A Presence of Absence

photo by Gary Jarvis of Dutch Reformed Cemetery

“The sunlight now lay over the valley perfectly still. I went over to the graveyard beside the church and found them under the old cedars… I am finding it a little hard to say that I felt them resting there, but I did… I saw that, for me, this country would always be populated with presences and absences, presences of absences, the living and the dead. The world as it is would always be a reminder of the world that was, and of the world that is to come.”
Wendell Berry in Jayber Crow

Today, as always over the last weekend of May, we have a family reunion where most turn up missing.  A handful of the living come together for lunch and then a slew of the no-longer-living, some of whom have been caught napping for a century or more, are no-shows.

It is always on this day of cemetery visiting that I feel keenly the presence of their absence: the great greats I never knew, a great aunt who kept so many secrets, an alcoholic grandfather I barely remember, my grandmother whose inherent messiness I inherited, my parents who separated for ten years late in life, yet reunited long enough for their ashes to rest together for eternity.

It is good, as one of the still-for-now living, to approach these plots of grass with a wary weariness of the aging.  But for the grace of God, there will I be sooner than I wish to be.  There, thanks to the grace of God, will I one day be an absent presence for my children and hoped-for grandchildren to ponder.

The world as it is remembers the world that was.  The world to come calls us home in its time, where we all will be present and accounted for — our reunion celebration.

All in good time.

3 thoughts on “A Presence of Absence

  1. I have never heard Memorial Day’s true message described in such a lovely way. We do not always recall or memorialize each of our “sleeping ones” in exactly the same way perhaps but we do acknowledge their presence among us and the fact that they are a part of what we have inherited through the generations. For other ‘sleepers,’ we may pause longer at their temporal dwelling place to meditate upon their presence among us, to remember and to thank them for the love and happiness that they brought to our lives, and to remind ourselves that indeed there will be a glorious reunion with joy and no tears when we meet again. We then will become the ‘presence’ for the next generation.

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