Hands tell the short story of a
life.
In early 2010 my sister, Ann, was
coming for a visit after our mother had fallen, breaking a hip. Mom was failing
fast.
My niece had found a beautiful
picture of multigenerational hands online and sent it to us, spurring us to try
to duplicate the photo. We arrived at the dementia unit––I with my camera in
hand.
In this picture, Dad’s creased and
rough hands wear his class ring from 1939, and a Masonic ring. He always did
love a bit of bling, but in his defense, one must actively wear all of these
possessions in a locked dementia unit, or they end up missing, found on other
people’s hands.
The ring you see my dad putting on
my mother’s crooked fingers matches one on his hand. These were bands bought
for their 25th wedding anniversary, 40 years earlier.
When Mom and Dad died, Ann took
Mom’s anniversary ring. I took Dad’s. His fits the middle finger on my right
hand perfectly. When I’m brushing my teeth in the morning, the glint of the
gold winks at me, reminding me of my parents’ love for each other, and my bond
with my sister.
Yesterday, while babysitting my
seven-month-old granddaughter, she rolled from her back to her stomach in her
quest to explore her little world of the blanket on the living room floor. As I
lay with her, playing, cooing, and peek-a-booing, she was mesmerized by Dad’s
ring on my hand. She pulled my finger, examining every angle of the ring, as
though she was a scientific researcher, pulling it closer to her face, closer
to her eyes, then to her nose, finally trying like the dickens to slip my
finger in her mouth to taste test.
I looked at her little, brand-new
hands––her fingers about one-fifth the size of my own. Hers, fresh and
plump––mine, crinkled and ruddy. I was struck by the presence of my parents,
their essence felt through that small piece of metal that had wound around
their fingers for decades.
At birth a baby reflexively grasps
the hand of their parent. That baby grows to a child who holds their parents’
hands to be taught, to be protected. Over the next half century, the roles
reverse as slowly as it takes wrinkles to form, eyesight to fade, and joints to
wear out. If a parent lives long enough to become frail, that parent comes to
hold their child’s hand for strength and safety. At death, the child grasps
their parent’s hand, thanking them for life. Just like the never-ending circle
of a ring, joy comes in holding the hands of future generations.
4 comments:
Ah, you made me cry. I spent the last month holding my mother's dear, frail hand until she passed. In my mind, I can't let go.
Wow, Linda. Your comment holds more power than the post. Blessings, Jean
What a sweet post!
What a sweet post!
Post a Comment