By Abe Villarreal

I helped a friend write an obituary this week. It was one of those acts of kindness that come after you tell your friend that you are there for them and will do anything, not knowing what anything really means. It's just a feeling when you say it.

Grief is a complex enemy and friend. It comes and goes. It sucker-punches you just when you are feeling better. It's there when you don't know it is. Sometimes you run away from it. Sometimes you can't escape it. You feel it all around, even when you can't feel anything. When you are numb to everyone and everything.

When you first learn you are losing a grandparent, you become a little kid. You never grow up when you think of what your grandparents meant to you. Summer vacations. Picking you up from school. Cookies. Big hugs. The kind that you get lost in.

When I was a kid, nana and tata gave us brothers a place to escape. When it was time to get picked up to go home, we always wanted to stay longer. Everything is fun when your parents aren't around to stop you from doing the things that grandparents always let you do. Life with them was always a little more open, a little riskier, a little more like the life you wanted.

Then we get older. Every few years, you lose a grandparent and then another. All those feelings come back. The kind of feelings that make you smile while tears run down your face. Feelings that remind you that you were the favorite, no matter what anyone else says.

A few years pass by, and then you lose another one. It doesn't get easier, but you are older and tell yourself that this is part of life. You try to make sense of something that doesn't make sense. Everything is supposed to make sense when you are older.

I don't have grandparents anymore. It's been about ten years since my nana passed away, and she was the last grandparent. Towards the end, she didn't know me. She rarely looked me straight in the eye and never called my name. The same name her husband had.

It was challenging to visit with her in that state of mind. To ask if she remembered the last time all the grandkids had Christmas in her old house on Rogers Avenue, across the street from Mormon Church. To not be able to hear her talk about her dad the musician, down in Cumpas. To listen to her voice, full with the cracks of time, as she sang Mas Alla del Sol, one of her favorite hymns.

If I had written her obituary, I would have asked her if she remembered all those things. I would have asked her if it was ok to be sad about her leaving us. I would have told her that her death was one of the hardest things I had ever experienced.

The meaning of an obituary is to make a notice to the public that a loved one has passed. A notice of the date, the times of service, and the relatives left behind. The details you have to include but only get in the way of what you really want to say.

When it comes time to write my obituary, I hope someone includes that I liked to listen to seventies light rock while cooking at the soup kitchen, that everyone was worth meeting and most of them were worth making a friend, that my cat Nadya always waited for me to come home no matter how long or short I was away, and that even though I didn't say it as much as I should have, that I loved everything my family taught me and never forgot those lessons.

Also, that not everything is supposed to make sense, and that's okay.

Abe Villarreal writes about the traditions, people, and culture of America. He can be reached at abevillarreal@hotmail.com.

Content on the Beat

WARNING: All articles and photos with a byline or photo credit are copyrighted to the author or photographer. You may not use any information found within the articles without asking permission AND giving attribution to the source. Photos can be requested and may incur a nominal fee for use personally or commercially.

Disclaimer: If you find errors in articles not written by the Beat team but sent to us from other content providers, please contact the writer, not the Beat. For example, obituaries are always provided by the funeral home or a family member. We can fix errors, but please give details on where the error is so we can find it. News releases from government and non-profit entities are posted generally without change, except for legal notices, which incur a small charge.

NOTE: If an article does not have a byline, it was written by someone not affiliated with the Beat and then sent to the Beat for posting.

Images: We have received complaints about large images blocking parts of other articles. If you encounter this problem, click on the title of the article you want to read and it will take you to that article's page, which shows only that article without any intruders. 

New Columnists: The Beat continues to bring you new columnists. And check out the old faithfuls who continue to provide content.

Newsletter: If you opt in to the Join GCB Three Times Weekly Updates option above this to the right, you will be subscribed to email notifications with links to recently posted articles.

Submitting to the Beat

Those new to providing news releases to the Beat are asked to please check out submission guidelines at https://www.grantcountybeat.com/about/submissions. They are for your information to make life easier on the readers, as well as for the editor.

Advertising: Don't forget to tell advertisers that you saw their ads on the Beat.

Classifieds: We have changed Classifieds to a simpler option. Check periodically to see if any new ones have popped up. Send your information to editor@grantcountybeat.com and we will post it as soon as we can. Instructions and prices are on the page.

Editor's Notes

It has come to this editor's attention that people are sending information to the Grant County Beat Facebook page. Please be aware that the editor does not regularly monitor the page. If you have items you want to send to the editor, please send them to editor@grantcountybeat.com. Thanks!

Here for YOU: Consider the Beat your DAILY newspaper for up-to-date information about Grant County. It's at your fingertips! One Click to Local News. Thanks for your support for and your readership of Grant County's online news source—www.grantcountybeat.com

Feel free to notify editor@grantcountybeat.com if you notice any technical problems on the site. Your convenience is my desire for the Beat.  The Beat totally appreciates its readers and subscribers!  

Compliance: Because you are an esteemed member of The Grant County Beat readership, be assured that we at the Beat continue to do everything we can to be in full compliance with GDPR and pertinent US law, so that the information you have chosen to give to us cannot be compromised.