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Brian Kantz
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© 2008 Brian Kantz All rights
reserved Contact Brian
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FROM NATIONAL
CATHOLIC REPORTER - APRIL 7,
2006
THE FULL STORY ABOUT MY GRANDMOTHER
I have this great photograph of my
grandmother on my desk. Wearing a mischievous smile and a
flower-print dress, she’s grabbing a handful of cookie
dough from the mixing bowl and — for once, totally
unrepentant — is about to snarf it down. The picture
represents everything I knew and loved about my grandmother:
she was prim and pious, yet could be wonderfully playful and
fun. That was my grandmother.
She passed away ten years ago, in the
summer of ’96. I was a year out of college at the time,
but was still just a kid in a lot of ways and I took the news
hard. My grandmother was really gone. At the funeral home, as
various members of the family stood up to say nice things about
her, I sat glued to my seat, too choked up to say anything, too
insecure to let anyone see my sadness. My silence at that
moment is something I still regret.
If I had had the nerve that day, I would
have waxed poetic about that kind old woman. I would have
recalled the simple moments: eating sandwiches and playing
board games at her house after school. I would have mentioned
her quirks: she was the only one I knew, besides Winnie the
Pooh, who used the phrase, “Oh, bother.” And I
would have proclaimed her a saint — an honest-to-goodness
saint — who spent innumerable hours in the last pew of
St. Ann Church, fingering her rosary beads, whispering the Hail
Mary, and meditating with her God.
Those were my memories: rose colored and
reassuring. But, as it turns out, I had only half the story.
In recent years, during long talks and long
walks with my mom, I discovered a different side to my
grandmother. As sure as she was a saint, she was also a
sinner.
Living a dream life with six beautiful
children and an immensely successful husband, my
grandmother’s fortunes took a fateful turn in 1951. On
vacation together in Buck Hill Falls, Pennsylvania, my
grandmother’s husband — the grandfather I never
knew — took ill with stomach pains. A day later, he was
dead, the victim of bleeding ulcers. Although there was
nothing my grandmother could have done to save him, she blamed
herself for his death and dedicated the rest of her life to
making it up to him.
She started, ironically, by disobeying his
orders. He had told her that if anything were to happen to
him, she was to immediately sell the business — one of
the first Buick dealerships in northeast Ohio — and use
the profits to take care of the family. Instead, my
grandmother screwed up her courage and entered the
male-dominated world of motorcars, ruffling feathers along the
way as a pioneering businesswoman.
Despite her best efforts and glowing praise
from local newspapers (one called her “three remarkable
persons wrapped in one — mother, father and business
manager”), she eventually realized that she
couldn’t do it all. Sales dwindled and, over the course
of several years, so did the family’s bank account and
esteem in the community.
Then came the devastating blow. Her eldest
son was diagnosed with cancer. He died at age 16. A family
that had so much, suddenly, became keenly aware of what they
were missing.
In her despair, my grandmother dealt with
things the only way she knew how, the only way many people know
how: through substance abuse. She drank too much. She became
dependent on prescription drugs. She became painfully thin.
She became a pain to her family. That, too, was my
grandmother.
Sometimes I wonder why I’m looking
for more detail about my grandmother’s life, why I
continue to ask my mom about her. Why tarnish the saintly
image of the sober, contented woman she became in her later
years? Recently, the answer has become clear. These stories
make my grandmother more real, more complex, more human, and no
less lovable. Amazingly, through each of her trials, she
maintained an unwavering faith in God. Examining her life has
allowed me to think about these questions: What makes you a
“good Christian?” What makes you a believer? What
makes people love God while living with tremendous sorrow?
In the end, my grandmother, ten years gone,
continues to teach me this lesson: all of us go through a
process over and over again during our lives. We sin, we
repent, and we believe — we’ve gotta believe
— in redemption and resurrection. If life is full of
lents, then it must be full of resurrections.
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