The Sendoff | Teen Ink

The Sendoff

March 8, 2015
By eska BRONZE, Ann Arbor, Michigan
eska BRONZE, Ann Arbor, Michigan
2 articles 0 photos 0 comments

Everybody had lots of fun the day of the funeral. It was, as my father would call it in the days and months after, ‘A damn good sendoff.’
The 30th of December was unusually bright, creating a stark black shadow on a solitary pile of snow that was still intact. Just over 100 people had congregated in St. Hugo’s Catholic Church, a palatial glass building with unusually geometric architecture, for the aforementioned funeral. The service itself was stunning,  the rare winter sun shining through the kaleidoscopic glass, the wails of bagpipes fading away as the musicians marched off, and a young woman’s determination not to cry while reading the eulogy. After the church, the inner family met at the home of the deceased’s parents.
         The house was twice as crowded as usual, due to two different sides of the family--the family of my aunt, who had married my father’s brother, and our family--meeting all together for the first time since my aunt and uncle’s wedding, over 30 years before. I watched the somber mood slowly leaching all color from the room as I felt what we all did in that moment: That no extra people or entire extended families or the elephant in the corner could fill the house’s echoing abyss. My father fished out a bottle of Jameson’s Irish Whiskey from a cabinet, hinting that it was grownup time. As I gravitated towards the edge of the room, I saw my tough uncle, still one of the strongest men I know, crying.
His voice shook while he vividly described how he had found the room and the blood and the note and the— the what, I’ll never know. My father all but evacuated me. And so I remained away from what I considered my family, awkwardly trying to entertain two young second cousins I had never met before.
And so it went, time passing as slowly as possible, until a terrible cacophony captured our attention. The floor above us shook, screeches, yells, and wails clashed, and rushing up the stairs it seemed clear that the elephant in the corner had stampeded into the spotlight. As we neared the door, the volume grew even more painful to the ears, but it also blended slowly into music and lyrics. Everybody was belting their hearts out, the songs varying from anthemic oldies to modern pop music. Strangers danced with strangers who had loved the same person they had, and once I had halted the lump forming in my throat, I opened my mouth as well.
It was a situation that grows in beauty with context. As we were swallowed by the ocean of sound, we didn’t care what the neighbors would think, we didn’t care what anyone thought. We sang until our voices were hoarse, then sang some more. We sang with our memories, rather than regrets, as his namesake played the piano with fervor, and we tried to sing, as he had loved to. We sang, and our two families became one.


The author's comments:

A common phrase is that families only really meet at weddings and funerals. Our family unfortunately got the latter, but there is always the occasional anomaly of a bright winter sun. One of my cousin(who’s funeral this was about)’s favorite songs, and a primary song we sang, was Frank Sinatra’s My Way. The following are two relevant excerpts:


“And now the end is near
And so I face the final curtain
My friend I’ll say it clear
I’ll state my case of which I’m certain”
I’ve loved, I’ve laughed and cried
I’ve had my fill, my share of losing
And now as tears subside
I find it all so amusing…”


Similar Articles

JOIN THE DISCUSSION

This article has 1 comment.


on Mar. 20 2015 at 12:31 am
Emma, I never met your cousin, but I have known your father for many years. You are right about funerals, I posted a picture of the family members who were able to attend my mother's and one of my cousins (who I haven't seen since I was your age) asked me to tell her who everyone was. We toasted mom with Jameson's (the adults) and sparkling juice (the younger members). Thank you for sharing your experience. You have inherited your father's gift for writing and have talked about the release of sharing grief and celebrating life both of which are experienced at funerals/wakes/memorial services if done right. In two days I will go to the memorial service for a friend from church. We will all wear Chucks (Converse tennis shoes). sing songs, tell stories and read verses...some from the Bible and some from The Hobbit. This might give you an idea of what my friend was like ;). She died on her 40th birthday from ALS. We will celebrate her life. Hold onto your perspective and don't stop writing, even if this is not your chosen career. I suspect you will find, if you haven't already that it will be a healing balm when facing life's trials and add to your joy in its celebrations.