I am wanting to begin to talk about a proverbial elephant in the room which has been there for some time, and there are many complexities and levels to it that make it somewhat challenging to talk about. The issue of course is family, specifically my family. The idea here is not to be accusative toward anyone or to even disparage any members of my own family, but I want to just address a few things that need to be clarified.
To begin with, a few points need to be established. First, criticism of family attitudes and family members by no means indicates hatred or rejection, but at times they may become serious enough to merit discussion. Second, no one is perfect, and as we live in a fallen world, mistakes happen and you try to deal with them and move on. Third, the present-day society we live in is so atomized that often close family ties we had in the past no longer exist, and with many older members dying off, it means that some younger family members don't know each other as well as they should. That is tragic also. Finally, the passing of older family members may be a mixed blessing. On one hand, their demise means a connection to the legacy is gone now, and it also may indicate that some valuable family stories may be lost for eternity if they are not recorded in some fashion. On the other hand though, some older generations tended to harbor some bad things that maybe their descendants don't reflect or share, and perhaps a lot of the tension and division in many families may be due to the actions of those older members. Given that is the case, the smart thing is to to do the old "digest the meat and spit out the gristle" approach to their legacies. I am going to try to navigate this with the delicacy of a surgeon's scalpel, but for some of my relatives who read this, it may not be pleasant, yet it needs to be said.
I feel that the last point - the legacies of deceased older family members - needs to be addressed first. Over the years in our own family (especially on my mother's side), there has been a drifting apart in our relationships. At the present time for instance, where I live in Baltimore I perhaps may have a dozen to 20 blood relatives within 15 miles of where I am sitting at home right now, but I neither hear nor see anything of any of them. Some of these are cousins I haven't even seen since I was a kid myself - almost 50 years! - yet they are within a few miles of me. Then, with a few of them, when I do actually talk to them on social media or something, they make some nasty jokes and inappropriate chatter that I cannot really understand - some of these people haven't seen me in 50 years, yet they make comments like that? I have come to the conclusion that limited communication with some of those people may be in my best interest, because they have made it clear that they don't really value me as a family member, and do not have a desire to do so. Therefore, in those cases it is better to just get on with my own life and let them get on with theirs. If they want to visit or talk, I conclude, they know where I am.
One other thing my mother's family has been particularly problematic with is for some reason they like to lay blame for whatever beef they had with my mother on my shoulders. In all honesty, I have little to do with it, and whatever issues they had with Mom or anyone else they should have addressed with her instead of projecting it on me. One thing they always love to do as a matter of fact is quite egregious to me, and it's taking a lot to even talk about it here. In her younger years, Mom liked to drink, and she used to do so quite frequently. Unfortunately, that gave her a reputation with some in the family. However, that was 40 years ago, and they failed to understand what Mom was like in her later years. Mom was by no means perfect, but I knew her better than a lot of her critics among family. Beginning about 40 years ago, Mom began to get focus in her life as she took on a role as a live-in caregiver for elderly folks, and not only did she find it rewarding but she also gained a great degree of personal growth from it. And, in all honesty, the families of the people she cared for ended up being more like family to me personally than my blood relatives did - I am still on good terms with many of them today, and I have a lot of fond memories of them. In the years that followed, Mom ended up working very successfully as a CNA once she moved to Florida, and even after she retired in her early 60s, she continued to keep a more disciplined life than she used to. Even as her health declined, I was there 3 years ago before she passed and witnessed her coming to terms with things in her life and making peace for herself, and in all honesty I was quite proud of her for doing so. The last 10 years or so of her life, as a matter of fact, were spent staying with me, and I took care of her when no one else would. During that ten years, Mom and I talked a lot about many things, and I have fond memories of sitting over coffee and just talking with her - there are days now I miss those moments. When Mom finally succumbed to heart disease in March 2022, she was I believe in a good place, and the closure I got from that was that I was there when no one else was for her. I got a lot of flak from other judgmental relatives for that over the years, but you know something, I don't regret a thing. Everyone needs someone with them, and Mom had me and I was happy to be there for her. She was able to leave this life with a good home, and I made sure she was put to rest in the way she would have wanted. And, any imperfections she had, in my opinion, died with her. I had some rather mean-spirited relatives of hers saying stupid things when she passed, including those stupid family rumors that she drank herself to death, etc. Many of these people did not know her, and they had no right to really say anything. But, their reckoning is coming too one day, and God help them when it does.
Unfortunately, I cannot say the same for other relatives. I had another relative pass away earlier last year, and a distant cousin who I never met in person acted very judgmental about it. This particular relative is into family history, and they contacted me years ago based on that. However, over the years they have also become sort of critical and condescending when I interact with them on social media, and despite never even meeting me in person, this individual all of a sudden has an opinion about me. Having practiced as a paralegal as well as having a Ph.D. now, both of those have taught me a couple of things about how information is communicated. For one, research and due diligence needs to be exercised before coming to any conclusion. A good paralegal for instance who knows how to research the facts of a case can make or break an attorney's presentation of the case. Also, from my doctoral education I learned that primary sources are key to establishing sound theses, and without the primary source material one cannot exercise good scholarship. Some family members would do well to exercise similar techniques when they open their mouths to repeat gossip and hearsay. I love how some relatives - these being 4th and 5th cousins - like making snap judgments about me and others without knowing a damn thing about anything. The relative in question was noted in life for being a pathological liar, and they had this distant cousin fooled for many years with their interpretation of things, and the distant cousin was frankly too lazy to do due diligence and get the whole story. To this day, that same cousin seems to be in judgment of me, and as far as I am concerned, let them - the truth will always prevail anyway, and in time the cousin will see how stupid they really were when it hits them full-on like an oncoming freight train. It may not even happen in my lifetime or theirs, but at some point provided the Second Coming doesn't happen soon someone will uncover the truth about things. That is a consolation that helps me to navigate these complex cloverleafs of family gossip and hearsay.
That pretty much summarizes the issue as far as that is concerned, and again, much of this rests more with my mother's side of the family than my dad's side. Although over the years Dad and I didn't have the greatest relationship, his family has nonetheless been quite loving and good to me, and they do not have as much of the crazy family drama and atomization that my mom's folks do. This doesn't mean they are perfect or anything, but overall my experiences with them have been good. In recent years I have gotten very close to a number of family on Dad's side, and it has been really a blessing to finally get to know them. Ironically, due to the fact that Mom had custody of me when I was a kid, I never got to know then many of my relatives on Dad's side like I wanted to as I never was around them as much. Yet, throughout much of my childhood I was around many of my cousins, aunts, and uncles on my mother's side, and now they are the ones who are atomized more. As I grow older myself though, I am starting to realize something, and that is what I wanted to talk about now.
My family dynamic has changed in recent years in some unusual ways. For instance, despite Barbara and I being divorced, she is more like family to me still than many of my own blood relatives. Also, in due time I may have the chance to sort of refine my own legacy and write a new chapter, as there is something that I will share at some point that may make that possible. There have been instances in life where a family legacy is preserved not by continuing old chapters, but by starting new ones. It may mean the family dynamic changes, and that is OK. Not everything can be as it was, and in some cases it is better to let some things die and be buried. A new chapter, I feel, is now being written in my own life personally, and it is just in the opening paragraphs at this point. Letting God direct it as it unfolds is integral, and in time I will share a few things which are part of that new chapter as right now is not the time to do so.
Thank you for allowing me to share today, and I will be talking more soon.