Precious time is slipping away
But you're only king for a day
It doesn't matter to which God you pray
Precious time is slipping away
It doesn't matter what route you take
Sooner or later the heart's going to break
No rhyme or reason, no master plan
No Nirvana, no promised land
Say que sera, whatever will be,
But then I keep on searching for immortality
She's so beautiful, but she's going to die some day-
Everything in life just passes away
Van Morrison
Believe it or not the above song is quite peppy and I highly encourage it for morale boost. It expresses perfectly what Linda said to me on February 19th 1999: "Oh Boo, we are all right behind him." (I love the Irish..so ready for the next stage).
So I went to the funeral- resplendent in a previously unworn black dress and waterproof mascara. My outfit looked so ominous- like a flattened grim reaper- that I took its picture.
The black dress is the wardrobe equivalent of the zen mantra:
"Do not tell people who you are, and they will know you."
It might mean the first date or the funeral. It is a blank canvas on which we project whatever we choose: joy, grief, mystery. The little black dress is paramount. It is the last thing we will ever give away.
One could tell the entire story of my friendship with the Carneys simply by reviewing the black dresses we have shared. There was the one I loaned them for their mother's funeral when we were 20 years old: a drop waisted number with white piping that made Boo look like a little girl. There is the one they swiped from my closet for their little sister's prom. There were the black pregnancy dresses Laura loaned me; and even though she had four babies and I only had one, she never asked for them back. When the Carneys' Aunt Theresa came out from Boston just before their mother died, she wandered around the house with her one black dress on a hanger, dusting the lint off (she said a woman only needed one dress, one skirt, and one blouse in her closet). The dress was like seeing a vulture appear overhead; and after a few hours of this, one of the twins lunged for her throat.
We wore black on the tops of tables to dance together, and we wore black to bury my father. We were told not to wear black to weddings; but sometimes we did.
So I put on my blank slate of endless black and drove for the thousandth time with Laura and Mindy to a Catholic ceremony, even though Christine wasn't Catholic (you know us Catholics: no need to quibble once you are dead.) Laura was whispering in my ear that under no circumstances is she to be laid to rest in a Catholic ceremony. She has cooled on her childhood faith....so I promised her I would organize a Bacchanalia inspired extravaganza with sage and high priestesses and tequila. This mollified her. Then she whispered: "it doesn't matter anyway, because you are going first."
The day was a movie we have all seen: cue the beautiful blond girls in black filing into the church- silent crows entering the proceedings. Behind them, crying children in braids leaning against their father; enter the old friends from college-boys we have kissed and forgotten; their new Spanish wives; their teen aged children. Here come the Catholics and the Atheists and the grieving parents.
Here comes the rain in a drought plagued state.
The priest told the children he would take away their pain if he could; and I think he meant it.
But he said if he did, he would have to take away the love as well; because that is the price we pay for love. We must grieve. We must ache.
It reminded me of this quote:
"....They say you have to earn the right to be loved. No. Love is unconditional. If you love someone, they don't have to earn it.
But- The right to tell someone that you love them? That has to be earned.
You have to earn the right to be believed.”
And as shitty a day as this was for those poor children; as shitty as it was for Christine to check out early; I know she earned that honor: her children believe her.
How many people believe us?