Monday, July 16, 2018

FRIDAY THE 13TH

 Friday the 13th gets a bad rap. Legend says that it was the day that the King Philip IV of France betrayed the Knights Templar. Then there is always Jason Voorhees—enough said. Really, before a book came out in 1907 (Friday the Thirteenth – Tom Lawson,) the date did not have really bad implications. Fridays were generally considered bad luck days. A person never started a long journey on a Friday. In middle ages Europe, Friday was called Hangman’s Day (apparently it was a day for swinging on the gallows.) The bad luck associated with the number 13 is only mentioned in the apocryphal tale that Judas Iscariot was the 13th person invited to Jesus’ last supper.
Until this past Friday, July 13, the whole bad luck day phenomenon had passed by me. It was just a day. On this day, however, this particular Friday the 13th, my grandmother slipped her mortal coil and graduated from her Earthly life. It was a sadness and a relief (cancer usually brings such mixed emotion.) It was not the worst thing that could happen to her or anyone. We are all going to die, and she fought for life until the last moment.
No, it was the total collapse of trust that I have in my family. That trust had been eroding for a decade, but that day saw the end of trust. It was as if the last chain that held my aunts, uncles, and cousins to my life had broken. They acted in a callous manner, denying that anyone had any right to claim that they shared a love with my grandmother. Cutting off my side of the family from being able to attend a viewing and open casket funeral. Her body will be cremated and shipped to Colorado for a memorial—and interred without any sort of ceremony.
Ok, I admit to not handling the situation well on my end. I very bluntly told my aunt (who conveyed their plans for a funeral service so rushed that I would never be able to make it to Phoenix in time) that this was all a bit hasty. I told her in a text that I totally got the hint (something I am not good at, btw.) I get that we are not to be a part of mourning/celebrating my grandmother’s life with her family. It was a private moment for them only. The link between us broke, and we no longer had a blood connection. We were done.
My uncle responded that he was fine with that, and I should never contact his wife again. To ensure that I complied with his order, I unfriended anyone from their side of the family on Facebook, and deleted all of their numbers from my phone. Maybe it was a tad bit reactionary, but I know where I am not wanted. Still, now I have to deal with grief, loss, sadness, and an anger for which this writing is my only outlet.

So for the first time, Friday the 13th wreaked its havoc in my life.
From what could have been a poignant and sad moment of relief and love, it become a life altering event filled with anger and resentment. An event where I find myself even more isolated than I ever was before that day. Well played, Friday the 13th…well played.


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