This weekend, while I was trying to find a simple piece of
biographical information, I was stunned to discover her name and dates
appearing in a genealogical database. Like she hadn’t just passed away. Like I
don’t have a homemade quart of sugar-free-vanilla-ice-cream sitting for her in
my freezer. Like she had moved from a warm living to a cold archived memory.
I'll admit, I was a annoyed that this archaic practice of "when a woman's name should appear in print (when she is born, when she is married and when she dies)" had been done to her. But I feel like I can cut History some slack; together, my grandmother and I liked it more than the average person.
Like Gramma, I appreciate old things – and like her I’m not overly fussy about the reproduction-aesthetic. But while she would collect items, I would prefer to make them. But it never really mattered.
She would endorse them all.
Shortly after my grandmother retired from her independent
business she became a student of mine. She told me she wanted a patient teacher
who wouldn’t make her do scales and other boring things (!); and so I refreshed
my grandmother in the art of how to play piano. She was a careful student who
held herself to high standards; her favorite song to play was “Edelweiss” and I can
still hear her near-perfect version of it. The one where she would just hum
over the parts she couldn’t quite play – and ask when/if it was okay to press
the damper pedal. And yes, as I type this I am singing it out loud, for her:
Edelweiss, Edelweiss
Every morning you greet me
Small and white,
clean and bright
You look happy to meet me.
blossom of snow
May you bloom and grow,
bloom and grow forever...
Edelweiss, Edelweiss
Bless my homeland forever
Edelweiss, Edelweiss
Every morning you greet me
Small and white,
clean and bright
You look happy to meet me.
blossom of snow
May you bloom and grow,
bloom and grow forever...
Edelweiss, Edelweiss
Bless my homeland forever
The more I think about it, the more humbled I am with her dying so close to the Fourth of July. Growing up, my grandmother was always an advocate for the Greatest Spot for Firework Viewing. This involved moving around chairs and blankets until we managed to procure the most ideal location to watch the show.
Perhaps then my grandmother’s passing right before the
holiday was her way of making sure she got the sky-side best seat in the house.