I overheard something at my mother’s funeral. Fifty years
have passed and the words still hurt.
“Poor Sheila, so young. Still, she lasted longer than we
thought.”
My auntie, dabbing her eyes, was holding court with other
relatives outside Carleton Crematorium Chapel. I can’t remember if it was
before or after the service, not that it matters. Nothing mattered, except the
deep deception that cut through my very soul. All these people, family and
friends of the family had known that my mother was terminally ill, yet they had
spent the last however many months speaking to me along the lines of, “When
Mummy’s better…”, “When your mum is better…”, “When Sheila gets over this…”. At
nearly fourteen years of age I was old enough to ‘be grown up about all this’,
but not considered to be old enough to be included in what was happening or
given a chance to say goodbye. I was shattered. I had believed I was secure in
a close-knit family. Everybody was hiding the truth.
Well, not quite everybody. My nanna was honest without
actually coming out with the words. She was looking after us, my
sister and me. Our family ran pubs and we were staying out of town at their
pub, rather than ours. I adored my nanna, she was my rock. I wouldn’t usually have
stepped out of line with her for the world. There was much love, respect but
also a tiny bit of fear because I expected she could be even angrier than my
mum if she was cross with me. I don’t know where it came from, but for the one
and only time in my life, I gave her a glimpse of my 'stroppy madam' mood and I answered her back. I don’t remember what was said
between us or why but I regretted it immediately and braced myself for a slap.
It didn’t come. Instead, she hugged me tight and I cried. Tears for being rude
to my lovely nanna and tears for worrying about my mum.
“Where there’s life, there’s hope.” Nanna’s words spoke
volumes. Sheila, my mum was her daughter. Nanna had already suffered the loss
of a daughter, a child, before my mum was born. I wish I had half of her
northern grit.
What I overheard at my mum’s funeral taught me about truth
and about compassion. My relatives wanted to protect me, though deceiving me
into false security was the outcome. It was with the best of intention, I can understand
that. My importance of honesty in life-threatening situations is borne of that
experience.
My husband was very
ill when our son was about twelve, maybe thirteen. The illness seemed never
ending. He was in hospital for months, no diagnosis, no improvement. I’m sure
our son thought long and hard before asking me if Dad was going to die. The
situation was on his mind more than I realised.
I told him with total honesty, that until it was discovered what was
wrong, we didn’t know what would happen, but we hoped Dad would pull through and I promised, I would always
tell him the truth. My husband recovered, eventually, thank goodness. My
children appreciated the truth.
A poem from Muhammad Ali,
The face of truth is open.
The eyes of truth are bright,
The lips of truth are ever closed,
The head of truth is upright.
The breast of truth stands forward,
The gaze of truth is straight,
Truth has neither fear nor doubt
Truth has patience to wait.
The words of truth are touching,
The voice of truth is deep,
The law of truth is simple:
All that you sow you reap.
The soul of truth is flaming,
The heart of truth is warm,
The mind of truth is clear,
And firm through rain or storm.
Facts are but its shadows,
Truth stands above all sin,
Great be the battle in life,
Truth in the end shall win.
The image of truth is Christ,
Wisdom's message its rod;
Sign of truth is the cross,
Soul of truth is God/
Life of truth is eternal,
Immortal is its past.
Power of truth will endure,
Truth shall hold to the last.
Muhammad Ali (1942 - 2016)
Thanks for reading, Pam x
1 comments:
Very moving Pam. White lies are always told with the best of intentions but sometimes the truth is kinder.
I know Muhammad Ali considered that poem a 'masterpiece'. What I find most refreshing about it is that this man who converted to Islam has not become anti-Christian...something which the hard line zealots would do well to recognise and respect.
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