Yesterday was promising to be an eventful day. I knew I
might be receiving some early morning emails, so I made sure to get the old
clunker computer up and running in preparation for the anticipated work. When
the system fired up, it first loaded, as usual, a news feed. It was inevitable
that I would thus start my day knowing the news that has now horrified nearly
everyone.
It didn’t take long for me to find out that this was not
just a generic news story. The minute I connected to all my online links, an
acquaintance on chat sent me one of those “did you hear the news about…” messages
I’ve learned to dread. One of our mutual friends, a talented recent college graduate with an incredible future, had happened to be back in her home state—Colorado—where she
happened to decide to join a group at the movie theater for opening night.
It was that movie
theater.
Today, my tasks from yesterday are predictably tucked away
in all their respective files and folders—and my friend has taken a radical
detour from life-as-planned to spend some post-op time in a neuro-ICU bed.
Someone had decided to play the Joker in real life, and many, many people are
losing in that unexpected game change.
Yet, life for the rest of us goes on. We are relatively
unscathed—as soon as we can tear ourselves away from the news broadcasts, or
shut our eyes to the trending Twitter feed on #theatershooting. Considering all
three hundred twelve million of us in the United States, there is, really,
only a miniscule percentage of us who actually knows anyone suffering in this
aftermath.
But we still hurt, anyway.
There is something collective about our nature. Something
that allows us to mirror in our faces the pain we see in a friend’s face.
Something that we can’t help responding to that cringes when we hear about
certain injuries, or makes us follow the glance of the person we’re talking to,
when that gaze suddenly averts over our shoulders. One scream, and we’re all on
alert. We are all connected that way—connected to each other’s well-being.
Connected: that’s a word that takes on a different
connotation for those whose passion is family history research. Sometimes I wonder,
when I devote so much energy to genealogy work, whether it would be better for
me to come back from “the dead”—spending so many hours poring over the facts
regarding people long gone—to that land of the living where thriving, breathing
souls actually talk to each other rather than leaving cryptic clues about themselves
intended for no one to discover for, oh, maybe a couple centuries. And yet,
those stories from years past have a way of connecting, too.
“Did you hear the news” must have been a recurring theme in
life for my ancestors in those more recent centuries, as I'm discovering as I delve into their lives' histories. I spend hours researching the stories of men and women who bear children—lots of them, in multiples of
numbers above the family sizes of today—only to see those children die in
near-like multiples of numbers, succumbing to diseases, famine, injuries or other
challenges we no longer face.
Sometimes I wonder how those people from prior ages bore the
pain of those types of suffering—like our family’s distant Tully relatives who
saw five of their eight children die before reaching their mid-twenties, and
only one of them marry and go on to have children of her own.
The pain is in the loss of a relationship. The relationships
are what give life its meaning.
Perhaps, though the relatives I study are now only remembered on paper—or now, digitized in archival records—it is the relationship I pursue rather than the mere conquest of discovering that that connection is one hundred, two hundred,
three hundred years old.
It’s the realization of connection that compels me to
continue searching. But it’s the discover of the relationships—through uncovering the stories of those lives—that breathes life into the connection and draws me closer to the person.
Ancestor whose story beguiles me from a distance of a safe
century away, or friend whose story doubles me over in the agony of prayer
today: each is calling out to be remembered, to be cared for, to be important
for each other.
It’s that essence that makes me care about those
two-hundred-year-old stories that also enables me to care about and carry the
burdens of those I know in the painful and all-too-frightening challenge of the
here-and-now. It’s what permits me to blend the stories of the remote ancestor
and the near acquaintance. It’s what makes me yearn to enable others to care
about the people whose stories—whose lives—I’ve loved.
The connections, the relationships: I want to pass them on.
Jacqi,
ReplyDeleteThat is beautifully bitter sweet how you put that in words! It was very sad to see that on the news and even more so to see the names and family talking today about each person.
Thank you so much for stopping by and leaving that note. Even though the post Saturday was not related to genealogy, somehow it helped to talk about it...reflect on it. Yes, it was sad to receive that news and know it has impacted so many.
DeleteNow that we are a few days removed from the incident, thankfully people are taking on a positive response. For my friend, that positive response has been communicated through their family's Facebook page, Twitter feed, and website at http://www.indiegogo.com/readytobelieve?c=home
It is positive responses like this that help the rest of us take heart.
Beautiful article. There are no words that can make it better, I know, but do know there are many out there who you have never met that hold you and all the family and friends in our thoughts and prayers. -- Anne Mitchell
ReplyDeleteAnne, thank you so much...and comments, thoughts, and prayers in their own small way do help make things better. In a way that no one can explain, with time, the help from relationships, connections and mutual effort do turn tragedy around and renew faith in the human touch.
DeleteThanks so much. It has been a long summer here in Colorado. I think people like you that can express these feelings so beautifully.
ReplyDeleteSooner or later I knew I would run onto someone who was touched by the tragedy in Aurora. So sad:(
ReplyDelete