Beth Mann's Blog

Beth's Urban Tales of Wonder and Decay

Beth Mann

Beth Mann
Location
Long Beach Island, New Jersey, USA
Birthday
November 11
Title
Presidente
Company
Hot Buttered Media
Bio
I'm a writer and creative consultant. I have years of experimental comedy and strange theater under my belt. I surf. I cook. I love wine, men and song. And oh puppies. I effin' love puppies.

MY RECENT POSTS

APRIL 6, 2011 11:38AM

Thanks for Finding my Dead Father, Peg!

Rate: 37 Flag

My father left me to be with this family.

When you discovered my dead father last weekend, Peg, it went beyond the boundaries of friendship. I was ready to leave his body behind...but no, not you. You were determined, even after the tranquilizers set in.

When I went back to my hometown to visit you, old friend, going to a cemetery was last on my list. But you and several others have wondered why I've never visited the place where my father was "laid to rest."

Well, you know the reasons:

1. My father has no tombstone. Are they still called tombstones? That sounds old-school and ghoulish. Grave marker? Well, whatever...he doesn't have one.

Why?

I have no effin' clue. Do any of us understand the dysfunctional workings of our families? It wouldn't be dysfunctional if they did the "normal" thing, right? When my dad died in 1973, my mom fell into a depressive stupor that lasted about, oh...her whole fucking life! A gravestone for the "man that abandoned her" was last on her list.

"I was busy raising five children. That's why! Have you tried raising five children on a secretary's salary? Have you? Did you want a fancy stone for your father's grave or dinner? Huh? Which one? You pick! Ungrateful, little...
 - My Mother, from the Other Side

2. I don't do cemeteries. I'm not into the "business" of dying. You'll be able to reference this when I croak. I don't want a stupid casket. Or a funeral. Or a fancy urn for my ashes. Just stick some dynamite in my orifices, light them and throw me off a cliff over the ocean, for the fish to feast on.

3. My father didn't die. I wasn't allowed to see him in the hospital and didn't go to the funeral because I was only six. I figured he skipped town to be with a better family (pictured above) with better little girls. While I now know this is silly, my little girl brain works differently. When people leave me, on any level, I feel too hurt for too long.

When we drove into the cemetery, my hands started shaking a little and you noticed. You offered me a cherry flavored, fast-dissolve Klonopin. Ah, what a friend! Tranquilizer candy! I didn't consciously find this situation upsetting, but I can disassociate with the best of them. So while I felt alright, your cherry flavored, fast-dissolve Klonopin made me feel...alrighter.

Cemeteries are hard to navigate - a virtual maze of death. How do grief-stricken people ever track down their loved ones?  It's "Section this, Lot that, Lane whatever, Row something." Perhaps they  are laid out in such a way where you walk your grief off.

My  father, according to the directions we were given, was between "Griffin"  and "Fario". If we found those two, he would be the "blank spot in the  middle." I cringed when the office told me that. Ah, the bloody symbolism of it all.

Our search began.

Plastic flowers blew everywhere this windy, cold Spring day. I gathered them into mini-bouquets and began putting them on several unmarked graves, having no luck finding Griffin or Fario.

Meanwhile, Peg, you kept looking as if your life depended on it. Why were you so concerned? Ah yes...long-standing friends know better. They've watched me operate from that little girl's mind for far too long. They want change for me, sometimes more than I want it.

But even you tired of the search, Peg. We just couldn't find him! (You'd think we would have found a goddamn Griffin, at least, just by default.) We got back in your car. You were more disappointed than me.

"Peg, I don't care. Really. This doesn't mean anything to me."

We started driving and after a moment, you slammed on the brakes. "Oh shit! Section H is on this side too!"

"Peg, really."

"No. We came this far."

We got out of the car and looked again. 

At this point I had no flowers left. A plastic red poppy blew by me and I grabbed it, just in case. As I looked halfheartedly for Griffin, I Klonopin-mulled over the effects of being fatherless:

To a little girl, your father is your prince. Your saviour. Without him, you feel like a perpetual Cinderella, too wrong and ugly to go to any ball. Or the last one at a party, hoping that special man will arrive and take you home. But he doesn't, so you stand there in the cold, waiting. Years go by, waiting. A fucking lifetime could go by, waiting. I don't want a lifetime to go by, Peg.

"Griffin!" you suddenly yell. "GRIFFIN!!!"

My heart and time stops. I turn toward you slowly and you're standing there, with such a look on your face; scared, pleased, relieved, concerned. This image of you will remain with me until the end of my days, this I'm sure. I stand there, with one plastic red poppy in my hand, feeling 6 again. Tears fall. Hands shake. I walk toward you. Toward my father.

When I reach you, we hug 6 feet directly above my dad. It's a true friend hug. Big, mighty and safe.

 "Your father is right here, Beth. Below me. He's not with some better family. He's right here."

"Thank you. You've...you've gone beyond friendship, Peg."

You insist I sit there for 10 minutes and grieve, damnit. And I do. I place the plastic red poppy where a marker should be. I rather like it. The surrounding tombstones all look the same. My father has a single red poppy instead, because he's special. He's not a blank spot anymore.

 



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Peggie and I on beach, years ago:


"Peg, it will come back to you"


My dad with his original family:





Those cards...whatever they're called:



 

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Comments

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It was just right. One red plastic poppy.
I haven't been able to visit my parents' graves. I hope I have the courage some day. R
What a friend, Beth...I'm glad you found your father...it is very important...thank you for sharing this with us...xox
Really well done, Beth.
Deeply moving. How painful and complex our relationship to parents can be!

"Just stick some dynamite in my orifices, light them and throw me off a cliff" — seriously considering putting this into my will.
Is that first pic a diorama??

Sort of reminds me of the ending to "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly" - except more poignant.
I rarely visit my mother's grave. Her grave marker also has my father's name chiseled on it with a blank space awaiting his death date. He's going to be buried on top of her. It makes me laugh. Talk about symbolism.

A friend was once told by her sister after their mother passed, "Don't become obsessed with that piece of land. It's not where she is." I believe this to be true. Cemeteries are strange and wondrous at the same time. Also scary and peaceful, hallowed and fascinating.

Fate brought you to your father's grave at this time in your life. Thank you for sharing your personal journey with us.
insanely good writing. gets the confusion/conflict, urgency, girlfriendship, dead dad thing, all of it. all of it. the steely dan song reference is perfect. wow, beth.
This made me cry. Such a beautifully poignant story. My dad's urn is still in the box that they put it in when they deliver it to, well in this case it was my mother. My mom can't bear to touch it. The four of us boys have no idea how to feel at this point. Dad was a great dad and dad was a son-of-a-bitch, but, he was dad and I miss him.
Thank you for this.
Rated
Wonderfully told. I've been on this journey and can relate. Love the dynamite quote.
What a powerful piece, Beth. It reveals so many complicated emotions. I visited my father's grave for the first time two years ago (though he only died in 1999). I couldn't find it either and since I had his ashes "Fed-Ex'd" from Tucson to NY" Now I'm not even sure he showed up!!
Thats what friends are for, I once told my best friend to scream at the grave of her dead brother. It is complicated, but it worked. Sometimes you just need a little kick to have a better understanding. Great writing by the by. Me, cremate, sneak me on a plane and toss my ashes over the highest Alpine rock you can muster. Enjoy the trip and drink lots of gluhwein in winter and weiss bier in sommer.
"Just stick some dynamite in my orifices, light them and throw me off a cliff over the ocean, for the fish to feast on"

**Tears** And I'll video it, put it on Youtube, where it'll go viral!! You'll be famous or something even in death!! ~more tears~

:D

Seriously, **tears** This made me cry.

Hopefully this comment will post as right now Open is acting well, funky!!!!!!!!!
I've missed your writing here Beth. This is right up there with some of your other 'bests' here. Poignantly told.
Thanks, all, for your wonderful feedback. OS was acting up majorly today - not loading at all for me - or I would have jumped in earlier.
Well that's one big fat happy [sad] closure for you. Revel in it and in the place of all closures, now move on. rated.
You are lucky to have Peg. Nice piece.
Years had passed when I went to visit my father's grave for the first time by myself. I got lost on the way there and once inside the cemetery grounds, I couldn't remember where his marker was. It had been a reallllllly long time since I had been there. I went to the office and the attendant couldn't find him either. Needless, to say it was a shaky ride home.

I next time I went back (with my sister) and found him. Whew.

Great post, Beth.
Gosh, those photos of him with his kids. How he loved you all. How sad he must have been to go...

I'm so sorry you lost him so very early in his life and in yours.

xo
such a good friend. she knew.
you say he's not with a better family. or your friend says that. but maybe he is. not with a better family, but with another one.
because-- we are all part of the same family.
Again, you got the mix of funny and sad just right. Actually made me feel your feelings (or mine, how can we know?) Feel something. That's the point.
If we take the time and look deeply ans selflessly into the eyes of our friends, we sometimes find a way to fill a certain void. This story touches me deeply Beth. Hold on tight to friends such as these....
Artful telling of a complex experience, both then and retrospectively. The plastic poppy brings it all home.
My father's headstone has a ceramic pig on it. Long story.
Beth, It took me 7 minutes to rate this yesterday and i was going to come back and comment after the server slowness stopped. Of course having a senior mind I forgot until I saw your red avatar on my blog this am.
HOLY cow I got as red as your avatar because I love you very much.
You now you are my heroe and I have come back to say what you write is gold and nothing but and your dancing is pretty damn good too.
Apologies for my lateness. I would love to blame it on the menopause but I can;t even do that these days.
HUGGGGGGGGGGG
Magnificent, Beth, in so many ways. You leveled me with this one. Here's to Peg, and you - I will be thinking of that poppy all day.
Beautifully written post
memories from childhood
losing your father
sad but
not sad any more
It is so hard to go to a parents grave
no matter what the marker
It is so lovely to have a loving friend
that cares to help you discover
that you were truly loved
rated with love
Such a beautiful story. You have a wonderful friend. I was relieved you found him! The picture at the end was perfect!
rated
You have a really good friend.
Closure sometimes comes in weird ways, but God love it when it finally does!
Somehow, you manage to distill so much memory, emotion, and pondering into a piece filled with honesty, humor, and yes . . . the reality of tears. Chica, you are one helluva writer. High props on being Beth Mann, also.
I actually like cemeteries, but my father's grave stone makes me sad. Where he was put, all the grave stones were flat, so that groundskeepers could mow the grass without going around standing tombstones or crosses or angels. When he died, I was a child. When my mother died, I was old. I took her ashes and put them in a wild place that she liked, and left them to be washed into a stream and out to the sea. I believe she told me to do that.

I cringe from rituals, but maybe that's because I never saw them used effectively when I was a kid. My father's funeral was an ordeal. I didn't believe he was dead, either, because the body in the casket didn't look like him. At least I didn't decide he had chosen some other kid to be with. I was just confused. I hope your visit to your father's grave helped somehow. That you made it yours. It makes me want to do the same, make my father's grave mine instead of a relic of a mindless, indistinguishable, factory funeral dictated by what people thought, not by what we felt.