The cicadas drone on and on in the trees on this last day of August. The windows are open. I feel the heat starting to build up in the house, and know I will have to turn on the air conditioning later this afternoon so that the upstairs will be bearable at bedtime. Yet I love the fresh air filling the house.
Laundry fills the washer and dryer as I prepare for a trip to Iowa. The first time I brought my husband to Iowa, the state where I was born, he was amazed at how beautiful it was. Instead of the flat farm fields and far horizons we have in Northern Illinois, rolling green hills cover Iowa.
While I never actually lived in Iowa (but wait, weren’t you born there? you are thinking) I visited my grandparents in Iowa often as I was growing up. I was born in Iowa but my parents lived across the border in Nebraska.
As kids, we knew we were getting close to Grandma and Grandpa’s when we started driving up the road next to the river. Shortly after that, we would turn onto Grandma and Grandpa’s street and start driving up the hill to their house. Up we would go until we got to the last house on the street. We would park in the circle driveway in front of the house and run up to the door.
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At the bottom of the circle driveway at my grandparents’ house |
My mom’s parents were the only grandparents I knew. Both my dad’s parents died before I was born. Grandma was born in 1918, and was just a baby when The Great Pandemic swept through the United States. She survived the flu, but one of her brothers did not.
Grandma was very proud of the fact that she had finished high school; she grew up in a time when many people didn’t continue their education. When she was 19 years old, she married my grandfather who was 9 years her senior. Together they made ends meet by working in an airplane factory during WWII, selling WearEver pots and pans, and a variety of other jobs.
As long as I can remember, she had white hair. She was very proud of her white hair; it was not grey or blue, but pure white. She was small-framed and strong; she worked hard all her life. While she thought family was extremely important, she wasn’t affectionate a typical grandmotherly way. When I was older, I would try to get her to tell me she loved me. I would give her a hug and say, “I love you, Grandma,” and she would respond, “Mmm-hmm.” Eventually she started saying, “We love you, too.”
She loved having great-grandchildren, and during her last few years would proudly walk with Lily and Emmy down the hallway in her assisted living building. She was one of the first people to move into an apartment after the building was finished, and she loved helping the “older people” who arrived. In fact, being almost 90, Grandma was probably one of the oldest people living there. I don’t know that she ever considered herself to be old.
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Great-Grandma and Emmy |
I still remember her sitting in front of my mom’s casket; just sitting with her grandchildren. Less than two months later she fell and broke her arm and just couldn’t recover. Numb with grief over the loss of my mother, I didn’t mourn the loss of my grandma properly. I pushed my emotions away and busied myself with the tasks of motherhood. And so eighteen months after her death, it is still hard to remember that we won’t be seeing my grandma during this trip.
I’m holding a tight rein to my feelings of grief as I remember Grandma’s laughter and her way of telling a story; to her generosity and her determination. I’m holding on tight to a grief I’ve barely given myself permission to feel — and letting it go gently as I tell my daughters about the love their great-grandmother had for them.
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