Monday, September 2, 2019
The Burial of My Mother Essay -- Personal Narrative, essay about my fa
The phone rang early the morning of July 21, 2013. It was a call from my  brother-in-law telling me the news of my mother's death. The news came as no  surprise. She was diagnosed with terminal cancer in May of 2013, and her death  had been expected. I had been trying to prepare myself for this day ever since I  had heard the diagnosis.     Once I awoke, I packed and started the journey home from State University, where I had been staying with friends while attending a business  seminar. I had spent three years at State University and had made this drive  home often. This time, however, everything seemed different. All the trees  seemed brighter, more colorful, and more full of life. Maybe when one thing has  died, it adds life to something else. Could this be the natural order of things?  In just those few moments, I felt my life change. I suddenly realized that I  could no longer be a child.     Not more than twenty minutes into my drive, I found myself suddenly overcome  by reality, and grief became my driving companion. There was a song on the radio  that stirred all my emotions into nervous gumbo. I felt everything from anger to  happiness, from betrayal to fortunate. As I continued, I started to see my life  unfold in front of me in a thousand different ways. This was a pivotal point in  my life, and what I did now would affect the rest of my life. Could I even have  a life after this? The questions I asked my God and myself that day are too many  to count. This was pure emotional trauma, and at the age of twenty-one, I was  not ready to handle this life on my own.     The drive took me through the home of my youth. As I arrived in McCormick, I  saw all the familiar sights. My mind started to drift back to when everything  w...              ... I  hate this tradition. Why would anybody want to throw a party in your honor on  the one day they know you cannot make it? I attended just to see what would  happen. We ate a lot, and everyone told us how sorry they were. As I looked at  them and at us, I realized people really do not handle death well. We as a  society need to come up with a better set of rules to follow when it comes to  funerals.     Years have passed since I watched the burial of my mother. The only  physical contact I have now is the occasional trip to the grave site, and the  only reason I go is to do ground maintenance. Pulling weeds and placing flowers  on the grave is a family duty. Even after you die, it is necessary that you  portray a good image, and I feel a responsibility to my mother and her memory.  It is still important to me that I live the type of life that would make her proud.                        
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