One of the lessons I learned in the funeral business is that when all is said and done, the family comes together as one when it comes time for the person to move on to a new direction. The strength of the family brings them through these trying times. This is a benefit of the ritualization of the wake, the memorial service, the eulogy, the funeral, and all the manifestations of the love and power of the family.
For one that spent the first half of his life immersed in that whole world of families coming together because of the death of their loved ones, you really get to see the everyday power of love shared, and the power that love can bring as a healing. The family is really what we leave behind. Everyone is so busy nowadays, we mourn friends and acquaintances, but we all have to move on to whatever we’re doing. But your immediate family, your children, are really a part of you. As I’ve often said, you’re never really gone when people remember and emulate things you do, or the values that you have.
I think that’s what, when we’ve talked about the beginning of how can we all bring peace to the world—that’s one of the great adjustments I believe we’re going to have to make. The role of the traditional family has deteriorated and gangs have taken their place, so what’s happened to the individual love that we have for each other?
It seems to me that some of the violence and disregard and disrespect for human life is an early warning sign of the deterioration of civilization itself. In reality, the civilization is basically made up of the love of family, friends, and then acquaintances, and then we might go out to geographic areas: the city, the state, the country, and so on. But as I have said in my Umbrella Projects, I believe we have to start loving people we absolutely do not understand. We can’t marginalize or kill them; we must love them—which is foreign to our gene structure and our cultures.
I am very proud of my family. My grandfather used to say, when people complimented him on the work of his son, “I would be a pretty poor father if my son wasn’t better than I am.” And I believe the same thing. I’d be a poor parent if my children didn’t bring more to the table than I did.
Matt