"No mud, no lotus." Thich Nhat Hanh

"No mud, no lotus." Thich Nhat Hanh

A messy collection of thoughts on writing and transformation

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Tamer of Dragons



 My beloved mother passed away last week. At the request of many who attended her funeral, I am posting (below her photo) the eulogy I read at the service. My humble Japanese mother lived a life of selfless and cheerful devotion to her family, and especially to her two intellectually and physically disabled children, my brother and sister. The funeral home was packed with those who admired her giving spirit in the face of a physically and emotionally demanding fifty-year workload--but few knew the circumstances of her life before Bobby and Jeannette were born. I hope that by sharing her story, Mom may continue to inspire others. Hers is truly the story of one who transformed the mud of suffering into a blossom of love and beauty. I am grateful to carry her in my heart forever.


Yoshiko Frances Kelley
1926-2015



So many of you here today are probably having the same sense of déjà vu that I am, standing here. You were here for my little sister’s funeral in 2001. You were here for my brother’s, four years ago.  Today we are laying Mom to rest with Bobby and Jeannette, and Dad and I want to say thank you to everyone here today, for the love and support you’ve given us. What a gift you have been to us, especially in these last years since Mom’s stroke. What a gift you’ve been to Mom.



The last two times I stood up here, I talked about my siblings and I read you some of the poems I wrote about them. Today I’m going to do something different. I’m going to tell you a story. But before the story, a quote from a children’s book, Coraline, by Neil Gaiman. In it he tells us, “Fairy tales are more than true—not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.”



The story that follows isn’t a fairy tale, but it does contain dragons. May it be as true for you as any fairy tale you’ve ever known.



Once there was a little girl with eyes that shone like pebbles washed in a river of light. She lived with her mama, whose face was as beautiful as the moon’s, and with her father, who carried her on his shoulders like she was a boy, who laughed and gave his change to the neighborhood children so they could listen to the stories of the traveling kamishibai man and buy candy when his tales were done. She lived with her little brother, Yoshiro, and with her mama’s mother, Haru, who came to help because another baby was on its way to join the young, happy family.



The family lived far away from their homeland, in a place called Manchuria, and they lived there because the emperor had told them it was their duty to make Japan stronger by settling in foreign lands. The father worked as an interpreter, and he worried about his family’s safety in this place where the Japanese were unwelcome aggressors, but duty came first.



The baby came next, a boy named Yoshi-aka, but the mother with the pale moon face did not survive his birth. The little girl loved this tiny brother, but it wasn’t long before his life waned and he was lost to darkness, like his mother. It was a sad time for the girl and Yoshiro, for the grandmother and for the father who feared for his family. “Take the children home to Japan,” he told Haru, “and I will return as soon as my duty is done.”



The girl and Yoshiro missed their father and mourned their mother and baby Yoshi-aka, but the grandmother cared for them and taught them as a mother would teach her own children. Yoshiro made friends with the neighbor boys. He kept a fighting spider in a bamboo box. The girl kept her eye on him, as a big sister should.



And when his duty was done, their father came home, and there was a parade in his honor. But it was a parade for a fallen hero, and when it was over the girl and Yoshiro said goodbye to him forever.



Time passed. The children went to school. And when Yoshiro was nine, he grew ill and died. And the little girl was not so little any more, but she was still young, and she wished more than ever that her mama would hold her tight and sing her a lullaby so that she could sleep and dream of a world where she was not so sad, so lonely all the time.



High school passed. The girl and her friends were sent to factories and plants to work, because there was a war going on. A big war. And the plant where the girl and her best friend worked was subjected to air raids again and again. And one time the girls ran in different directions, and the friend hid under a bridge, and the girl with the pebble eyes watched in terror as death fell from the sky and took the bridge, and took her friend with it.  Some time later a mushroom cloud rose on the horizon, in the direction of Nagasaki, sixty miles away.



After the war, the girl, who was now a young woman, went to work in the city. It was not a happy life. And then a young sergeant, an American, came to the shop where she worked, looked into her dark eyes, and fell in love. He visited her again and again, and when his tour of duty was over and he had to return to America, he saved his money and they wrote back and forth until he could return to Japan and rescue his beautiful bride.



They had a child. A quiet boy with eyes like dark pebbles, solemn and shy. He was not well, he needed surgery; his would not be a normal life.



They had a girl. Her eyes were button bright, and she was as lively and quick as the boy was quiet and still. She would need help to take care of her big brother, the young woman and her handsome husband decided. They would have another child.



The third child was another girl. Her face was as lovely as the moon’s. But her arms and legs were floppy and soft, and she could neither talk nor walk for years.



But the young woman held her children close. She sang them her Japanese songs. She loved them as her mother had loved her. And the oldest and the youngest were hers forever, always beside her, and the middle one was always in her heart, and when the grandchildren came and the young woman became an old woman who was still washing her own children’s hair, she did not tire.



Not until her youngest and her oldest had lived out their lives did she begin to wane, and when she did, her husband sat beside her every day, holding her hand, and her daughter’s husband and children brightened her days.



And when Yoshiro called her from beyond the stars, she knew it was time to go. Her daughter held her tight and sang her a song, a lullaby, and the old woman sighed and slipped softly into a dream of her beautiful, love-filled life.



Now, that is the end of my story, but it is not the end of my mother, Yoshiko’s, story, and it is not the end of our story—those of us who grieve and love and wonder why bad things happen to good people.



Our story is now. Our dragons are here. They are real. They are as true as my mother’s story is true, and I have left out many, many of the dragons she encountered in her life.



But my mother taught me that dragons can be beaten. Not with force. Not with hatred, or anger, or resentment. How could my mother beat the dragons of war which killed her father and her friend? How could she beat the dragons of grief—the same dragons we face today, here in this room?



She beat them by not allowing them to harden her heart. She beat them by allowing the pain to make her stronger, and she used that strength to help others. After all she endured in her early life, how was she able to fight the dragons of weariness and fear which arose as she cared for her disabled children, whose needs increased with time? She fought the dragons with love. She had learned at a young age how precious love was, how precious family was, and because of that she had the strength to fight  for decades and to hold on for Bobby and Jeannette in a way that someone with a softer, easier childhood might not have been capable of, for so long.



When you are struggling with your own dragons, when you wonder why someone with a kind and generous heart can be dealt a difficult life, I challenge you to remember that even the dragon of despair can be beaten with love. My mom taught me that. We may not understand what truth each dragon will bring us, but I know that heartbreak can crack open your heart so that your light can be shared with others—and so their light can enter your heart, as well.



In Kurt Vonnegut’s words:    
Be soft. 
Do not let the world make you hard. 
Do not let the pain make you hate. 
Do not let the bitterness steal your sweetness. 
Take pride that even though the rest of the world may disagree, you still believe it to be a beautiful place.



My mom had so many opportunities to harden her heart to life, but anyone who met her knew that her earthly body guarded the soul of a child. Innocent. Open. Trusting. Loving.





As the wise old bear Winnie the Pooh said:  How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.



Rest in peace, my dear, sweet mama. Thank you for teaching me how to tame dragons.