You have to take a bit of joy wherever you can find it.
So, with that in mind, I want to remember some lighter moments
from the night before and the day of Mom’s funeral.
After the receiving of friends, we went to eat at Tom’s. Woodrow opened
his menu, looked at it for a bit, and said that he wanted number 1 – water.
Then on the morning of the service, I had to stop and put gas in my car –
I know I should have done it the night before, but it was late and I was tired, so…
I stopped in Puryear to fill my car with gas. As I was pulling back onto the highway,
my phone rang. It was my sister-in-law telling me that Robert had forgotten his jacket
and he was going to stand by Highway 641 and flag me down so we could go ahead
to the funeral home as we had another hour of receiving friends before
we left for the graveside service. I asked where they were on 641 and was told
that they were over the rise! Well, if you know anything about 641, it is straight
as an arrow, and nothing but a series of dips and rises! So, I set off at about 70 mph, yes
we were running late, and just began looking as I topped each rise. Finally,
I topped the correct rise, and there was Robert waving his arms beside the road.
I stopped, he got in, and away we went!
Next, they were going to line up the cars for the procession to Fort Donelson.
So, a young man came to get my “keys.” I asked if he knew how to drive a Prius. He
assured me that he did and had recently driven one. I handed over my key fob
and away he went. About ten minutes later, the same young man came back to ask me
to go help as they couldn’t get the brake released. I found out later that my nephew’s
wife and her mother were in the parking lot watching this unfold. There were 3 men
who tried to move my car. The ladies were laughing and said that it would probably take
only 1 woman. Right after those words came out of their mouths, I walked out to
my car with instructions on how to release the brake so he could move my car. My car
was then moved into its rightful place behind the hearse.
Then on the way to the cemetery, I had the funny thought
that this was the only time that I wouldn’t have to worry about getting a speeding
ticket in Dover since the police escort was in front of me rather than behind me!
Later, as we were sitting under the canopy for the service, my grandson Woodrow, soon
to be 2, noticed the flower spray on Mom’s casket. He looked at me and repeated “pick it Grandma”,
“pick it” – he wanted a flower! During the service he was given a copy of the hymn we were
going to sing. He gave it to his Mama and said, “read it mama, read it.” At the end of the service,
after I “picked” him a daisy he said he wanted a pink one too. I then got him one of the pink
rosebuds. He took it from me and looked down at it and said, “Honey bee down in it.”
He and his Dad have been watching their honey bees this summer – he knows where they do
their work! By the way, there wasn’t really a honey bee “down in it” – at least not right then!
Oh, and the minister had started a new medication that had her feeling dizzy, and at one point during the service she lost her footing a bit, and I was afraid she was going to fall.
Finally, during the service, my son, Will, and my nephew, Stewart – standing side by
side as pall bearers – (I know they were melting in their suits) had a hummingbird fly
up to them and all around them several times. It looked like it might land on them.
I bet Mom was in charge of that! Small bits of joy I’m sure my Mom was responsible
for. Small bits of joy to remember – something Mom would heartily approve of – for that
was her outlook on life.