Recently I had the chance to
spend a day with my cousin—technically my second cousin—Tom, who
had come into Chicago with his wife Cindy. While Cindy was at a
day-long business meeting, Tom and I took a boat tour on the Chicago
river in 46 degree weather with a strong, cold wind which kept me
looking for icebergs in the water. Toward the end of the cruise, a
gust of wind tossed Tom's hat into the water, leaving his head
exposed to the elements. Luckily our next stop was Navy Pier, where
he bought a new one...and a hooded sweatshirt to wear under his
jacket. We then came back to my apartment and, joined by my best
friend Gary, we just sat and talked for a couple of hours. (Are you
old enough to remember when people simply sat and talked?)
So what was particularly
special about all this? Nothing, other than it was the longest single
time I'd spent with just Tom in memory, and it reminded me of just
how important, necessary, and wonderful family and friends are, and
how lost without them we would be. Every human lives every instant of
his or her life within the prison/cage of the body...the “self.”
We can be in a vast crowd of other humans and yet feel—and in
reality be—utterly alone. But there are invisible
bridges...links,if you will...between ourselves and a limited number
of other humans which reassure us that we are not totally alone. Our
family and our friends shield us from the icy winds of “aloneness.”
Of our family/friends links,
those to family are probably strongest simply because they are the
longest. It's impossible to fully describe these links. Blood and
DNA, certainly, but also a commonality of history, experience, and
people—of proximity—which creates an indefinable, indescribable
bonding. For the majority of people, family is the foundation upon
which their lives are built. Those without strong or positive family
ties are deprived of one of the basic supports of life and often are
invisibly but significantly scarred for life by their absence.
It's a cliché that while we
can't pick our family, we can pick our friends, and whereas we have
no say regarding to which family we are born into, our friendships
are almost always a choice. The bonds of friendship are usually
deliberately woven from common interests, outlooks, and attitudes. It
could be said we are bound to family with instinctual glue, to
friends with threads of interests and intellect.
And because we largely chose
our friends, our links to them tend to be far more flexible than
family ties. Family is the group of people with whom we share DNA and
that cannot be changed. And while friends may ebb and flow throughout
our lives, with new ones relatively (no pun intended) easy to add,
the “supply” of those in our core family—the people to whom we
are directly genetically linked—is largely set at our birth. We
can, with a little effort, make any number of friends, but the number
of brothers and sisters and cousins and aunts and uncles in our core
family varies little if at all. There may be a few additions while
we're quite young, but for the most part, the “supply” is set.
One's number of friends can always be replenished...not so the number
of one's family.
With age, human lifespans
being what they are, our core, genetically-linked family begins to
shrink. Yes, nieces and nephews and cousins go on to produce more
people with the same general genetic makeup, but with each succeeding
generation the bonds loosen.
Since each core family has
two sides, maternal and paternal, it's not uncommon to feel closer to
one side than the other. In my case, it was my mom's. While my dad
had a half-sister who in turn had two kids, I never felt really close
to them. I consider my mother's side to be my core family, and I
entered it with a grandfather, an aunt, an uncle, and three cousins.
Probably because my three cousins had six children—technically my
“second cousins”—I while I was still quite young, I never
differentiated “first” from “second.”
And now my parents,
grandfather, aunt and uncle, two of my first cousins and one second
cousin are gone. Of the eight people in “my generation” of the
family, only my cousin Jack and I remain.
I think they call this sort
of thing “life.”
Dorien's
blogs are posted by 10 a.m. Central time every Monday and Thursday.
Please take a moment to visit his website (http://www.doriengrey.com)
and, if you enjoy these blogs, you might want to check out Short
Circuits: a Life in Blogs (http://bit.ly/m8CSO1).
1 comment:
He who passes with the most toys wins!
I was watching an episode of a British comedy series called Mrs. Brown's Boys and the next door neighbor expressed some concern over what Mrs. Brown was eating.
"Those things will kill you!"
To which Mrs. Brown replies: "What do I care? I'll not be lifting the feckin' coffin."
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