Monday, October 10, 2005

How Do You Cope?

Here I am thirty-seven years old, and silly me thought I could cope with anything that came my way. I listened to the lessons I was taught growing up, and I even learned from others’ mistakes. Yep, in my arrogance I thought I was ready.

Then my mother calls and tells me Grandma isn’t doing so well. Logically, I understand about death. I know she can’t live forever. But logic doesn’t comfort me and the family. It doesn’t relieve her pain. It doesn’t absorb my mother’s tears.

The family has gathered to be with Grandma. I thank God our family is so tight. We are not mourning her. She is still with us and will always be, in a way. But it is still hard. I can’t even imagine what it would be like to not be able to pick up the phone and tell Grandma my great and not so great moments.

Every Mother’s Day my sister and I redo her flower garden. We spend hours shopping, buying way to many flowers to fit, and planting them ourselves. Grandma brags to everyone in city about what her grandbabies do for her like we put professionals to shame.

Who will make the homemade applie pie. I'm talking the best crust ever made. Grandma tried to teach me, but my attempts turned out harder than bullet proof vest.

I try to take my mind off the inevitable by working, emailing, anything but facing reality, but it isn’t working. Simply put, I want my grandma to live forever. But then I see the pain she is in, and I pray God ends her suffering—whether that end means a miracle that eliminates the cancer or him calling her home.

I know the author of When Death Comes A Knockin’, Vanessa Johnson (http://www.lulu.com/vanessaajohnson). Fabulous book I recommend to everyone. In it she explains about people who were close to her that have passed, how these deaths affected her, and how she eventually coped. I’m not trying to be funny, but I need a prequel. What do you do when you know your loved one will die? How do you cope, but still be there for your family and the one who is ill?

Much Joy, Peace, and Love
Deatri

4 comments:

Vanessa A. Johnson said...

Hi Deatri,
What do I tell you my dear that you don't already know? You know in your head what's best for your grandma, but getting your heart to understand this is one difficult task. What you must do, my friend is take every life lesson, every gift that grandma has passed down to you, and carry her torch proudly. I know when the time comes, this won't ease the pain, especially in the beginning, but with time, you will learn to have her live on through you as you pass what she's shared with you down to others, your daughter, your neice, cousin, etc.

Know that I'm here for you if ever you need to talk. Sounds like you have a closeness to your grandma like I had with me. Take care.

Love & Peace,
VeeJay

P.S. Thanks for the shout out for my book as well. You are a GEM!

Deatri King-Bey said...

Vanessa,

Thank you for being you.

Deatri

Deatri King-Bey said...

Our beloved mother and friend Catherine Shaw of Decatur, Illinois departed this life on Thursday, November 03, 2005 from her daughters home.

Funeral service will be Tuesday, November 8, 2005 at 11 a.m. at St. Peters AME Church. Visitation will be Monday November 7, 2005 from 6-8 p.m. at Moran & Goebel Funeral Home. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.

Family was important to Catherine; she raised not only her own children, but also provided daycare and fostered several children over her lifetime. She was a loving parent who accepted Christ at a very young age, and she was a proud to be a member of St. Peter’s AME Church. Catherine led an exemplary life of service as a Sunday school teacher, bible-school teacher, and pianist for the children’s choir over several years. She devoted herself to many organizations such as The Big Sisters, The Daughters of Allen, The Stewardess Board, The NAACP, and she volunteered at Decatur Memorial Hospital and at the Park District. She gave this world 89 years of love and service.

Catherine was born on February 10, 1916 in Decatur, Illinois to the union of Samuel Jordan and Anna Wright. She married Harrington Shaw in 1936; he preceded her in death in 1962. To this union seven children were born.

She leaves to cherish her memories: her children; Harrington (Oretha) Shaw Jr. of Dallas, TX, Kimber and Martin Shaw of Chicago, IL, Mary Catherine (Aaron) Hodges of Forsyth, IL, nineteen grandchildren, fifteen great grandchildren, three great great grandchildren, four special foster children and a host of other relatives and friends.

She was preceded in death by her parents, six sisters, a brother, her daughters Sonia Elizabeth and Beatrice Ann, and her son Patrick.

The family would like to offer a special thanks to Cancer Care and the Hospice Workers.

Rose said...

You have to pray and let God hold you. Thanks for sharing..