FITTING FINAL FAREWELLS
When the former leader of our country shed tears on live television this week, I shed them, too. He was saying goodbye to his father, another former leader of our country. At this moment, his most important role was that of son, and the purpose of the funeral was to celebrate the life of a father and husband first—perhaps even a friend—before the life of a former United States president.
I had a lunch date with a home health patient at the time the funeral was televised. He was watching it, and my job was to watch him eat to make sure he was not having problems swallowing. So, with a few sideways glances to lessen the feeling I was indeed staring at him—its my job, I, too, watched the funeral.
This man was almost as old as George H.W. Bush. He, too, had lived a long and storied life. Unlike George Bush Jr., though, he didn’t shed tears when his own father died, he told me in between bites. When he was thirteen years old, his father died suddenly.
From that point in, he was taught, boys and men don’t cry. A series of further tragedies befell his family. Still, he reported, he never cried. I tried to hide my obvious tears as I, too, held my hand over my heart in a salute, just as they did on TV. Unlike him, I wasn’t very good at not crying.
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The next day, George H.W. Bush’s body arrived in Houston by train for burial. It was noted during the television coverage that the last president to be transported to his final resting place by train was Dwight D. Eisenhower, 49 years ago in 1969. He was carried by train to his boyhood home in Abilene, Kansas, the very place I was at that moment.

71-456-279 Funeral of Dwight David Eisenhower – Abilene, Kansas 2 April 1969 The funeral train arrives at the Union Pacific Station 2 April 1969
I tried to imagine this small town of less than 7,000 residents alight and alive with glory, respect and honor for their hometown boy; a meaningful, but sad parade of people from far and near.
I was three years old in 1969, living two hours away from Abilene. Now that I am aware enough, I wish I had been old enough and close enough to Abilene to witness the history of Eisenhower’s burial.
Now, in 2018, this town still resonates with the spirit of the Eisenhower presidency. I see it around town, especially when I visit or drive by his museum, which includes his final resting place in a small chapel.
I wrote about Abilene in Someplace Special (September 10th, 2017). If you have never visited Abilene—and especially the Eisenhower museum, I highly recommend it.
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I recall a funeral procession I was part of in Wichita in 2006. My aunt Jeanne—my mother’s sister—passed away, and her funeral was on the east side of town. Her burial was on the far west side of town. For a nominal fee, she was allowed a grand police escort on her final ride, with the procession cutting all the way through this city, stopping all traffic along the way.
And it was grand. I wish you could have seen it. I wish she could have seen such a procession while she was alive. You see, she couldn’t see. She was blinded at 18 months of age from retinal blastoma—cancer—in both retinas. She never knew sight, but it didn’t stop her from leading a full and vibrant life.
Then, the day before our parents died, we were back in Wichita for our grandmother’s funeral. Gail, Suzanne, several of our brothers and I were in one vehicle in her procession to the cemetery from the church. In his signature dry, monotone comedic style, our brother Ryan posed this deep question: “If a funeral procession meets a fire truck or ambulance, who has the right of way?’
We laughed it off, knowing such humor was his gift to us. We left the cemetery after the burial to go back to the church for a dinner, no longer in procession. It was a large cemetery, and yet another funeral procession was headed to the cemetery as we left. Then, as if he had sent out a freak vibe with that question, a fire truck headed swiftly toward the oncoming procession.
Apparently, urgency for the living supersedes respect for the dead. The procession had to pull over.
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We paid loving respects to our grandmother, celebrating her 90-year, long and blessed life. We had one day of reprieve after her funeral before we started planning another one.
Now, we are not a family to brag or gloat over our achievements, but we will hold fast to the honor of having received the most floral arrangements for any funeral ever in the lone church in our small hometown—95, if I got the number right. Granted, it was a double funeral, but it was still one funeral, so we will argue that should the record ever come into question.
We had to find joy in whatever small ways we could.
In those four days between their deaths on Tuesday and the funeral on Saturday, we clung to each other; cried mostly, but laughed some, too. We propped each other up and picked each other up, with grace and faith ensuring that a majority of at least four of us seven were relatively strong at any given moment to pick up the other three or less, both literally and figuratively.
The only good thing about the time between the deaths and the funeral was the fact that our actions were already prescribed. We didn’t have to figure out what to do. We simply mourned, made arrangements, accepted food, flowers and friendship, and waited. We were in the socially expected shroud of mourning, and we did that well.
Still, knowing exactly what we had to do, the pain was unparalleled for all of us. No one is prepared for such soul-searing pain, but I am glad we weren’t warned. That would have been worse. We loved them fiercely, just as they loved us. We collected ourselves for Saturday morning, and even found ourselves comforting some of the mourners who had come to comfort us. We were experts at comforting each other by this point, so we had it down. We found strength to make it through the funeral.
Since then, we have all became stronger than we ever dreamed we could be. They are still with us, and we celebrate them in our own ways now, every day of every month of every year.
Their funeral helped us do this. There were tears, of course, but just like President Bush’s funeral, there were happy moments, too.
When George W. Bush eulogized his father, I felt his pain. I recalled the eulogy we delivered for our parents. All seven of us composed a written eulogy before the funeral, and Gail, Suzanne and I delivered it. We agreed ahead of time that we would take turns reading, and if any of us were to become emotional and unable to read any further, we would simply step down, handing the baton to the next one, even if it were mid-sentence.
None of us faltered. I suppose we were perceived as strong, at least at that moment. I suppose we were strong, at that moment, anyway. This isn’t to say that anyone who does falter while delivering a eulogy is not strong. We simply were given grace and composure to get through this difficult moment. We know where—or shall we say who—provided it for us.
At this moment, let me interject my expert advice on how to comfort the mourning. I hate to brag, but we are sort of authorities on this subject: It is not accurate to gauge how the bereaved are handling the loss by the way they are acting at the funeral. The real test comes in the days, weeks and months—perhaps even years—after the funeral. Trust us on this. Trust me when I say that it is never too late to express condolences. There is no statute of limitations. For me, I found some of the most meaningful expressions of sympathy arriving not immediately, but after some time had passed. It let me know that not everyone in the world had moved on, there were actually some people who knew that we were still suffering.
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Because funerals really are joyful celebrations sometimes cloaked in heaviness and sadness, it is important to keep a positive perspective regarding them. Which is why I asked Gail for her contribution of funeral humor. This is what she came up with:
A woman is sitting at her deceased husband’s funeral. A man leans in to her and asks: “Do you mind if I say a word?”
“No, go right ahead,” the woman replies.
The man stands, clears his throat, says “Plethora,” and sits back down.
“Thanks,” the woman says. “That means ‘a lot.’”
Just before press time, I asked Suzanne for any large or small contribution to this post. I wanted to keep it light, I told her. And she is just the person to give me that.
“Um, you are writing about five funerals, five funerals for six different people. Good luck.”
I knew she would give “light.”
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We did cry a lot. But more important than that, we found joy in those early days, even laughter. Ryan, our dry-witted younger brother was 34 when Mom and Dad died. Gail is his godmother, one of two adults appointed at baptism to be a spiritual leader to the child as he or she grows. In earlier times, this meant also that they would be the guardian to the child should something happen to the parents.
At the wake the night before the funeral, Ryan was seated next to me. He leaned in and whispered, “Does this mean I have to go live with Gail?”
As we greeted people arriving at the wake, our childhood dentist, who lived across the street from our parents then, arrived with his condolences. He re-introduced himself to me very seriously, thinking perhaps I would have forgotten him. I hadn’t; he was a good dentist and is a good man.
“Of course!” I said. “I remember you.” Then I flashed him a wide smile, and asked: “Do you remember these teeth?”
“Yes, yes I do! They still look great,” he replied.
“Thank you,” I said. “I floss every day.”
“I can tell,” he said, smiling as he walked away.
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“To weep is to make less the depth of grief.”—William Shakespeare
It takes a strong man to lead a country, especially the United States. I think George W. Bush’s tears as he bade farewell to his father were a sign of strength. I cried with him at that moment, sweet-bitter tears for a life well-lived. Sweet-bitter tears that recalled fond memories of my own father. Tears of strength that keep me going through my life, reminding me of all I have to be thankful for.
And all I have to keep laughing about.
I cried too, as George eulogized his father. It was quite touching. I truly believe that grief is a journey. Not one we willingly take, nor wish to take anyone with us on, but nevertheless a journey. My Dad has been gone 39 years. It seems like yesterday. I can’t imagine your grief, with both parents in your loss. Hugs to you. and thank you for putting the “journey” in words. Love you much! Sandi P
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Hello again my friend! Thank you so much for your kind words. I am still so glad I drug you down the hall that day to meet my parents when they were visiting my aunt. Not long after that, as you remember well, they were gone. I am so glad I listened to my little voice that told me to do that! I know your dad is still with you, too, but he is probably visiting with my dad and George H.W. by now!
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Kathleen you did a great job writing this and putting into words what so many of us have been through. During those times I think the support of family, friends, and our faith in God help give us the strength to get through it. I’ve never counted the number of floral arrangements at the many funerals I’ve attended in our hometown but 95 is pretty impressive!! Shows that a lot of people loved your parents and cared about you and your family.
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Thank you, Lorelle! Always so good to hear from you, and I know you know the funeral feeling…
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I love this! Thank you!
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