Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Hiiiiii

 It was March Break and my husband was in California AGAIN. I left town. I drove six hours to my sister's place and hung out with her (and her husband) without our parents being around for the first time in... decades, possibly? We held chaotic gabfests in the hot tub every night and said "we have to get out now" multiple times and were so incredibly pruney when we finally did. We went to her little neighbourhood theatre and watched Oscar-nominated animated short films with her friend who brought boozy juice boxes for us, and then went back to her house and watched the Oscars (the animated short film that one was far down on my list but oh well - MICHAEL B. JORDAN yes! I think Sinners should have won but I did like One Battle After Another. Amy Madigan was adorable, and her performance in Weapons was fire.) We went to her neighbourhood pub for St. Patrick's Day. We double-Facetimed our daughters who are doing masters degrees in two different countries. It was blissful. 

We're all wearing a green but you can't tell because IT FREAKING SNOWED AGAIN and we were walking to the pub.




Then I drove an hour and a half back in the direction of home and hung out with Eve for a few days. I took her and her former housemate out for dinner and the waitress said we were adorable and then we accidentally did some trivia and didn't suck as much as we expected. She presented a poster at a symposium and I walked in and watched her walking a professor through her experiment while she didn't know I was there and she looked so confident and professional and it was so weird. She wanted to go to McDonalds one day after I picked her up from the lab so we went and we punched in the order and then were standing at the counter and she said "do you want to sit down?" and I said "no, I'm fine, do you want to get a table" and she said "no, I mean you get the table" and I said "YOU'RE going to get the food?" and then collapsed laughing because she's 23 and I realized I was still treating her like a seven-year-old and HOW DOES THIS ALL WORK, I still don't know, should I ask her to do my taxes too? 





Matt flew in from California Friday and came to the Hamilton hotel, and Saturday we took Eve out for lunch and then drove to Toronto because there was a funeral service for Matt's aunt who died from lung cancer at 72, exactly like his mother six years ago. Which is stupid and sad, and we were in that 'seeing people we were happy to see, but for sad reasons' headspace. We went out for dinner with people Saturday night and I got to meet Matt's long-lost sister in person finally, and when the waiter asked what the occasion was we talked about that instead of the funeral thing. The number of wait staff in the Toronto area who now know this story is quite a bit more than zero.

Matt's cousin Mary (who I love) organized the service and gave the eulogy for her mom, Lorana. I didn't see Lorana often but she was lovely to me and amazing to my kids, and she had a great sense of humor.   Mary is spirited and funny and energetic and she gave the kind of eulogy I've told my kids I want  - 80% loving and complimentary, 20% loving roast ("Her apple pie was the best in the world. Her rhubarb pie was disgusting.") I read Engie's post about the laughter book this morning and it made me realize how much I love belonging to two families who approach every situation with as much humour as possible and usually more than is appropriate. After the speeches, a bunch of us compared notes and realized that when Mary said her mom hated green peas we had heard Greenpeace and were really confused about what her beef was with environmentalists. We laughed until we cried and then cried until we laughed, my contacts were shriveled by the end of the day and there was no moisture left in my body. 

The last time most of us got together was for Mary's wedding a few years ago, and it was the most joyful occasion, and we knew how fortunate we were to be together for something other than a funeral. It's easy to say we should all get together before someone else dies, but we are far-flung and busy and it is difficult, of course. I was pouring a small amount of bourbon over my feelings thinking that funerals are sad, but weirdly also joyful, because you feel closer to the people left behind, and aware of how precious our time together is. 

Anyone remember when we went to Georgia last May and it was Atlanta Furry Weekend? We got an email from the hotel in Toronto before we got there advising us that we would be there the same time as....... prepare yourself...... the Furnal Equinox



It was mostly great fun, other than elevator issues. A couple of people in full fur suits really fill an elevator. The hotel allowed the service elevators to be used for guests, which helped. We were on the 28th floor, which meant that (after a long wait) we were able to get on as the elevator started back down from the 30th floor, but then we stopped on virtually every other floor on the way down, until we were jammed up against each other and afterwards. This happened as we were on our way down to drive to the funeral, and got increasingly funny. The part of Engie's post about talking to strangers resonated with me because we all spent a good fifteen minutes together, and naturally by the time we got down to the main floor they knew we were going to a funeral and that I was appreciating the hilarity as a counter to the sadness. I asked one furry if I could snap a picture of her head to send to Eve, and instead she rode down to the main level (even though that was not her original destination) and got out to let me take a full-length picture, and then she asked if I wanted a hug. So that was amazing, and for increased amusement points, I looked up and saw my husband halfway across the main lobby pretending he didn't know me. Joke's on him, clearly I am going to be more present, creative, connected and happy. And also I will have better furry pictures. 



17 comments:

J said...

WOW, what a busy, wonderful time. I mean, except for Matt’s aunt. Funerals are like that, right? So sad, but also poignant and happy.

Your time with your sister, and then Eve, and then your husband joining. I love every bit of it. And I’ve never heard of these Furry conventions, but the one you got a picture of is A.DOR.A.BLE.

Nicole said...

I have never had small talk with a furry, and it feels like you are hogging all the furries!!!! Leave some for the rest of us (super jealous, obviously). To be honest I AM jealous of your relationship with your sister! How lovely. Sorry about Matt's aunt. I do like a funeral that really "gets" the person who is deceased, I like adding a touch of humour if that is what the person was like.

Nance said...

I feel like this is making me rethink my whole ethos about funerals. I've never, ever considered them from this perspective, and your statement that, "funerals are sad, but weirdly also joyful, because you feel closer to the people left behind, and aware of how precious our time together is" made me really, really stop and think.

This was a wonderful read. I, too, continue to marvel at the fact that, somehow, my adult kids are just that--adults.

NGS said...

If I was staying at the same hotel as a furry convention, you better believe I would have SO MUCH TO SAY. What a grand time. I mean, I'm sorry about you and your family's loss, of course. But the stories!

Anonymous said...

Elevator trouble made me LOL all by myself at the nail salon-- omg so funny

Bibliomama said...

I think I only knew about Furry Conventions from CSI, but Eve clocked them in Atlanta really quickly. It comes across weird, but it seems to be a really sweet and inclusive community. It was an amazing week for seeing a lot of wonderful people, even with the sadness.

Bibliomama said...

I am super lucky to have my sister. And I so agree about funerals - if someone had a healthy sense of humor in life, why would we try to erase that because they died, when it's part of why we loved them?

Bibliomama said...

I love the way the blog community makes me think of things in new ways. And yeah, the kids. We made freaking people, it is endlessly trippy.

Bibliomama said...

I just walk around gawking at them with my husband hauling me across the immense lobby praying I won't try to talk to another one.

Bibliomama said...

Clown car, but fuzzier!

StephLove said...

This made me think about how I never see my sister without my mom (unless we carve out time for a meal or coffee together during a family vacation), because they both live on the other coast.

I know what you mean about funerals, at least some of the time they can be joyful.

Swistle said...

UG not to complain but it is hard to comment on a post that is SO FULL of things to comment on! If I remark on the remarkable photos of furries and how now I TOO want to connect with the world and all the goodness in it, it seems like maybe I just blew right past the rhubarb pie thing without laughing and resolving to do better at the funeral eulogies I am never going to give because I choke up. If I mention liking the part about pouring a small amount of bourbon over your feelings, maybe it feels like I didn't take time to appreciate your wonderful daughter and think about how odd it is to feel so invested in someone else's kids WHEN I HAVE NEVER MET THE KIDS LET ALONE THEIR MOTHER. Etc.

suzanne day by day said...

Funerals and furry conventions: what a wild mix. You and all your people are so adorable, I am not surprised waitstaff are commenting on that fact. I love love love the glow I am feeling of secondhand pride for your brilliant beautiful daughter -- what a fantastic glimpse into parenting an ADULT. Condolences about Matt's aunt, and YES to your point about the poignant beauty of coming together to celebrate the people we've lost in the (temporary) company of people we still have. <3

Bibliomama said...

@Steph - I love our whole family being together, of course, but it's a different vibe just hanging out with my sister and it was really nice.

ccr in MA said...

I'm not sure why the universe is sending you furries, but no complaints, right?

The funeral thing, yeah, I hear you. I don't get to see my brother that often, and we have a cousin I also don't get to see that often, and in the pictures of the three of us the last time we were together we are all smiling wide, which is a bit odd considering that we were together for our grandmother's funeral. But she was 105 (and a half!) and honestly glad to go, and we were happy to see each other despite the inherent sadness of funerals.

Busy Bee Suz said...

I'm sorry about the loss of Matt's aunt. SO young! So sad!
I was thinking after Lolo's baby shower, which had so many family and friends in attendance, that we generally don't ALL get together except for weddings, funerals, and now, co-ed baby showers. So yes, funerals can be joyful because it turns into a family reunion of sorts.

How awesome to watch your daughter blossom into a fully fledged, capable adult! Brava!

Anne said...

Funerals are so fraught - an opportunity to see people you don't see as often as you'd like, in the context of an unwanted situation. Bah.
I don't think I have ever received a head's up email from a hotel about any other gatherings or conventions happening at the same time as my stay. Since many of my hotel stays are related to conventions or meetings, I wonder if my groups have ever been the subject of warnings to other guests? Hmmm... (And no, my groups are not Furries, lol.)

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