Blog

death in the family…

To bastardize Tolstoy — happy towns are all alike, and unhappy ones are unhappy in their own ways.

In Erie, Pennsylvania, where I grew up, the steel industry fueled the good times, and when it left to find a cheaper home toward the end of the ’70s, those good times gave way to recession. Left with only a polluted Great Lake to offer as an alternate attraction, Erie’s never fully recovered. Many of my friends and family members are out of work, under-employed, or collecting disability or unemployment. The lake’s beaches often close because of E. Coli levels. Its fish are cancerous. In many ways my family is representative of the people in the town — deeply generous, tough but fiercely loyal, skeptical but unwilling to ever give up.

A few weeks ago I flew back to see my relatives in Erie. On a visit with my Uncle John, or “Johnny,” as everyone in the family called him , we sat in the living room of his mother’s old house where he had always lived and watched a replay of a 10-year -old college football game, taken from ESPN’s completely unnecessary series called “Greatest College Football Games.” And, we talked about the game. Johnny never liked to talk about himself. He had suffered with polio as a child and spent two years in an Iron Lung. Besides emerging from this experience physically and mentally stunted, he also dealt with kids bullying him in school.

“This was a really good college football game,” he’d said, “this, yeah. Uh, this was a really good game.” I agreed with him, though had to admit to myself I had no memory of ever watching the game.

Shortly after I returned home from Erie I received news that Johnny had passed away. He rarely left the house, but just before he died he went to a family picnic feeling unwell. My mother said she thought her brother had come to say goodbye. Less than 48 hours after the picnic, he died in his chair watching TV of an apparent heart attack, still grasping a bottle of water by his side.

Years ago, when my wife first met Johnny, she’d commented afterward, “I could see he had a kind heart, he looked at me right in the eyes. He accepted me right away.” A  stranger to my uncle, she’d reminded me of qualities he possessed that I’d somehow learned to take for granted with the passing of years. Johnny likely never had a girlfriend, he had no acquaintances and no contact with any one outside the family. It had become habit for us, or, at least me, to think of him as anti-social.

The funeral for Johnny was held yesterday. Ever since learning of his passing I have been thinking of the personality traits my wife had immediately noticed. I’ve wondered, were they enough? And for whom, us or him?

We could not afford to go back to Erie so soon again to attend the funeral. We decided against sending flowers, as sentimental gestures like this, even pity, didn’t quite feel right. I emailed my mother the sketch of a poem I’d written on my visit instead. Honestly, I don’t know that it speaks to Johnny at all. There seems so much and so little to say.

 

A Train Gone

Sunlight soaks the coned fruits of the sumac,

Wounds crowding a rusted train viaduct

Whose chunks have broken off in the rumble of years,

The phantom load of train cars that used to pass

Over the road, last shreds of ghost locomotion.

 

The heat sweating the jagged leaves,

Does it push the steel slab further along,

Little by little, like a drop of rain on a stone?

 

Or has this bridge built by dead men

Seeped into what surrounds it, burnishing

The earth, then the roots, the stems, leaves

And fruit with all its distresses, all its decay,

For the sun to lay bare.

 

 

3 Comments

  • in home care on Sep 27, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    very couple of sites that occur to become in depth beneath, from our point of view are undoubtedly very well worth checking out

  • SATTA MATKA on Sep 26, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    we prefer to honor lots of other world wide web sites around the internet, even though they arent linked to us, by linking to them. Below are some webpages worth checking out

  • social apps on Sep 26, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    below youll discover the link to some sites that we think you’ll want to visit

  • Turen on Sep 26, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    please pay a visit to the web-sites we comply with, like this 1, as it represents our picks from the web

  • Fenster und Turen on Sep 25, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Here is a good Blog You may Locate Interesting that we Encourage You

  • real work from home jobs 2016 on Sep 25, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    here are some links to internet sites that we link to due to the fact we think they’re really worth visiting

  • Google on Sep 24, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Sites of interest we’ve a link to.

  • Child Custody Forms on Sep 24, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Here is a good Weblog You might Come across Intriguing that we Encourage You

  • create app on Sep 22, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Here is a superb Blog You might Obtain Interesting that we Encourage You

  • 受注管理システム on Sep 21, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    we like to honor several other world wide web web sites on the web, even if they arent linked to us, by linking to them. Below are some webpages worth checking out

  • Cash for cars melbourne on Sep 20, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    we came across a cool web-site that you could possibly take pleasure in. Take a search for those who want

  • free app maker on Sep 20, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    just beneath, are numerous entirely not associated web-sites to ours, however, they are certainly really worth going over

  • Google on Sep 18, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Wonderful story, reckoned we could combine a couple of unrelated data, nevertheless really really worth taking a look, whoa did a single master about Mid East has got additional problerms as well.

  • Smart Balance Wheel on Jul 17, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    I use your Smart Balance Wheel http://www.fashionhoverboard.com to attend education.These particular shoos are perfect and yet a few facts far too largley.

  • payday loan on Jul 15, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Another issue is that video gaming became one of the all-time largest forms of fun for people spanning various ages. Kids enjoy video games, plus adults do, too. The particular XBox 360 is just about the favorite games systems for individuals that love to have hundreds of video games available to them, and also who like to learn live with other individuals all over the world. Thank you for sharing your ideas.

  • Lauran Statum on Mar 15, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    I like this website because so much useful material on here : D.

  • Clarice Edin on Mar 15, 2016 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    It¦s really a cool and helpful piece of information. I¦m satisfied that you simply shared this useful information with us. Please keep us informed like this. Thank you for sharing.

  • Olga on Mar 20, 2014 Reply Your comment is awaiting moderation.

    Technically the only use of Beast that I know of is i the intro that plays before the main menu, which, as with many games, is that same triealr. If you ask me though if it’s on the disc it’s part of the soundtrack.Games are one my primary avenues of musical discovery, if it weren’t for the Fallout series I wouldn’t know about the Ink Spots or Marty Robbins.

  • Aunt Barb & Uncle Bill on Aug 04, 2012 Reply

    A good article you wrote about John. Bill got to spend some one-on-one visits with John during our visits in Erie, and Bill was amazed at how intelligent John was; John was quite knowledgeable about a lot of things, although most people did not realize this.

    Venus was right about John “having a kind heart.” He accepted everyone openly. He is truly in heaven but I miss him from the depths of my heart, and will pray for him every day.

    Due to Bill’s stroke, we were unable to fly to Erie for the funeral, but were certainly there in spirit.

  • Aunt Barb & Uncle Bill on Aug 03, 2012 Reply

    Dear Sam, Your comments are so touching and bring tears to my eyes. Due to effects of his stroke, Bill and I couldn’t make it to the funeral and felt so very badly about it. John and Bill spent many times together during our visits to Erie, and Bill was surprised at the depth of John’s knowledge, which many people had never realized. He was really quite intelligent and, as Venus mentioned, he had a kind heart. All he wanted was to be around the family. We ask for prayers and will always fondly remember him. He was a wonderful brother who always cared about others rather than himself. Thank you again for your poem and comments. Love, Aunt Barb & Uncle Bill

  • admin on Aug 23, 2012 Reply

    thank you, am vacationing now, but will check your site when i return…

Leave Reply