Thursday, December 31, 2020
Goodbye, Jack
What happens to one’s wisdom and experiences when one dies?
I know we touch and teach people and leave marks of various
degrees and help shape others and live on in the hearts of our families and all
that, but when someone lives a long time, that person accumulates a great deal
of knowledge. Unless he or she writes a book or becomes famous, is that all wasted,
just lost, when the person leaves?
I ask because my 83-year-old dad died on Christmas – 72 days
after my 80-year-old mom died alone in a regional hospital in Spalding County,
Georgia, gasping for air – and I’m afraid. All the people he knew and music he
liked and lessons he learned and experiences he had and achievements he amassed
and wisdom he gained from eight decades of life – are they just lost with him?
He didn’t write any books or give any TED Talks; he touched many people but
memories fade and life goes on and I just feel right now like the list of reasons
why this was such an indescribable loss not just to me and his other loved ones
but to the universe is immeasurably long.
Yes, he left the world a better place. Yes, he loved and was
loved, and he was smart and compassionate and strong and interesting and
charming and patient and talented and generous. He was multi-faceted and caring
and unselfish and genuine and wonderful. He taught me so much about so much. But
who’s gonna know this when there’s no Wikipedia page, no statue in a park, no offspring
to keep his memory alive ‘cause we’ll be gone at some point too? Who’s going to
be aware of all that Jack Diehl knew and saw and learned and was? Blog posts
and framed photos don’t convey this.
Everyone dies, I know. And so many people have been lost to Covid.
It’s overwhelming, though, to everyone left behind. Because not only do we suffer
the immediate, up-close loss of our loved ones – their empty chairs at our dinner
tables, their laughs no longer filling our rooms – but collectively we suffer
the loss of all that each of them was, all they knew and offered and
represented in the bigger scheme of things.
I don’t even know if what I’m writing makes any sense. But it
doesn’t make sense to me how someone can live for decades – learning and loving
and being and giving – and then just leave one day for good.
There are no buildings with Jack’s name on them, no charitable
foundations dedicated to preserving his memory. But he deserved this and so
much more. I’m sad that someday no one will know this.
And I’m devastated by how much we’ve lost.
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Rest in Peace, Mom
Kay Diehl |
Friday, May 29, 2020
Everybody Needs a Sparkly Patrick
I received a package from my Facebook pal Patrick that I have to tell you about.
I met Patrick several years ago online. We were writing for the same website and became Facebook friends. Although I know very little about the guy – I probably knew more but my memory sucks – he’s one of my most colorful and compelling contacts in the Land of Lord Zuckerberg. His posts about politics, current events, entertainment and sex are witty, thought-provoking and fun. He’s an Occupy Wall Street/Don’t Taze Me Bro kind of guy, someone who reads Hunter Thompson, Charles Bukowski, Saul Alinsky and Malcolm X and also digs Dolly Parton, the Bee Gees and watching Leave It to Beaver while stoned. He marches for what he believes in and is pro-cannabis, anti-war and ready for the revolution.
Patrick with Dr. Cornel West |
So anyway, a few weeks ago Patrick posted something in Facebook about how we need brightness in this grim world “so send me your address and I’ll try to brighten your day” or something along those lines – my memory sucks, remember? – so I sent him a DM and we exchanged addresses. Sure enough, a colorful yellow box, bigger than a shoebox but smaller than a microwave oven, adorned with SpongeBob and pig stickers, arrived at my doorstep from New York City a few days ago. It was a gift on so many levels.
The box included:
- Utensil packets from a fast food place
- Hot Wheels Fun Park
- A Pizzaboyzzz lapel pin
- A birthday candle in the shape of the number 6
- Assorted small plastic containers, one full of candies and Tums
- Stickers
- A LOVE refrigerator magnet
- A New York Metro card
- Fluffy ears headband
- Assorted loose playing cards
- Three condoms
- A photo of the Empire State Building
- Loose sheets of paper
- Two packets of Yogi organic tea
- Hand sanitizer
- Knitting for Dummies book
- More stickers
- “I’m With the Band: Confessions of a Groupie” book by Pamela Des Barres
- A small, battery-powered plastic candle flame
- A short personal note from Patrick
It’s no secret that I’ve been depressed lately. In addition to the whole “people are refusing to wear masks during a global pandemic and increasing the likelihood that I’m gonna catch the virus” thing and my personal
If you’re woke, it’s hard to be light-hearted, to smile and laugh and feel like everything might be okay after all. But that’s just what Sparkly Patrick’s package did for me. Hope it did it for you too.
What did the note say? None of your business. Get your own Sparkly Patrick. 😊