Monday, May 6, 2019

Peripheral People


Do you have peripheral people? I’m sure you do, but by nature of their role you may not always see them clearly. I attended a funeral mass today for one of my peripheral people, Pat. Patricia Elizabeth Cossins, although I may not have recognized that name had I seen it somewhere out of context. I found out today that Pat had 25 grandchildren and 38 great grandchildren. I had no idea what a bundle of family she had, but even so she gave attention to celebrating the milestones of my children as though they belonged to her, not peripheral attention but genuine, focused warmth.

We got Pat at St. Mary’s, our parish just outside the Snow Globe.  My parents were always front row people at church, and Pat was their front row counterpart just across the narrow aisle. I can’t remember what point in time she began to be there. I just know she was in the family photos of Holly’s baptism and then of Devin’s. I grew up a front row person by association and was ever uncomfortable and self-conscious there. So when Devin, (wiggly Devin who didn’t have a whisper voice whatsoever) was a toddler, I began to look for ways to sit behind the front row people on the outside where I could escape as necessary to give him a good scolding on the back steps (for which I needed to confess my lack of patience during several Advents and Lents).

By the time Treyson’s baptism came around, Pat was not only in the photos, she was more than happy to be his godmother, for which I was grateful. But I was more grateful still when St. Mary’s joined other small parishes to become one big parish and Pat saved me. She became my parents’ front row same side of the new wide aisle companion. Because they had Pat, I didn’t feel like they were lonely when I began sliding in the side entrance with two very busy boys and one teen sister sweetly aloof from their ruckus. By mid-mass I usually had to force my way in between the boys to keep them from laughing and elbowing, and it was always a comfort to look across the way and see Pat and my parents, distant enough to be fondly amused by the shenanigans and sympathetically supportive of me.

While my parents’ friendship with Pat was more concrete, mine was mostly a Sunday kind of deal. We congregated after mass to chat, Pat would catch up on the doings of the kids, and we’d exchange well-wishes for the week ahead. There were Christmas cards sent. I was guilty of needing to call my mom for her address for a string of years because I hadn’t taken time to add it to my address book. We attended her 70th birthday party with her family. By Devin’s graduation she had mobility challenges, so I didn’t give much thought to her actually attending, but she got herself there early and told a teacher who she was there to celebrate. The teacher assumed she was a grandparent and helped her to a seat in the row reserved for Devin’s family where we found her waiting with a smile. It was a much better spot for her than on the periphery.

Pat was proudly present at Treyson’s graduation and Devin’s wedding. When Devin came to mass for the last time before moving across the country for graduate school, she cried like she was losing one of her own, which took the focus from my own heavy heart and helped me hold myself together. After an illness left her in a wheelchair her daughter Terry began bringing her to church and the brief cheerful Sunday chats continued with another person in the circle, until Pat went through a string of health complications and Terry began to come to mass alone. Then on Easter Sunday Terry invited us to visit Pat at home, where the family had settled her with the help of hospice to spend her last days.

I’m not proud of how much I didn’t want to go. It seemed so intimate and personal, not peripheral at all. I love people, but I’m socially awkward at best so imagine me when things are at their worst. I did go though, and I have never felt with more certainty the value of connection or the divine force that has given us hearts to connect. I can’t fully comprehend why it mattered that I was there, but it did. Pat was not able to hold a conversation but when she said my name I moved to a stool by the bed and she gazed steadily at me, her eyes shining and clear for a long, warm while. I didn’t have words then, and I don’t have them now, but I will never forget that moment. We stayed at the house for just a bit longer to encourage Terry, so brave in bringing her mom home and so fragile in her knowledge of both how long and how fleeting the time would be. When I told Pat “Goodbye, I’ll see you again,” I knew it to be true.

From this Easter parting with Pat I learned you should value your peripheral people. That’s not to say you must bring them into the center of your life; they’re exactly where they belong. But when you meet them, understand that you are seen and heard and more importantly, allow yourself to see and hear. Outside your snow globe the world is vast and impersonal but between you and things beyond that don’t belong to you, stand your peripheral people. When one of them is gone, you’ll feel deeply that the world out there is too big without them, but then you will realize with comfort how much more connected to all humanity you are because they once were there.