logo-image

Soooooo . . .

Lisa Thomas • Jul 22, 2020

Soooooo . . . I have a question.  Actually, maybe two or three or ten . . . or more . . .  Side note, if my cousin was present and I started a sentence that way, she’d jump in with “a button on it!”  Just in case you’re ever around her and start a sentence that way.  Now you know what to expect.  But I digress.  As I so often do . . .

Soooooo . . . I have a question, and it’s a tough one, so get ready.

Would you want to know the exact moment you were going to die?

Not necessarily how the event would occur, just when.  Down to the second.  I can see all kinds of pros and cons to such knowledge.  For example—would I react positively by ceasing to procrastinate and starting to prepare in all the usual ways . . . or would it paralyze me with fear so I wasn’t able to enjoy—or at least make the most of—the time I had left?  Knowing the exact moment I was scheduled to leave the planet would probably be the ultimate double-edged sword—the blessing and the curse so often referred to by that great fictional TV detective, Adrian Monk.

Which brings me to another question . . . if you did know, what would you do?  Let’s say you have a year . . . 365 days from today and then poof!  You’re gone.  What would you do?  Would you say, “I’m going to keep working for the next so many months and then I’m gonna quit and enjoy what’s left?”  I’m bettin’ that’s a big ol’ nope.  Would you begin telling the people around you all the things you should have said (the nice things) over the years but just always assumed they knew?  Are there folks you’d find and give an earful because they’ve been such terrible human beings (in your considered opinion) but no one ever had the nerve to tell them? If it was me, I’d certainly sit down with an attorney and make sure all my stuff was in order.  I’d probably bid farewell to the home, although I’m pretty sure there are people who are desperately hoping I’d clean off my desk first and share all the secrets of my job with someone else.   I would definitely start making sure my family knew how much I loved them . . . and I’d have to start writing letters to my kids and grandkids so they’d have my wonderful words of wisdom for all eternity. In writing.  So they can never forget.  There are probably other folks I’d put on the mailing list as well, not for words of wisdom but for words of gratitude.  It’s always nice to let people know they’ve actually made a difference somewhere along the way.

But what if you just had a month?  Does the length of time change your plans?  Would there be a sense of panic because the to-do list was so long and the time so short?  Would it motivate you to hurry up and try all the things you’d always wanted to but never had the nerve . . . like sky-diving for instance?  Another side note, even my upcoming demise would not get me to jump out of a plane unless it’s sitting on the ground.

All of which brings about yet another question . . . what if the person with the expiration date isn’t you but someone you love?  How does that change your plans?  Would you try to spend as much time with them as you could?  Would there be deep conversations about life and hopes and dreams and the coming end to it all?  Or would you try your best to distract them from their future—or lack thereof—and encourage them to fully enjoy what time they had left?  What would you say to them?  What would you do for them?  And the really hard one . . . would their pending departure make you so uncomfortable you would choose to walk away instead of walking the path with them?

Fortunately . . . maybe . . . for most of us our date of departure is a great mystery.  We can live in blissful ignorance with the belief there will always be another day—until there isn’t.  Of course, we can’t all quit our jobs and go skydiving . . . and it’s probably best if we don’t start sharing our real feelings with everyone we’ve ever disliked.  But those other things . . . the nice things . . . the helpful things.  We can do those now.  We can make certain our financial affairs are in order.  We can have the documents in place that will make our passing easier—or at least not any harder—on those we leave behind.  And we can realize that the special people in our lives are deserving of our time and our attention.  They deserve to know how much they mean to us and what a difference they’ve made.

There is so much to be done and so much good we can accomplish . . . if we’ll just quit betting on tomorrow.

 

 

About the author:  Lisa Shackelford Thomas is a fourth generation member of a family that’s been in funeral service since 1926.  She has been employed at Shackelford Funeral Directors in Savannah, Tennessee for over 40 years and currently serves as the manager there.  Any opinions expressed here are hers and hers alone, and may or may not reflect the opinions of other Shackelford family members or staff.

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: