logo-image

With a Grain of Salt

Lisa Thomas • Feb 08, 2018

Last year my husband’s uncle died.  His name was Joe M. Thomas.  My husband’s name is Joseph E. Thomas, but everyone knows him as Joe.  Can you see where this is headed?  Coincidentally, when the hospital called to release Joe M. to us, Joe E. was the person answering the phones after hours.  We were sitting in the Mexican restaurant having our traditional Sunday evening meal when he took the call, greeting the caller in his usual manner . . . “Shackelford’s.  Joe Thomas”.

There was this long pause on the other end of the line . . .

The nurse in charge of releasing Joe M.’s remains was amazed and then afraid when someone with the same name took her call.  Afraid because she feared this was a family member who was unaware of the death; amazed because, come on . . . what are the odds?  And that, my friends, is the entire point of this missive.

We went to great lengths to circumvent the confusion that we knew was preparing to pounce after the announcement of Joe M.’s demise.  On our website, we specified that he had reached the ripe old age of 90, but it didn’t matter.  Evidently, everyone thought Joe E. was hiding his age really well.  People called the funeral home, tearfully bemoaning his death and wailing in doubt about how we could ever continue without him.  I guess if there was a silver lining to all the confusion, at least Joe E. heard the things most of us don’t get until after we’re dead and gone.

It wasn’t until we got Joe M.’s picture on the website that the calls slowed down.  But you can’t put a picture on a recorded obituary information line . . .

And that, people, brings me to my point.  Most everyone who heard the name got their daily dose of exercise by jumping to conclusions.  They didn’t read the related age.  They didn’t call to confirm or wait until more information was available.  Joe Thomas was dead and they only knew one Joe Thomas so it had to be him—and with that certainty, the news spread like wild fire.  Never mind that at one time there were at least three in Savannah, one of whom was a doctor.  (Don’t even get me started on the calls we got at home asking us for a sight unseen diagnosis.  I would tell them my husband worked at the funeral home and I didn’t think they wanted us just yet.  They’d laugh and agree, but one lady still asked if I knew what time the clinic opened.)

When it comes to the word around town, especially a small town, there are three points to always remember:

  1. Just because you thought you heard something doesn’t actually mean you heard what you thought you did.
  2. Just because someone ought to know something doesn’t mean they actually do.
  3. Points 1 and 2 should make you take every grain of “truth” with a sizable grain of salt.

If you pay attention to, and follow, those three points, there is a good possibility you won’t find yourself guilty of believing, and then spreading, false information about an alleged death.  And, amazingly enough, this also works quite well in other areas of life.

By Lisa Thomas 17 Apr, 2024
I have a confession to make. There are days when I’ll set the air conditioning on 65 and get the house cold enough to hang meat . . . and then light the fireplace.
By Lisa Thomas 10 Apr, 2024
If you’re a semi-regular reader, then you know I’ve been enduring that right of passage known as “The Packing of Parental Possessions”. For the last several months, the focus has been on cleaning out the apartment they occupied for 30 years . . .
By Lisa Thomas 04 Apr, 2024
When John Jacobs died of pancreatic cancer on October 29, 2005, his family was devastated. The New York defense attorney believed in staying connected to those he cherished the most, something he managed to accomplish by calling them three or four times a day on his beloved Motorola T720 cell phone . . .
By Lisa Thomas 28 Mar, 2024
There’s a place I’m privileged to visit on occasion—a civilized wilderness of sorts—where very few people intrude and my desire for hermitism (not to be confused with hermetism which is a philosophical or religious system based on the teaching of Hermes Trismegistus . . . mine just means I like being left alone) is fulfilled.
By Lisa Thomas 20 Mar, 2024
I am a lover of words and occasionally manage to put them together in a half-way decent manner. Ask me to speak to you spontaneously . . . off the cuff . . . with no preparation . . . and my brain freezes.
By Lisa Thomas 14 Mar, 2024
In a bookcase in the office in Savannah, you’ll find all kinds of books, mostly on grief (which makes perfect sense given that it’s an office in a funeral home).
By Lisa Thomas 07 Mar, 2024
When my daughter was in second grade the music program at her school disappeared. I don’t remember if it was a lack of personnel or a lack of funding or a lack of personnel caused by a lack of funding . . .
By Lisa Thomas 29 Feb, 2024
On November 21st of 2021, I wrote the blog “The Ultimate Reminder” about a gentleman I’d literally known all my life . . . about his acknowledgment that his circle of older family members and friends was rapidly dwindling . . . about how hard it was to watch them leave.
By Lisa Thomas 22 Feb, 2024
Recently local and national news outlets picked up the story of Pauline Pusser’s exhumation, turning it into front page news and lead stories.
By Lisa Thomas 14 Feb, 2024
We didn’t meet under the best of circumstances—I was the funeral director and he was the husband grieving the imminent death of his wife.
More Posts
Share by: