anthimeria

Reconciliation with the angels

Posted in my everyday life by Maria on 2009/02/24

Maritsa died yesterday. She was an amazing woman.

Suffice to say, her death is not mine to to share. What I will share is that she’s been my family since before I was a notion, my third grandmother, a spectacularly elegant lady who left, not suddenly, but too soon.

I’m having a difficult time of it. More so than I imagined, and despite my stoic mask. And not because it’s hard to lose beautiful human beings (though it is), or because I didn’t say a proper goodbye, or for some other easy platitude with which to mask my grief.

Rather, I’m battling an angel on my shoulder.

Maritsa was a deeply religious woman. She observed the Orthodox fast – she lived and breathed the church – her daughter married a priest  - she sprinkled basil water in the deepest recesses of all the homes of all the people she loved – she died, I am sure, at deep-seated peace with her God.

I make no secret that religion troubles me. It does. Strangely, though, her reverence and devotion never troubled me in any great way.

Last night, I hung up my phone on an oddly-quiet College streetcar, having just been told by my mom that Maritsa died that morning. And my mind, without filter or regard, said a silent she’s with the angels and I crossed my heart – Father, Son, Holy Spirit.

Amen.

And I just lost it. 

I’ve spent the better part of the last 24 hours wrapped in a troubling cognitive dissonance. I can’t bring myself to be dogmatic about this beautiful woman’s death. I start to think it’s okay if I want her to be with the angels, that I want to imagine Maritsa her heaven without it reeking of hypocrisy. There isn’t any reason for me to even wrestle with this. I will heal, as we humans do – I will placate the screaming angel on my shoulder.

There’s this wonderful line from Dickinson: Parting is all we know of heaven. I’m parsing its meaning to suit my story (don’t we all do this with poetry?) but I think it fits. That is, this is my first real-world brush with a religious heaven. The word is otherwise so storybook, ephemeral, tossed loosely into pop lyrics; but when it’s the destination of someone I hold dear to my heart, parting is all I know of this place. It helps to quiet the dissonance the teeniest bit.  

Without thesis or reason, today I extend a piece of bread to the angel on my shoulder and all the others. I hope they’ve received Maritsa. I hope she’s at grace.

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Since feeling is first

Posted in my everyday life by Maria on 2009/02/24

Of the many poets whose dog-eared volumes I hold dear, e.e. cummings is best for a smile when I’m feeling down.

since feeling is first
who pays any attention
to the syntax of things
will never wholly kiss you;
wholly to be a fool
while Spring is in the world

my blood approves,
and kisses are a better fate
than wisdom
lady i swear by all flowers. Don’t cry
—the best gesture of my brain is less than
your eyelids’ flutter which says

we are for each other: then
laugh, leaning back in my arms
for life’s not a paragraph

And death i think is no parenthesis

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Mr. President, eh?

Posted in politics by Maria on 2009/02/19

To Blair Gable – who captured this image of President Obama on his first official foreign visit today – I say wow. What a brilliant photo.

OBAMA/CANADA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[Photo credit: Blair Gable via]

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Happy hearts

Posted in my everyday life by Maria on 2009/02/12

My sister, Eleni, makes pretty cards. I particularly liked this one she put together for her lucky Valentine, especially the detail on the skirt.

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Rocket-powered unicorns and magic watermelon boats

Posted in my everyday life by Maria on 2009/02/11

I’m a big fan of Saint-Exupéry’s Le Petit Prince, and was happy to stumble on this little gem yesterday, which has the same wistful wonder in its prose and gorgeous, childlike illustrations - Dallas Clayton’s ‘An Awesome Book’. It’s the sort of thing I want to read to my kids one day, and my sisters’ kids, and all the little ones in my life.

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The entire book is available to read online before you buy, too. Kudos to his awesome publisher.

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