Can You Speak Up? I Have Dirt In My Ears
Talk? I don't expect a response from my father. He was never much for chatting. What I get is the sound advice and comforting reassurance that only seems to come from saying things out loud.
I tell him how I feel about client or family situations. I tell him of important decisions and of the choices before me.
On the darkest days I tell him I don't know what to do or where to turn on a serious issue. Despite no voice responding, I can't think of a time that I didn't leave his graveside without a clearer view of what was needed.
Some people speak to their plants, cats or the ashes of their dear-departed. I say it's all good. No matter your religious beliefs about the spiritual world, I believe there is good karma in connecting with other states of being.
Often in probate practice, I see greed as the sole driver. Self-interest and a grab-it-all mindset are the hallmarks of too many heirs. So many react to the loss of a loved one as a perfunctory event - like getting an inspection sticker for their cars, I want to scream. SCREAM!!!
The screaming leads more to the question than the answer. Is it the deceased's failure to be a good parent? Or is it the survivor's failure to be a good child? In many cultures, if not most, one's ancestors and one's connection to them is paramount to a good life.
As I talk to the pink granite block emblazoned with my family name, I know unless I connect with my own family while I'm alive, they'll never gain any wisdom talking to the marking stone over me once I'm gone.