A Friend Stopped By | 03/10/2009 11:25 am
The Memory Keepers, by Michele Neff Hernandez

Editor’s Note: Michele Neff Hernandez is the executive director and founding president of the Soaring Spirits Loss Foundation. SSLF is a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting and inspiring people who are grieving the loss of someone they love. Soaring Spirits is hosting the first ever National Conference on Widowhood at the Marriott Hotel and Marina in San Diego, CA, from July 17-19, 2009. For information about the programs SSLF offers, please visit SSLF’s website. You can reach Michele at micheleh@sslf.org.
My husband had a shoe fetish. Phillip owned shoes for all occasions and athletic events — some were kept only for their sentimental value. To him, each pair either served a purpose or told a story, so there was no getting rid of them. This caused a serious storage issue. In addition to his side of the closet, he claimed the entire space under our bed. According to my husband, shoes could not be stacked, which meant the entire perimeter of the bed was lined with shoes. My shoes were piled in the closet in order to make more room for his.
When Phillip died, each pair of shoes became a reminder of something about him or about us that I missed. His favorite pair of trail shoes, still covered with dust from his last run, recalled the happy hours we shared running together on mountain trails. I missed the time we spent exercising together, and enjoying the beauty of the outdoors. Racing flats brought memories of him crossing one of many finish lines, sometimes with a smile of triumph, other times with a look of disbelief, always with the determination of a person who loved to run. I missed his competitive spirit, and the surprising heights of physical endurance to which he regularly pushed me. A pair of vintage Nikes were a particular favorite of his — causing more than one heated discussion when he pulled them out with his party attire. The despised dress shoes always made me smile, because they required dusting before being worn. Still, they were a necessity, and they had their place in the lineup under our bed.
How could I part with all those shoes? I knew it had to be done, but just moving them to a new location required baby steps. Each time I picked up a pair, I relived the story they told and put them right back where they were with tears in my eyes. This dilemma felt like an unsolvable puzzle: to not only let go of the shoes, but to do it in a way that would exemplify my husband’s love for them. How could I look into what was once our shared closet and not see his beloved collection stored neatly in their assigned location? The shoes became memory keepers and I feared that letting go of the shoes would also mean letting go of the memories.
As
the holidays approached, the answer to my problem finally became
clear. Phillip’s parents were born in Mexico City. A few
months before he died, he took a long-awaited trip to visit relatives
who still live there. He returned with a renewed sense of how
fortunate we are here in the United States, speaking for weeks of the
poverty and despair he witnessed in his parents’ homeland.
Yet, he also noticed that blended with the despair was a generosity
of spirit and an unwavering faith that he truly admired. As a result
of his trip, we planned to join our church group in December, when
they traveled to a small Mexican town to bring the people there much-needed food and clothing. After my husband’s death, my
daughter and I decided to make the trip to Mexico in his memory. As
we planned for the trip, it occurred to me that the people in the
village could really use his shoes. They wouldn’t be
someone’s extra pair — they might be their only pair. His
large assortment of footwear could provide the opportunity for a
group of people he deeply cared about to work and travel in
well-covered feet, rather than completing the necessary tasks of
daily life barefoot. This act of kindness would transform those
shoes from memory-keepers back into shoes once again.























69 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
What a beautiful story. And it brings to mind the parable of "walking a mile in someone else’s shoes". Your husband will always be alive in your memory, but but to know that so many people will be walking in his shoes has almost a cosmic irony. Where will those shoes take them ? What will they accomplish that you husband could not ?
We try to hold on to the wrong things, our immortality lies in what we leave behind and the good that we do.
Don’t forget that the best images and artifacts are in your forever memory.
Thank you for the inspiring story. Giving away your beloved’s possessions is part of the grief work that is very difficult, and at the same time very rewarding. You are giving something he loved to someone he loved. I remember my late husband had ties and some hats, such as his Irish Tweed Crumpled hat, which I gave to one of his closest friend. I gave his Straw Bowler to another beloved friend. Sheet music to another one. It was as though I was giving him to them. And, in sharing, I discovered that my grief work was turned into a positive time instead of going into deeper depression than I already was in. And, how glad I am to see Soaring Spirits, a site I will check into today.
Grief work takes "as long as it takes" , as my bereavement counselor used to say. And, the presence of the loved one returns at the most unexpected moments forever. It is as though the beloved’s soul somehow takes time to mingle with your own, and so, at certain times you know exactly what he would be advising you, or saying to you, or thinking. And, it is that nearness that is the most enduring quality that will reinforce and sustain you forever. It is called Love.
Hold the memories of your loved one who has died always close in your heart, but the kindest thing you can do for family members who come after you is to "spill" out your feelings in words on paper. You will find that they must rush out in a torrent, but they may come to you in small moments or stories remembered. The stories capture the person so well, and if you can bring up things - perhaps years later - that add to the family history of your loved one, please write it down. Sooner or later, all of us are sorry we did not ask certain questions of those who have passed. . and recovered memory often can fill in the gaps.
More often than I would like, the phone rings with the news that someone who has been a piece of my life has passed on. After the first surge of emotions has swept through, I find that if I can put into words my feelings, my personal memories, the good times and laughter we had shared, it forms a eulogy.
A family member does not necessarily know the person as well as the best friend does, and your words bring out facets and stories most of friends and family have no idea of. I make a copy for each member of the close family members and have it in their hands within a day or so.
Sometimes - more than sometimes - the minister or rabbi has not met my friend - so there is thanksgiving to be able to speak at the service about the deceased that comes over as a warm tribute. My words - eulogies to others - are often read at the church or at the gravesite - for I feel I have captured the person well enough that everyone attending is touched in unexpected ways.
Yes, you can send flowers or charitable gifts, but nothing will be forever remembered forever like the words that say "I care". I believe that the stories I tell reflect - not so much the "accomplishments" that we already know, but what lay within that made my friend beyond special. The thanks I have been given tell me that these words are the "keepers" in truth - and cherished.
I love this post, Diana, as gives an opening to easily express ourselves on the most personal things that have the most meaning to us. It allows those who have fortunately not been through this sort of grief to hopefully have a light go on within in them, begin to understand what has happened to us. And you are so right. The grief process can not be counted in weeks or months … and some never seem to make any real sort of transition. Grief counseling for as long as you need it can be gold in your hand. Keeping it inside is never good. . and talking, sharing, is its own release when you are surrounded with people who are also going through this. Most of us do not totally move on - not if the love we have had is strong. We hold the person in our hearts … and often touch base for it is comforting.
Unfortunately, those who have yet to be touched think that we should snap back. Most women I knew spent months into a year or more going into another town to get groceries so they wouldn’t run into anyone they knew — as one mention of the loved one and they knew they would fall apart. Fall apart? Months later? But we do learn from tragedy, adversity, don’t we, Diana — and we are there for as long as it takes for others to feel comfortable in talking it out. We relate, we know. . and even way down the road at a low time, there is again need to talk of this.
You are wonderful at expressing your inner feelings. In doing so, every day you know that in so many ways you are helping others. It is a wonderful trait … and you are a beyond wonderful woman, caring, smart, responsive, and well prepared when you need to be in your responses. When I see the name Diana - all I can think is WOW!!
An excellent analogy, Diana, in your final sentences. . . ones I too thought of on the other thread and did not have time to address in the succinct form you have expressed it in. I too believe we learn in times of adversity, and many times it allows even us to truly know what we are made of. You already know that I believe my own reason for being is to be there to help others - by word, written word, deed, whatever it takes. People know that I will never step back. In my case, the early death of a parent left a gaping hole … but after a while, it left me with an understanding of "loss" and its toil on the ones left behind. I believe I feel that there is a reason for everything. . . and adversity of all kinds provides a lesson, an education, for those sensitive enough to look (later) at it as such. It is an education of a different kind. . . an education in life, in living, in doing. In the larger world that has gone astray, our grieving has only just begun. And we are all in this together as it hits each one of us. We cannot project the future or even try as each day brings worse news. Right now I know we can help those less fortunate than we are in a multitude of ways. But it will take so much more, so much more.
And this thread seems to bring out the best in people, doesn’t it, making me long for more of this kind that warms our hearts, stretches our minds, and brings us close.