I wanted my return to blogging attempts to be about
something important. Important things have happened and have continued happening
in my life. However, I have been unable to pull the one particular important
thing from my brain and put it into words, I have been unable to take a deep
breath and finally say what needs to be said and what deserves to be said. I
know this sounds all melodramatic, but I’m an emotional person, so shut up and don’t
judge me.
There are people who pass in and out of your life. There are
people you choose to hang on to and there are people who you are supposed to
try to hang on to, due to some ill-defined genetic obligation. There are also people
you choose to let go. Of all of the millions of people you encounter in your
life, maybe a few you prop up on a pedestal; you admire and respect those people.
As an emotional person, per the above, I tend to put a lot
of people onto pedestals. This is because it takes my big brain a little while
to catch up to my idiot heart; at which point the pedestal crumbles because I
discover the person atop it wasn’t worthy, as most people aren’t. We all, as is
said of humans, are flawed. However, in my 35 years on earth, there has been
one person who never fell, never even stumbled on the top of the pedestal I had
erected for him. That person is my grandfather, Duane Weber, who passed away
this past August. He is the subject of my “important” blog post. I want to
write this for him and for me, but it really is for anyone who lost their hero.
I don’t think humans are inherently good or evil. Each one
of us moves up and down that spectrum in life, but not Grandpa. He was an
inherently good person. That sounds generic. What I mean is that every action
he took was from a pure and good place in his heart. I never saw him show
malice, or spite, or greed, or injustice, or anger or any of the other bad
words Roget’s Thesaurus can match to those I’ve listed. He was just a good
person. He was also adorable. He was nicknamed Dewey and also nicknamed Grandpa
Nibbles. I couldn’t think of anyone more adorable if I tried – his little red
cardigan, his snickering “hee-hee-hee,” his feigned jump of surprise when we
demanded of him, “Look, Grandpa! Look what I did!” My brother and I played him
and Grams in Euchre. He sat there smiling sweetly through our bombast and BS,
and promptly beat us 10-0. Adorable.
I would like to say I was his favorite, as the oldest
grandkid. I’m sure my sister will argue with me on that point, but I do feel
that I had a special relationship with him. The truth is, not one of us was
really his favorite, and that’s because we were ALL his favorite. He had so
much capacity for love that there was no such thing as loving someone more or
less than someone else. He just loved. Even after the huge family, spawned out
of some sort of German Catholic requisite for procreation, there was still love
left over. Of course, not for the rabbits that ate his petunias.
I learned about love from watching my grandparents. They
taught me how to have the capacity for love. I can think of no better lesson to
teach your children or grandchildren. They were married for 62 years when he
died. For almost double the time that I’ve been alive, they had loved each
other. One time, they came and visited me at the University of Illinois. We
went to dinner, and Grandpa just talked and told story after story while Grams
bickered with him, “no, Duane, no, that’s not right.” He ignored her and kept
right on talking about Will Rogers or whatever. Their bickering was sweet,
though, in good humor as if that had been their strategy to cope through a
lifetime of commitment to one person, even though that one person might
occasionally be annoying. At my brother’s wedding, they continued dancing while
the DJ picked off other dancing couples trying to determine who had been
married the longest. When they were of the last two couples still dancing he
asked, “Sir, what is your advice for a good marriage?” … “Well…” (he paused), “you
need to be able to listen.” We all kind of laughed, especially knowing Grams as
being more outspoken than not. However, there is really a lot of wisdom there.
I would assume that after 62 years, that our significant other’s voice might
easily become some sort of background noise, but not for him. One of the last
times I was home to visit, when he had been moved to his new assisted living
ward, he showed me his little room. On the wall was a picture of Grams, I went
over to look at it, and unprompted, he said, “She’s just as beautiful as when
we first met. She’s my best friend.” He taught me that the capacity for love is
not only a sign of a good heart, but also of a dedicated mind.
I know at this point in my life I’ve become a non-practicing
Catholic. Despite it being past Ash Wednesday and almost Good Friday, the last
time I heard mass was at Grandpa’s funeral. I don’t know if I believe in God.
In my mind, if God exists, then He exists in people like Grandpa, people who
are kind, warm, joyous, and infectious in their own joy. My grandparents, like
most of the elderly population, are political. Grandpa had a hard time voting
Democratic because, being a strict Catholic, he was against abortion. However,
he had an even harder time voting Republican because (and also probably due to
his Catholicism) he believed that it was the healthy person’s duty to help the
sick; it was the rich person’s duty to help the poor, and it was the strong
person’s duty to help the weak. He raved about Keith Olbermann’s broadcasts. We
would have intelligent discussions about politics and where this country is
going wrong – in Pope John Paul’s eyes capitalism was as corrupting as
communism. He taught me to challenge authority, question things, to be curious
about life, and not see everything as black and white like the pages of a
Bible. Ultimately, this was about love as well. We need to not only love our
family and friends, but we need to have compassion for humanity as a whole. We
all have that capacity within us. In that way, he taught me what God is as
well.
I miss you, Grandpa. I miss your sweet smile. I miss our
talks. I know that the person I saw the last time I was home before you passed
was not you; it was merely a body. You had already gone to a better place. I
choose to remember you the previous time I was home. It was almost your
birthday, and when I told you, you perked up in that same feigned surprise, “WOW!
It is? How old will I be?” You were still happy and joyous despite the cobwebs
clouding your mind. Thank you for being my hero. Thank you for never shaking my
admiration and love for you, not even by a single step you took. That pedestal
will always stand in memory of you. I love you, Paw Paw. I will always do my best to live
up to your expectations of me. I hope in
heaven there are enough petunias for you and all of those rabbits.
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