THE LULU CHRONICLES
Who am I now? |
I am a widow. How strange to write that out loud. I grew up
doing various service projects for the widows of my home congregation. My
mother was a wonderful example of this and taught her children well. Every
Christmas my church youth group would make fruit baskets and deliver them on
Christmas Eve to all our widows, along with a few carols as well. Mom always
took me to the nursing home to visit a widow here and there. I watched her
sing, massage feet and bring gifts to these little, old women who had lost
their husbands years and years before. My favorite widow was Sister
Parks. She was from England and I could listen to her for hours as she told
story after story of her life across the pond. She was a rather large woman, so
when she told me about her life as a ballerina I was enthralled. I used to help
clean her house and wash her windows while my dad and brother mowed her lawn. When
Gary and I first started dating, after my parents, she was the first person I
wanted him to meet. She adored him immediately. Her first words to him were,
“You have such luscious lips!” It became one of my favorite things to remind
him of over the years.
In those days, church folks took seriously the admonition of
James’ inspired words: “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless
is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress, and keep oneself
from being polluted by the world.” (James 1:27) Since I lived in Florida, there was never a short supply of
widows to look after. So, it is so strange to me, that now
after all these years I am one, a widow. Back then those women looked so old to
me. Some had been widowed for more than thirty years. They were always short,
always had blue hair and always smelled of rose water. I remember being drawn
to their fragile hands and the wedding rings they still wore. The gold bands
had worn thin from wear and age, but were as much a natural part of the finger as
the knuckle. To remove them was unthinkable. The ring represented a life not
forgotten. The ring was a testament to a love cherished still.
I don’t know where I fit in this.
I’m younger than the widows I knew back home. I don’t think I have blue hair…
yet. And, I smell more of sweat from my excursions on LuLu, the pink bike, than
rose water. So who am I now? How am I supposed to act? Because I have no
husband does that mean I have no voice? Am I now someone who needs others to
look after them? I don’t know this role. It is as unfamiliar to me as my now
empty house. I shared a mission and a ministry with Gary for forty-three years.
What happens to my mission now? My ministry? Will I be forced to surrender my
talents and calling because I no longer have a husband? We were a team, a whole
package. Our strengths and weaknesses complimented each other. He was
left-handed. I was right-handed. He could sing. I could write. He could preach.
I could teach. We both loved, and gave, and served, and… now what?
I am a widow. Half of me is
missing. Should I just wait for someone to bring me a fruit basket?
wid·ow
ˈwidō/
1. a woman who has lost her husband by death and has not remarried.
2. a last word or short
last line of a paragraph falling at the top of a page or column and considered
undesirable.
1 comment:
Once again Deb you have given voice to feelings I myself have/had. I chose to look for ways to give service and not dwell on receiving. I have been told I do too much, as a result and don't ask for help enough. I feel I still have gifts to offer to God and others so I do what I can do. The rest I will leave to God. I have met many new friends also widows and it has been encouraging. Just keep on going and doing and praising. God will take care of the rest. Love you, Pat
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