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When
the Clouds Form
Passover, Yizkor - April, 1999
I am certain all of you have
had this happen. You are enjoying a bright sunny, spring or summer
day and suddenly clouds roll in. The gleaming expanse of blue sky
becomes dark and foreboding. And then the rains fall. Mourning the
loss of a dear one is a similar experience. We are going about our
work or relaxing or having dinner and abruptly there is an alteration
in our mental process. Like the sudden appearance of storm clouds,
sadness unsuspectingly streams into our thinking. When the wounds
of grief are fresh, the sudden change has the effect of a psychic
thunder clap - startling us and shaking us up. Tears flow like rain.
Grief overwhelms our emotional floodgates. And then it is over.
As suddenly as it intruded into our thoughts, the grief gives way
and normalcy returns - until the next time our grief sneaks up on
us. As time slowly heals our hurt, the skies stay clear for longer
periods.
Yet, mourning knows no time limits.
It can descend upon us out of the blue -- triggered by a word spoken
in a conversation or by smells, or by foods, sights and sounds.
Old friends, random thoughts or reminiscences can bring it on. And
when it comes, there is no hiding. It envelops us. But now, with
the passage of time, the memories of our beloved dead no longer
startle. They impose themselves on us but they don't shake us to
our core as they once did.
We may even arrive at a stage
of acceptance where once heartbreaking remembrances are now welcomed.
It is like being caught in a spring or summer cloudburst. You feel
strangely refreshed by the drops falling on your face? A similar
thing can happen when thoughts of loved ones no longer at our side
bathe us in a pleasing nostalgia. Memories of what was sweet and
charming about them comfort us. We remember festive gatherings and
milestones spent in their presence. We feel strengthened and heartened
by all the wonderful times and special moments we enjoyed with them.
At these moments we think more of them as they were in life than
we do about their deaths. The love and affection we once had becomes
more important than what we have lost.
Yizkor is a time for being awash
in memories. Thoughts of parents, grandparents, a spouse, a child,
uncles and aunts and friends begin to drift in. We are warmed by
the recollections of the myriad of events and experiences that linked
our lives with theirs. We recognize the blessing they brought us.
Our sadness at their passing is eased by the felt joy of having
shared so much of life with them. This is why many of us are here
this morning. It is not to angrily point a finger at God as we may
have done in the early stages of our sadness. No. It is to spend
a few minutes in reminiscences and memory; to say prayers in God
's presence that immortalize our dear ones in our hearts. At Yizkor
time, we bask in the glow of loving thoughts about people whose
deaths have neither diminished our love for them nor our longing.
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