The day strangely culminates in German potato salad and trays of sliced meat on my Aunt MaryAnn’s dining table. A celebratory end to a hectic week, filled with what seem interminable discussions, plans, decisions. My father takes deliberate care to involve me in its events, in part for companionship and in part not knowing what else to do.
So, there we sit in the overheated director’s office, weigh the pros and cons of viewing times. Meet with clergy, choirs and relation. Design order, odes and speeches. Evaluate various technical and stylistic advantages of wood versus metal. Apply for certificates and approvals from this office and that. Fill out forms and releases. Select a hairstyle and a dress. A shade of lipstick. Glasses or none. None.
It’s a freezing February day. The wind bites; the snow is a dry powder blowing over rock hard ground. I sit on the stoop outside MaryAnn’s back door, a plate of uneaten food, trying to size up what we had done. All at once, it seems brutal. The series of banal choices that moments after they were made, mean less than the potatoes and onions in my lap. A purposeful, unavoidable, flurry of activity followed by nothing.
Time passes and other lives intervene. All those boxes to tick and formalities to fulfill, their substitutions for thought and reason. A system well worn and little changed, with its own unbearable demand. But there was assurance, and if I am honest a little hope within it.