Stephanie Jankowski
Blogger at WhenCrazyMeetsExhaustion.com | Mom
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My paternal Grandmother and I weren’t particularly close. Situation and proximity saw to that; she enjoyed a much more fulfilling relationship with my cousins. As a child, that was hard to swallow. She rarely spelled my name correctly on birthday cards, and the one time a broken heart let my guard down, forcing me to cry in front of her, she took a long drag on her cigarette and from across the room very calmly asked, “Well, what did you do to deserve it?”
She didn’t delight in my successes like the grandparents in those Hallmark movies do; she was there on my wedding day, but not really present. In retrospect, the fact that she forgot to wear her teeth is kind of hilarious, but at the time I remember feeling the sting of her nonchalance right along with the scratchy lace from my veil.
I don’t know why those are the memories that have stuck with me, but they are.
When she fell ill late last week and my Dad let us know this was it, I tried to summon happier memories. They weren’t of she and I, but of the time she spent with people I love. My dad says she never missed one of his football games, and aunts and friends shared stories about her homemade pies and ravioli soup. She was a straight-shooter, a no bullshit kind of lady, and I certainly identify with that.
Last night, I had a dream of firsts and lasts. In the dream, my Grandmother came to my house, a place she had never been before, and wrapped me up in her arms, a place I had never been before. We were standing in the kitchen, my back to the window above the sink. Though I couldn’t see it for myself, I felt the morning sun streaming through, warming the floor where it hit, casting light in an otherwise dark room. The hug, realistic in its awkwardness, was punctuated with Grandma’s smile and distracted glances out the window. She waved once, but didn’t say a word, and she didn’t have to. I knew my Grandfather was waiting for her, beeping his beloved Chrysler’s horn.
This morning, my fat thumbs were poised and ready to text my Dad about the dream. Before I could finish my message, though, his came through: “Grandma gone. Left us about 1:00am.”
I don’t know why she chose me. Maybe because I write, maybe because people read. Maybe so I could tell the family she is finally, unmistakably happy and at rest. Maybe because with the heavy finality of the changing of the guard, she wanted us all to share in her peace. Maybe because I’ve been quietly wrestling with my faith. Maybe because after all those years of putting the F where the PH goes, she wanted me to hold on to something good.
It’s good, Gram. It’s all good.
This post was originally posted at WhenCrazyMeetsExhaustion.com on 1/19/2016.
English teacher by trade, smack talker by nature, Stephanie Jankowski loves words and has a knack for finding the funny in everyday life. She blogs at WhenCrazyMeetsExhaustion.com, and puts the fun in dysfunctional on her Facebook page and on Twitter.
View all posts by Stephanie Jankowski here.
4 Comments on “Light in the Window – My Grandmother’s Last Visit”
What a wonderful little post!
I LOVED this Stephanie, I worked in Hospice for a few years before staying home with my kids and have heard so many similar stories where those least expected were visited by the departed. I believe that relationships are complicated and we don’t often understand the motives behind them. I also had trouble with my grandmother and found out later it was because she thought I looked the most like her and so pushed me the hardest. What I thought was rejection was really just a woman looking in the mirror and wanting more. Thank you for this, you really are a beautiful writer.
Thanks for this wonderful, thoughtful comment, Kara.
Kara, Thank you so much for your kind words and for sharing your experience, too. It’s a little un-nerving, but A LOT like a sigh of relief all wrapped into one, right?!
Hugs to you and yours! xo
Steph