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Oysters do not go in graves

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On Black Friday we met Piper Dave in the cemetery with a box full of Mackula.
Translation: We hired our friend Dave, who plays the bagpipes, to meet us in the cemetery to bury my dad’s ashes the day after Thanksgiving.

It was all Nancy’s fault, really.

Mackula died in January of 2008. Nancy died in July of 2024.

I met Nancy in the 6th grade and have called her sister since then. Mackula (my dad) would take us to movies or shopping or lunches or shows, and he would introduce us (to anyone really) as his daughters. Other friends were just friends: ”This is my daughter Lucy and her friend Ethel” or “This is my daughter Veronica and her friend Betty”.

But my dad adored Nancy, and though not his child, she was introduced as my sibling. He’d say things like: “These are my daughters, Frick and Frack” or “These are my daughters, The Notorious Twosome” making us sound like a failed vaudeville act or criminal runaways from a sideshow.

I would do anything for Nancy, and in her final days, she requested that her ashes be divided and scattered in various locations.

We told Hurricane (my mom) that part of Nancy’s ashes should go near daddy, and since both of his (biological) children and grandchildren were all going to be in town at Thanksgiving, wasn’t it was time to actually bury the man? She agreed.

After a brief day or two of me and GB (my brother) having blood pressure panic surges, she located him. Hurricane has moved three times since Mackula’s death and some sleuthing was required, but the box of ashes was found, in a dresser drawer where she keeps sweaters she’s not worn since 1988 and her winter scarves and socks. “Would y’all calm down. I would’ve found him when the weather turned real cold,” she said, rolling her eyes.

We’d decided we’d do it at 10am, then drive back to my house and eat some of daddy’s favorite foods at lunch as a gastronomic tribute. This meant steamed crab legs, steamed oysters, spicy pterodactyl wings, and Corona beers. Along with Thanksgiving leftovers and desserts, it was a feast to make him proud.

The oysters, though, were the culinary coup-de-grace.

Mackula loved steamed oysters more than a rare ribeye (and if you knew the man, you know he ate a lot of those). We’re a family that considers an all-you-can-eat oyster roast an acceptable challenge. In the months before he died, we made every oyster connection we could on the Carolina coasts, even once driving to Murrells Inlet to have them at one of his favorite places- called, (of course), Nance’s.

For Black Friday preparations, I ordered 150 oysters and Big Haggis (my husband) cleaned out the big steamer pot and basket, filled the propane tank, and found all the oyster knives.

Hurricane was excited and hyper-focused on the crab legs and oysters, and weeks in advance began issuing lame culinary threats about over-steaming them. Every time we spoke to her about the graveside ceremony, she spoke about how ready she was to eat some “good ole” steamed oysters. “We could throw one oyster in the hole with your daddy,” she said, completely missing/ignoring the horror that registered with me and GB.

“What the actual fuck?” he later railed, mirroring my own inner monologue.

“Let’s throw an oyster IN THE HOLE with your daddy. There’s a sentence no child should ever hear. Thanks Hurricane,” I commiserated.

“Daddy would come back and haunt her for wasting a perfectly good oyster.”

“If he hasn’t become a haint already, I think that ship has sailed.”

We paid the gravedigger holiday overtime. We hired Dave to play two stanzas of four different musical pieces on the bagpipes to sandwich wee stories we would share about dad. With a camping chair, a flask, and a plan, we drove in the opposite direction from the Black Friday crowds and sales, and gathered in the cemetery to settle Mackula into his final resting place.

Stories were shared. Tears were shed. By 11am, Mackula was interred with the women he loved most who died before him: his mother and two sisters. He would appreciate that we kept our wee ceremony short and sweet; it was chilly, and we needed to go home and fire up an oyster pot.

And we did not toss any oysters in the hole with him.

The week prior, when I reminded Hurricane that Nancy had been allergic to shellfish, she nodded solemnly and said, “Well. Skip that then. We can’t do that.”

Nancy’s wishes moved my family to get my dad out of a drawer and into his family plot. And the same dead woman’s allergies were enough to move my mom away from one of her more recent hair-brained ideas.

Gilbert to my Sullivan, still a beloved part of my family’s madcap revue.

Thanks Nancy.


 
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Posted by on February 19, 2025 in BLOG DEPOSITS

 

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On the “Calendaring” of Life

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On the “Calendaring” of Life

We are only five days into the new year, but rather than talk of resolutions, this year I am focused on Time – in what feels like a new and weighty way.

In the new year, we use calendar as a verb without much reflection. We plan our year, seemingly on autopilot. For examples, I am calendaring a trip to the Midwest for a niece’s graduation. I am calendaring camping trips and fly-fishing excursions and hosting the July 4 long weekend. With a stroke of a pen, I am six months out into my life, thinking of the fun of living life with ever an eye on figuring out how to pay for it all (a bigger concern for me since I effectively quit my job in December).

But more than money, or goals, or celebrations. I’m an extrovert; I love a party. I (like to think I) am realistic about goals. And I’m not afraid of being poor. I’ve been all varieties of it. Including homeless and sleeping in my car for a wee stretch.

Time – as I understand it – isn’t measured in financial quarters for me
– though my financial advisor would say I should reconsider
Time for me isn’t measured in semesters
– even though I am still a professor and these calendars are provided for me
Time for me isn’t about legacy
– I am childfree, so my calendars are neither filled with soccer practices and proms, nor the countdown to empty nesting; I have the luxury of Auntie and Fairy Godmother duties only
I don’t measure Time in personal or professional accomplishments
– sometimes just crawling into January, exhausted but alive (maybe with a half martini in hand) is success enough.

But The Thing with which I mark time is the way I believe most people do, even if they get bogged down with the calendaring of life.

Which is to say in story.

I understand Time in narrative.

I think most humans do too.

The year I graduated from college I have no idea what I “calendared” beyond passing Statitics so that I could walk in May. I don’t remember a single thing about that class or its exam, but I do remember that my grandmother left a message on my answering machine that said her entire Stitch and Bitch group at church was praying hard for me to pass. (Whose to say it didn’t work.)

1996 was the year I moved to CA with $28.17 in my bank account and a Texaco card. There were so many stories to follow that.

1989 was the year I decided it was OK to forgive myself for not liking someone just because they were family. (Being related was not a pass for being a bigot.) Those stories, while kept secret, were integral to my identity. And continue to be.

2005 was the year I lost my grandad and made the worst decision of my marriage – to move into his old home as a DIY house situation. We lived in it while renovating it, working crap jobs with long hours and dealing with unhinged people of all sorts. (It has since become a point of marital pride; if we can survive that, we can survive anything.) So. Many. Stories.

In 2017, as a PhD student, my life was often marked in pages and not in days. And as I was mining and refining stories for a large project, my husband consistently showed me and my chemo brain one of life’s greatest acts of kindness – which is to pretend you haven’t already heard that story before.

In 2008, I lost my dad after years of heartache associated with congestive heart disease.

In 2024, I lost my sister to a brain tumor.

All of these events involve the happiest, most enriching stories of my life, even though attached to some of the saddest moments. In January of each of those years, I didn’t make resolutions. I can only remember the gratitude I felt – still feel – for being so lucky to have these people and stories in my life.

And these stories last longer than lifetimes.

So I am starting this year with capital-G Gratitude. Not a personal scoresheet of accomplishments and failures, but gratitude for living a life that includes all of the above.

I started by writing thank you notes.

Thank you notes for holiday presents are a must for me. And they will be hand-written until I no longer have that capacity because I feel strongly about the weight of such actions. But then I started writing other thank you notes. Then letters. Long ones that I might never mail – I am still distilling that idea.

A thank you note isn’t about performing some expected piece of etiquette, but about recognizing someone for thinking of you. In a world where it is easy to dismiss others, to not think of others, or own the consequences of word and deeed, I think that’s quite a special thing, a note of thanks. Even when writing a note to someone I don’t particularly care for, I am choosing words that are honest and kind.

And, you know of course, that if you are writing a thank you note to a person you don’t like, there are stories there too. Gratitude should be shown for all of the stories. Stories make us who we are, even those guided by villains. Sometimes especially so.

So here we are, five days into the new year, and I am feeling okay about it. I have anxieties of course – about my bills, my family, my country – I’m pragmatic and not blind to the evils in this world.

But I’m not a goal-setting over-achieving optimism-oozing cheerleader “let’s crush this” kind of person. I am more of a “let’s pour a drink and make a few plans and enjoy how our stories develop” kind of woman.

I am coolio with the new year because I am open to new stories.

The good, the bad, the ugly.

They are all coming.

But let’s write them together, shall we?

 
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Posted by on January 6, 2025 in BLOG DEPOSITS

 

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