Essay:
"A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Funeral"
by Marnie Pehrson, Written
August 1999
|

In Loving Memory of
"Granny"
Thelma
White
Born 23 September 1910
Died: 2 August 1999
|
|
On August 2nd, my
grandmother passed away after 9 years in a nursing home with
advanced Alzheimer's. Her passing brought back fond memories, and
actually was seen by her family as a joyful occasion to celebrate
her freedom from the chains of her earthly body and mind.
On August 4th we attended her
funeral. It was a lovely funeral -- at least what I saw of it. I
think if my Granny was watching, she would have gotten a lot of
really good laughs...
Greg (my husband) was a
pallbearer and was riding in the van for the pallbearers, so they
had my kids and me get in a limousine. They loaded up all the
cars, but no one ever came to drive ours. They started motioning
people on until finally they were all gone but mine. I was just
sitting there with the baby on my lap and Jillian (2 years old),
Caleb (9 years) and Joshua (7 years) in the back seat -- no
driver.
Finally after me waving at him
for what seemed like eons, this man came over to ask me who was
driving my car. I said, ''I don't have a clue.'' They hurried up
and put this poor old man into my car to drive. I found out later
he had worked with my Granny at American Uniform so that tells you
how old he was (she was a month shy of 89 when she died). He
couldn't even get the car into gear. He just kept fumbling around
with the steering wheel and every knob he could find. The car
started coasting over toward the building. He even popped the hood
while fumbling all around the steering wheel trying to get the car
to go. I was sitting there thinking, ''Man, I'm going to miss the
funeral procession, and we'll be lucky if we even make it there
alive with this poor old senile man driving!''
Finally, he got the car in gear
and drove like a madman to catch up with the procession. We had to
drive for about 40 minutes into the country to this old family
cemetery. About half-way there, the limousine started dinging and
flashing messages on the dash that read, "Low Fuel
Levels." I spent the remaining 20 minutes praying that the
car wouldn't run out of gas. I was sure this poor old man wouldn't
know the way if we got left behind, and we were the last car in
the procession, so no one would ever see that we were missing.
We evidently weren't the only
ones having trouble... my cousin's husband was driving the lead
car and even took a wrong turn down a dead end street along the
way.
Meanwhile in the back seat of our
car... Josh was doing his usual subtle picking at Jillian that
makes her absolutely bonkers. She was whining and jumping all over
the back seat like a monkey and kicking Josh and the back of the
driver's seat. At one point, she had slipped all the way down
until the seatbelt was around her neck. She had been wild the
whole day. During the funeral itself, I had to take her and Nathan
(the baby) out because they were fighting over the LifeSavers that
I was shoving into Jillie's mouth as fast as I could to keep her
quiet. I guess I gave her too many because she started yelling,
''I WANNA DRINK!'' I could tell she was on the verge of one of her
hissy fits. So, totally embarrassed, I lugged a child in each arm,
down the endless isle and out the back door.
Needless to say, I never got the
chance to be sad. And I'm positive my Granny wasn't either.
Marnie L. Pehrson is a wife,
mother of 6, founder of SheLovesGod.com, and author of both inspirational
Christian titles such as Lord,
Are You Sure? and historical
fiction novels. She particularly enjoys writing stories that
integrate her ancestors like "The
Patriot Wore Petticoats" which is based on the true story
of her 4th Great Grandmother - a Revolutionary War heroine.
Click
here to return to the Reading Room