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If we don't go to heaven when we die, then where do we go?
I had to know.
Marla Greenway
Tell Me About Your First Time
Early Remembrances of Death
By Cat Saunders
They say you never forget your first lover. I wonder: Could the same
thing be true about death? Do you remember the first time death touched
your life?
While
working on this article, I fantasized about the power of storytelling.
Storytelling has such a graceful way of normalizing things. Could it
help people feel safer with death?
I
can see people sitting around together, relaxing, when one person turns
to another and says, "Will you tell me about your first time?"
The
sexual innuendo in that question is bound to elicit attention. After
pausing a moment for effect, the questioner can clarify the topic: "I
mean, will you tell me about the first time death touched your life?"
Once
you find a friend to join you for storytelling, I recommend that you
practice your best listening skills with each other. Unfortunately,
many people don't actually listen when someone else is talking. They
split their attention with other tasks, interrupt the speaker with endless
comments, or "swipe the focus" by launching into a story of their own
when the speaker pauses to take a breath. Be sure that you and your
friend truly receive each other's stories with full attention.
For
now, I'd like to share some stories from my own circle of close friends.
The first is from Marla Greenway, whose childhood story inspired this
article. Next comes a story from David Young, who lost his mother when
he was an infant. Third, my best friend, Leslie Heizer, speaks candidly
about her difficult introduction to death. Next, Rishi (not his real
name) tells an incredible story about a friend's suicide. Finally, one
of my favorite stories comes from my partner, John Giovine, whose father
died suddenly when John was a toddler.
These
are tender stories, spoken from the heart. May they inspire you to honor
your own stories about death.
Marla Greenway
My mother is an atheist. She thought it wiser to let me grow up without
religion. Instead, she educated me about the scientific truths of death
that it's not necessarily a bad thing, but part of the grand cycle
of life.
When
I was four, I remember sitting in the bathtub, thinking about what my
friends had told me about death. They said that when we die, we go to
heaven. I was afraid to tell my mom about this, but I was in a quandary.
If we don't go to heaven when we die, then where do we go? I had to
know.
My
fear escalated into panic, and I started sobbing and screaming. Mom
came into the bathroom, and there I was, hysterical, mumbling watery
fears about what would happen to me if I didn't believe in God.
We
had a long talk about death and religion. I'll never forget it. I can't
say she calmed my fears, but she told me I could believe in God if I
wanted to. Then she told me what she'd learned about death and religion
from her work as an anthropologist.
She
talked about Western and Eastern religions, Buddhism, paganism, African
and Native American religions; you name it. The bath water was icy cold
by the time she finished.
"This
is what all these different people believe," she said. "Now you choose
what you want to believe."
It's
been almost thirty years since we had that talk, and I still haven't
decided what to believe. But it gave me the impetus to look at death
and religion with true, objective curiosity.
David Young
The first time death touched my life, it touched me very deeply. My mom
died when I was twenty months old. She had been diagnosed with cancer
shortly before I was conceived. I was told later that she got sicker faster
because she was pregnant. I was also told that she wouldn't have wanted
it any other way, because her greatest wish in sickness and in
health was to have a child.
My
father reminded me of this when we spoke today, on Mother's Day. The
reason we were talking is that he's having triple bypass surgery tomorrow,
and he felt a very strong need to connect. Mortality issues were definitely
on his mind. I encouraged him to talk about it.
I
was especially moved when he told me how he learned of his own father's
death. He started crying when he told the story. He was eight when his
mother came home from the hospital, where his father had died. She said,
"No more Daddy for you!" That still stings him to this day.
Although
there aren't any single incidents about my mother that sting me that
way, I really feel the loss of a maternal bond, as young as I was. No
amount of therapy will ever take away that pain, and that's okay, because
it has made me very, very sensitive. It's a part of me that I have come
to love.
Leslie Heizer
The first thing that got to me about death happened when I was about seven.
I was at a friend's house, and she had that prayer on her wall, "Now I
lay me down to sleep," which has the line, "...if I should die before
I wake."
In
my memory, that was the moment I developed an intense fear of dying
in my sleep. Every night, I tried to get my mother to promise me that
I wouldn't die in my sleep, and every night, my mother refused to reassure
me. She'd say, "Well, there's no guarantee."
Finally,
she took me to the pediatrician, because I developed insomnia. Later,
she gave me Dramamine. She said, "This will make you sleep. I'll see
you in the morning."
Essentially,
she had reassured me. That night, I fell asleep. The next morning, she
said, "That wasn't really anything to make you sleep. Now we know it's
only in your mind, so I don't want to hear any more about it."
What
a disgusting thing to do to a kid!
Around
that same time, my goldfish popped its eyeball on the castle in the
aquarium. It started swimming sideways, then it died. My mother just
said we'd have to flush it down the toilet. There was no emotional support.
Then
my hamster ate the chew-stick, and its intestines came out of its rear
end. I wanted to take it to the vet, but my mother said, "We can't take
a hamster to the vet," so it bled to death.
These
stories must sound pretty depressing! It took me years of hard work
to turn my fear of death into curiosity and awe.
Rishi
The first time I had a significant death experience was in 1980, when
I was 33. I had a close friend who committed suicide when we were monks
together at the Vedic monastery in Vancouver, B.C.
Das
(not his real name) owned an old car. As monks, we didn't drive around
much, but one day we were coming back from a speaking engagement. We
stopped at an automotive supply, because Das wanted to buy a length
of radiator hose. Nothing seemed peculiar about it. Das was upbeat,
and we just thought he was going to do some repairs on his car.
Later,
when we got back, I went to bed and had a dream in which Das came to
me in the form of a ghost. He looked very anxious and fearful, and he
said, "It didn't work! It didn't work!"
I
woke up and looked around, then went back to sleep. Das appeared again
in my dream, and again he said, "It didn't work!"
The
next morning, I got up around four o'clock, as is customary at the Temple.
About six, somebody came rushing in, saying that Das had committed suicide
during the night.
He
had parked his car in front of the Temple with the hose hooked up from
the exhaust. Evidently, he thought he was going to get liberated, because
he had sacred pictures, flower garlands, and other Temple items around
him in the car.
Philosophically,
he should never have thought that suicide would bring him liberation.
That was never taught in any scripture we'd read. But Das didn't tell
anyone about his plan, or we would have talked him out of it.
By
the time I got out to the car, a crowd of people had gathered. There
he was, dead, leaning against the window. Because I was his closest
friend, the coroner asked me to identify the body. He was stiff like
a tree limb. They put him in an ambulance and took him away. His family
was contacted, and they requested cremation.
Later
that year, I went to India, and I took his ashes. After chanting various
mantras, I deposited his ashes in the Ganges River, which is said to
deliver the soul from the limbo state into its next incarnation, if
it had gotten stuck in a ghost body.
That's
what I did for my friend. It was a difficult emotional passage for me.
John Giovine
My first experience with death came when my father dropped dead of a heart
attack at home, in 1959, when I was not quite three. Even today, the little
mantra that I carry with me is that death was one of my first introductions
to life.
Since
childhood, I've had a recurring dream throughout my life. It is always
the exact same dream.
I'm
in our family room where I grew up in Olympia. I'm sitting on the knee
of our neighbor from across the street. I'm facing the door, which is
open. It's kind of dark, with back lighting. Through the door come two
large skeleton hands toward me.
Even
as a child, I remember this dream as being kind of scary, but not upsetting.
It was almost reassuring, with a sense of calm about it. The skeleton
hands weren't menacing. Somehow I knew they were my father's spirit
extending to greet me.
When
my father died, my older brothers and I didn't go to his funeral, because
my maternal grandmother wouldn't allow it. I think that was an unconscionable
act on her part. I knew where my father was buried, but something was
missing, because I didn't get to complete with his body.
I
used to look up at telephone poles and see the transformers, those black,
cylindrical boxes. I thought that was where they put dead people. From
my perspective, the transformers were oblong and rectangular, like caskets.
There
was a transformer box on the telephone pole at the far end of our yard,
and I could see it from my bedroom window. I used to relate to my father
as being in that transformer. It gave me a sense of ease to feel that
he was nearby.
This
article is from a series on death originally published by The New
Times (1998-99).
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Death Is My Friend ||
Sitting in the Fire
|| No Time
to Go Fast ||
|| Death
as an Adviser || My
Dream || Violence,
Pacifism and War ||
|| Requiem
for My Sister || Tell
Me About Your First Time ||
|| The
Remarkable Value of Dying Well ||
|| Growing
Wings || Spiritual
Bushwhacking ||
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