I have a friend who jokingly refers to any wedding as a funeral. He says all individual freedom is gone from that point on, when two become as one. Yes, he has “somewhat” of a point.
Love can (and often does) bond two individuals so unspeakably close together that they actually both want to act as one, voluntarily giving up many individual freedoms they may have once possessed.
Yes, love can do that. And often does.
Yesterday eve I drove to the countryside near Greeneville TN and attended the joyous wedding of two former students, Baylee Nave and Jordan Sewell - pictured above. Yes, you read that right. They both once sat in my classroom at Van Pelt Elementary. Who would have ever thought I’d be watching them marry each other someday? What an unusually joyous occassion this was for me!
Yet. Just a couple of weeks ago I attended an event for another former student. It was his funeral service. This young man died by his own hand.
Being human, we are ruled largely by our emotions, not by logic. I realize some folks may initially beg to differ, but we have the entirety of human history to show us all otherwise. Collectively and individually, human emotion is both King and Queen to most of our behaviors in this world.
That being noted, I don’t see that as a negative thing. Not at all. Quite the contrary, to feel emotion is to be fully alive and fully human to the fullest extent.
Like being in love.
Like feeling grief.
Like feeling gratitude.
To be fully human it matters little what emotion we may feel, as long as we feel.
I used to think (as most young people do) that having your heart broken in a romantic relationship was the most terrible tragedy of utmost proportions possible. Indeed, as I write these words I can count several students who have died at a young age by their own hand - universally due to the breakup of a romantic love relationship.
Romantic love is, as Shakespeare so wonderfully put it, the ultimate “sunshine” of our lives. I am a believer. Aren’t we all?
Age. Time. Wisdom. Eventually these three teach us that love is never lost, even when it seems to be. Love, when real, lives on.
My favorite verse in all the Good Book is, “God is love.” (And the only one I’ve found that I really need.)
Indeed, love exhibits itself in all its myriad of flavors at weddings and funerals alike.
Gosh, I still love (at least a little) my first girlfriend. I always will (at least a little). And we do well to remember that even a little bit of love is a wondrous and powerful thing.
I can sit here and honestly feel emotionally for every gal I ever loved, even from long ago. Love is still there. This doesn’t make me a polygamist. It simply makes me honest about the joyous feelings I once had (however close to mere embers those feelings may have now faintly waned). How much better might divorced or estranged couples ultimately feel about each other should they view themselves from this frame of reference, I wonder. Rancor, distrust, and anger are hard (if not impossible) to feel at the same time one is feeling the very powerful emotion of love (however “big or little” that love may be deemed to be).
Anyway. It is easy to feel a sense of joy when I attend weddings. Hope is everywhere in the air.
But at funerals? By that point, isn’t any hope raised in vain?
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