Tuesday, March 1, 2011

A Parting Gift To My Sister

As I write this my sister lays dying; the third of my siblings to do so in less than three years. The cycle of emotions I have been feeling this time around are different. We have simultaneously had no relationship, yet a loaded one. Logic would dictate I feel nothing but it is not that simple.

When I was born, K was less than a month shy of her 19th birthday. There are photographs of K in her CNA uniform, at the hospital, bundling me for my ride home with our parents. I don’t ever recall living with her or being welcome in any home in which she resided.

I have mentioned K in other posts. She has never been kind to me but I am told that is just her way; she is not malicious but instead unfiltered. Often, intent makes little difference. When a company poisons the soil or groundwater in a neighborhood it hardly matters whether they did so with malice aforethought or through simple negligence. If you hope to live, you move elsewhere to try to escape the damage. That has been my primary coping strategy with K and our oldest brother but given that families are not real estate, my strategy has been only partially successful. I have occasionally been pulled back into the sister role to distract K during funerals or festivities where her unfiltered tendencies may have damaged others’ important lifetime memories.

Please do not think I never tried to have a relationship with K but now is not the time to rehash all those instances. There is much I don’t understand and will never know because of the years that separate us. I hoped as adults the rift would mend and our commonality would pull us together. Twenty years after the loss of our parents this had not happened and it seems likely it never would, even if cancer were not robbing her of the twenty more years she deserves.

I have spent these weeks of Ks illness replaying our past, wondering what to do or if there is anything I could do before circling back to emptiness. Years I have mulled over how my birth could so offend and whether I owe it to anyone to rectify my presence in life at this late date.

I have stayed away and hope this is the right decision. I stare at a family tree she penned for our Grandmother when I was in high school. I am not on it. I know I could care for her and help her be more physically comfortable but I can do nothing to cure her. I hope by at least pretending I don’t exist, this will give her comfort in her final days.

10 comments:

  1. families are complicated.
    i hope your unanswered questions don't bring you down when she dies. it's difficult to find peace when the solution is out of your hands.
    i'm really sorry.
    @pomomama

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you, Mama. Families ARE complicated. It's been a hard few decades since our parents passed because our Mum taught us to value & embrace family but what can one do when their family doesn't welcome them as part OF the family? I just got the call that K passed half an hour ago and I am inordinately sad. Gone with her are any chances to fix what was broken. I'll have to find peace with that. At least all her children were with her and this brings me a measure of comfort as I am sure it brought her. Too few people have the gift of being able to pass quietly at home surrounded by their chosen loved ones but K did. Godspeed to my sister, K.

    ReplyDelete
  3. My condolences on the loss of your sister. But more importantly my condolences on the loss of answers.
    A candle it lit for you and may the peace you seek and so richly deserve surround you.

    @MissJane-VA

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm sorry to her that she is gone. While there is life, there is hope & possibility of reality becoming what we wish could be. Death steals that from us, leaving us with just the memories of what was. I wish there had been time for your world to be a little better, and there could be more joyful memories to offset the pain of loss you feel.

    ReplyDelete
  5. What a powerful piece--thank you for sharing this. I have had similar relations with my siblings and you moved me.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thank you, Miss Jane. I know the sincerity of your heart and feel your sentiments powerfully.

    Thank you, Mr. Harvey. I wish all your siblings knew you the way I know you and could take the blinders of the past off to see inside your heart. It is their loss if they never see what is in there. Your friendship is appreciated.

    Thank you, Ms. Schreck. I was uncertain how my candidness would be received. I was afraid people would say I am a hateful monster. Many people texted me to echo they have similar relationships and emotions. While it is reassuring to know I am not alone, I wish I could fix things for everyone else. {{{hugs}}}

    I appreciate all of you reading and taking the time to comment.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Emma - Ugh, families are so tough! I'm sorry! Your words are an inspiration to all of us who have tried and hope to find sisterhood somewhere in the world! Warm regards ~ Diane Darling

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thank you for reading, Ms. Darling. Families can be tough but I've learned so much from mine.

    ReplyDelete
  9. First of all, I'm sorry it took so long for me to read this. I can totally relate, which is probably the reason why I didn't read this when it first came out. Families are complicated. I come from a broken home aka divorced parents. This divorce changed all of my brothers and sisters. In dealing with our own grief, we complicated our relationships. I do try, but I have learned at the end of the day, I can't do it alone. Life is short, I do what I can and that's all I can do. Thank you for writing this, Bless you for being you! Peace and Hugs, Rosy

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thank you, Rosy. Divorce can be so damaging. I find it sad that often those most damaged are the products of the marriage.
    You're only one person. Don't beat yourself up for not being all things to all people. You're more than good enough as you are!

    ReplyDelete