R.I.P. Aunt Honey

  • by Marisa
  • January 9, 2007

Aunt Helen, aka Aunt Honey, passed away on January 2, 2007. Her funeral was January 5 which is my daughter’s birthday as well as Briatanie and Aunt Fran’s birthdays. A date we won’t forget.

Aunt Helen had pneumonia and a very high fever when she was very young. For that reason she never developed properly emotionally and mentally. Her heart, however, made up for that. It was as big as the sky and her love was all-encompassing.

My sister, Mary Beth, delivered the eulogy at Aunt Helen’s funeral. Here is the text of that essay that captured Aunt Helen so eloquently.

For most of my life, Aunt Helen seemed younger than I was, at least in the ways that matter.

Chronologically, she was half a lifetime ahead of me. But emotionally, she didn’t keep pace. She remained always guileless, trusting. So, so sweet. She was a looking glass through which I viewed my own coming of age. I watched my innocence fall away as hers remained intact.

Every trace of cynicism that took root in me stood in stark relief against her wide-eyed disbelief that bad things happen to good people and, god forbid, to children.

Countless were the times I’d walk into my mother’s house to find Aunt Helen sitting at the dining room table playing cards. Expecting her to greet me with a casual hello, I’d instead be confronted with a series of distressed, disjointed questions: Oh! did you see? How could they do that? What about the children? What’s wrong with people? It would take some back tracking and deciphering to get the whole story out of her, which was inevitably the latest reported tragedy on the local or national news.

Most of us, by adulthood, have developed filters for such things. We hear the stories of heartbreak and sorrow, but we keep a proper distance. We differentiate between public and personal tragedy.

But Aunt Helen had no filters. She held things as they were given to her. Her heart seemed to feel the world’s tragedies one by one, each with equal importance and gravity. For Aunt Helen, there was no shortage of grief to share, just as there was no shortage of love. We were all one.

And still, innocence aside, there was a mysterious “other” side to Aunt Helen that often made me wonder, if not for a fever, who she might have been.

There seemed to be a spring of knowledge and wisdom at her center that bubbled up at the most surprising times: some insight into human behavior; a blunt acknowledgment of the lamentable lack of decency in the world, a string of correct answers to Alec Trebek’s jeopardy questions. How did she always manage to kick our butts in jeopardy?

There is a book I have loved since I was a child. It’s called The Little Prince. It’s the story of a prince from another planet and an airplane pilot from France who both fall to Earth and find themselves lost in the Sahara desert. The prince, though a child, is wise and soulful, and offers the pilot insight into the planet Earth and its inhabitants as only someone who’s not of this world could.

As I think about the mystery that is Aunt Helen, a passage from that book keeps coming to mind. The pilot is recalling a moment spent with the little prince when they were thirsty and searching for water in the desert.

“The desert is beautiful,” the little prince said.

And that was true. I have always loved the desert. One sits down on a desert sand dune, sees nothing, hears nothing, yet through the silence something throbs and gleams.

“What makes the desert beautiful,” said the little prince,”is that somewhere it hides a well.”
And I believe this is true of Aunt Helen. What made her so beautiful was that for all of her uncomplicated goodness, there was a mysterious well within her that was untapped, unknown, but full of such magical promise. It shimmered through. We felt its presence, but like all great mysteries, it was just beyond us.
In the story of the Little Prince, he finally finds his way out of the desert and back home to his planet among the stars.
Like the Little Prince, Aunt Helen has found her way back home, back to a place where, finally, she fully belongs, a place where we are all one.
And with us, she’s left her mystery to hold.

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2 Responses to “R.I.P. Aunt Honey”

  • I’m so sorry for your loss but what a beautiful eulogy. Tell your sister she nearly made me start crying. I’m here if you need a friend (and thank you for all the kind words you always give me. sometimes they just make my day)

    only background Marcus (7 comments.)January 9,. 2007 in the in the wee hours
  • I’m sorry for your loss :( That eulogy is just beautiful! She sounds like a very special person.

    only background Julie (6 comments.)January 9,. 2007 in the terribly early in the morning