or see it. Not with our physical senses at any rate. But open yourself up and you can surely feel it.

There are two reasons why a call to sacred communion is off-putting, I believe. Connecting with “Spirit” assumes you believe there is “One.” You must also believe that “Spirit” is available to you and willing to spend time with you. (Who am I, we may ask, for Spirit to talk to lowly me?)

The second reason it is often off-putting is that notions of Spirit are fragmented and compartmentalized in our lives today. Where do we even go to connect with “Spirit” if we believe in one? Church? Or a synagogue or a mosque? Somewhere where someone in fancy clothes with elevated connections to “Spirit” grants us access?

Here’s the thing. What I believe is that Spirit is an inherent part of “who we are.” It is universal and inborn in every one of us and is included with membership in the human race. That other stuff – the fancy garments and learned sermons – is a form of religious theater.

It is vitally important to some people. The dogma of church and religious teachings grounds many people in their lives and guides their actions. I have no quarrel with that. But I will say it is likely a little narrow in terms of what Spirit actually is and does.

I don’t care how much one studies or learns or how old and wise they get, the fundamental mysteries of life remain fundamentally mysterious. No one to my knowledge has cracked the code of how Earth came to be in the form it is and what it does.

There are no answers to devolving the “miracle of birth,” except from a strictly scientific and biological perspective. And let’s admit it. That comes up a little short in the “explanation” department.

So today I was touched once again by the teachings of my dear old friend Joseph Campbell (in my mind’s eye only; I never met the man.) He talked about the crucial need to create a sacred space in our lives. His prescription was to carve out a space or even maybe an hour a day to do nothing.

No chores. No phone calls. No conversations. Nada. Just focused me time. To play your favorite music (no matter how bad it is in the opinion of others.) To go inward. To write perhaps. To just be. And see what comes up.

Hah. Nice try with a quasi-OCD, Type A, get ‘er done kinda gal. But I am working on it. And I have experienced sacred spaces and places before. Sustaining them seems to be an issue.

Joe Campbell says it is important to carve out sacred space for ourselves now because our capitalist system focusses almost exclusively on social and economic activities. When First Nations roamed North America, they inherently understood that everything about them was sacred. The land, the skies, all of nature.

They acted accordingly. No wonder they were such a threat to the invading white Europeans. Europeans “triumphed,” in fact, because, they had little to no sense of spiritual relationship to the land and nature. What a high price we have all paid for that disconnect.

Spirit lives in all of us. It may be dormant or temporarily absent or out dealing with some other poor schmuck who has appealed to it for succour. We can disconnect from “Spirit” through our deeds and words. But it is never dead, dead.

I believe Spirit supports and encourages life and loving. Our worldly pursuits may cause us to lose track of that fact. In my healing journey, I often said, I abandoned myself, but god (as I choose to call Spirit) never did. When I was acting contrary to the laws of love and connection, the disconnect was painfully evident.

It is how I understand clinical depression. A disconnect with the essence and vitality of who we really are. Sure, part of it may be brain chemistry. (Who devised that in the first place is the obvious question?) But Spirit heals from within.

Great spiritual leaders have always know that and preach about it. Religious leaders? Well, it depends on how spiritually driven their beliefs and actions are. Among the best I ever knew was Rev. John Hogman. John was half of the ministerial tag team at Fairfield United Church in Victoria, BC with his wife, Rev. Michelle.

John’s sermons were consistently marked by his ability to connect the relationship between the scripture Jesus Christ proselytized and our everyday life. A song that was popular when Rev. John was on the planet was Joan Osborne’s One of Us: “What if God was one of us … just a slob like one of us … just a stranger on the bus … tryin’ to make his way home.”

So it would appear I need to tune up my Spirit communion skills. To carve out serious “me time.” To move more into the camp of human “being” instead of human “doing.” To reacquaint myself with a sense of awe, joy and wonder.

Because after all the money has been earned, the lectures have been delivered, the books written or read, what else is there??

Spirit and the Great Mystery. Even if I don’t “know” what the heck it is.

Advent One

I’m going to go to church today. It’s been awhile.

With all the stresses and strains of the past few months, I am deliberately seeking sanctuary. I have tried to create it in my home environment. That has helped some but it is not enough.

I need people. I need community. After living in a new place for such a short period of time, church beckons me back. Attending church was once central to my life.

In the Christian tradition, today is the first day of Advent. It is the first of the four Sundays leading up to Christmas Day. On each consecutive Sunday, we celebrate getting closer to the blessed birthday of Christ the Lord. It is such an enduring and compelling story.

Do I buy the whole Christ the Savior story 110%? Not really. He was undoubtedly a wise and good man. Deeply wise like many others who had come before him. Confucius. Buddha. Mohamed. All great humanitarians who contributed great wisdom and advice for how to live a good and godly life.

I have always been impressed by the consistency in their messages. Delivered and interpreted within vastly different cultural contexts and languages and eras. But the basics seem similar.

Love is a big one. Love one another. Help one another. The greatest value we can offer to life is our time and talents. That is how love is actualized. Pretty simple script. Pretty difficult to stick to.

There’s all those pesky ego desires and physical and emotional demands and limitations on whatever we do or want to do. So life is an ongoing struggle between selflessness and self-preservation.

It is disheartening to see how highly evolved spiritual visionaries have fared in history. The messages of peace and love the greatest humanitarians – starting with Jesus Christ – are contrary to the more common and baser human interests of power and control.

Assassination seems an alarmingly common fate for many visionaries that walked among us. Abraham Lincoln. John F. Kennedy. Robert Kennedy. Martin Luther King.

Preaching the gospel of love and peace is clearly in conflict with the more worldly interests of those who believe that glory and salvation are only achievable here on Planet Earth.

As the Advent season begins, Christians collectively gather to focus and reflect on this monthlong journey towards the biggest birthday party in their annual calendar. We can try to stiff the incessant material come-ons, difficult as this may be.

Same story every year. We are reminded to put “Christ back into Christmas.” “Remember the true meaning of the season.” Hard to argue with that logic. A debate over the inconsistency of those sentiments is for another time.

Personally, I am happy for the inherent annual reminders in this season that aren’t about buying stuff. Reminders about the importance of love, magic, unity and harmony.

My thoughts turn to Christmases past and present. I especially like memories when the elements of love, family, sharing and joy came together and were there in abundance.

Here’s to an upcoming season of the same.

In Our Stars

I like to explore things I don’t fully understand. High level finance, for example. The meaning of life. Relationships. Of all types.

When I discover something in the world that has been around forever, it sparks my curiosity. I want to know more. I may not make my exploration a full-time pursuit but I am usually wiser having found out more about it.

I was a faithful church goer at one time as I tried to fathom the depths and mysteries and sticking power of Christianity. I wanted to know what this Christ guy was all about and what he was trying to teach us. I was particularly intrigued by how he has held so many people in such thrall for such a long time.

I have thrown runes. In Norse mythology, runes functioned as letters, but they were much more than just letters. Each rune was an ideographic or pictographic symbol of some cosmological principle or power, about which I understand zero to nothing. 

Even if my interpretation of the stones I drew was facile and superficial, I loved how cool they looked. And even tarot card readings. Again, pretty cool looking pictures regardless what the symbols were trying to indicate.

Ancient cultures developed their own methods for seeking guidance from the spirit world. Historically, all peoples needed and eventually found some methodology to help them work through the mysteries of life and living.

Is there a parallel spirit world out here with guardian angels and demons and all manner of unknown entities that act on us in our daily lives? Damned if I know.

Yesterday, I had an astrology reading. If that revelation hasn’t moved you to close your device, I want to explain the value I took away from that session. To start with, I chose a reputable astrologer dianabadger.com.

I sent her details of my birth earlier in the week with the day, date and time. When we went online to meet yesterday at about 4:30 PM (EST), she opened by displaying my birth chart. The only impression I had from the visual was an enormous amount of activity in one of my houses down in the far right corner.

To her, this was instructive and meaningful. My fifth house showed strong fire and creativity. I was born with Aries rising. It also revealed my tendency to run slipshod over people’s feelings in my drive to accomplish in the world and get things done. That resonated, if a bit uncomfortably.

So I am going to stop right there. Because saying anything more about what Diana told me would undermine the nuance of Diana’s work and would likely be dead wrong or garbled. I tried to listen more than I talked.

Diana validated many things I already knew from other explorations in counseling and Myers-Briggs testing and enneagrams and readings in the whole wide world of self-help literature. A lot she said I already knew about myself.

So my question was, how did she do that? How is it that there can be such accurate revelations about a single individual in a chart based on when, and where you were born?

She said my chart indicated I was turning away from pursuing public accolades and accomplishments and evolving into a person with a greater sense of service and community.

You likely have passing familiarity with the archetypes of the zodiac signs. If you do, you would know what a course correction that is for a flamboyant and attention-seeking Leo (and c’mon … are you telling me you never once read Jeanne Dixon’s horoscope for your sign to see how the day was likely to turn out?)

She said my chart indicates I am heading toward the influences of Aquarius which should make my approach to life more balanced and egalitarian. Dear God, I hope so. My connection to the Earth and Nature is likely to become stronger.

In summary, Diana told me I am moving toward a greater sense of “me” to “we.” I sure hope so. It can be lonely being a lion that people may respect but avoid out of fear. Diana accurately nailed difficulties I had in my life “getting a seat at the table.” She suggests that will happen naturally with surrender and by letting go.

For a self-reflecting, hyper-vigilant, control freak like me, letting go is pretty intimidating, to say nothing of surrender. I am not even sure I know what that would look like, if I’m honest.

But I guess I am going to have to learn.

Wish me luck.

Thanks for the insights and the nudge, Diana. I’ll let you know how it’s going.