Here’s the thing about privilege – it can be used in a positive way.
Privilege has always been around. Some people have forever had privilege. We didn’t have a name for it when I was growing up, but it was there. Those of us who had our own bedrooms as a kid – privilege. Families who got to go out to eat at restaurants instead of eating tv dinners night after night – privilege. Students who had their choice of university regardless of the cost – privilege.
And I think I have understood the concept of it for quite a while, before I had a label for it, but called it “luck”. Like, “We are so lucky that we get to travel a lot”. Or “It sure is lucky we have a hybrid car because gas is so expensive!”. But now I understand that those things often don’t happen because of luck. They happen because of privilege – something I have through no work of my own, but society has “gifted” me.
So, whenever I can, I try to use my privilege in a positive way.
Like today.
It’s Veterans Day in the
USA, a day to honor those who serve and have served in the Armed Forces. My partner David’s father was in the
military, so he and David’s mom are buried at Arlington National Cemetery
(which, I could go off on a tangent here, is a privilege because the
funeral services and burial are free there, but perhaps it is not
privilege because the men and woman buried there certainly did sacrifice of themselves
for the right to rest in that hallowed place).
Anyway, because we have relatives buried in Arlington National Cemetery
(ANC), we have a driving pass that allows us to drive in and visit their
gravesite.
But today, like I try to
do on every Memorial and Veterans Day, we went to the cemetery not only to
visit our loved ones’ gravesite, but to share our privilege of being
able to drive our car there instead of walk.
ANC is huge – 639 acres and still growing. If you are on foot you can easily put in a
LOT of steps before you get to the place where your loved one is buried. So, we drive in, then offer rides to people
we see walking. Sometimes people take us
up on it (today we met a sweet woman and her daughter, the woman is in the Army
and moving to Moscow next week for her next station), some people say no and
keep walking.
Today I also bought a
dozen red roses (using Kindness Activist funds) to share in the cemetery. We placed one on a gravesite for a friend,
and one on the gravesite of a stranger who I have only met online in a sibling
grief group. The woman from the group
has a brother buried at ANC, but she does not live locally so cannot go visit
this gravesite. I was honored to be able
to visit for her and send her photos.
We also handed out roses
to people going to gravesites empty handed.
Each and every one of them was very appreciative. We gave roses to two men in full uniform
walking through the cemetery and thanked them for their service. And we laid a rose at the resting place of
Senator Bob Dole.
But the rose that meant
the most today, the one that reminded me that I was exactly where I was
supposed to be at that moment, was this one.
We saw a man sitting on
the ground, in front of a gravesite, under a black umbrella on this rainy, gray
day. The image was very touching – the contrast
of his black umbrella with the white headstones, the green lawn and the leaves
on the trees changing colors, the scene showing without words how important it
was for him to be there – important enough to sit silently in the wet
grass. I selfishly wanted to take a photo
(respectfully, of course, from behind).
We pulled over and I jumped out of the car with a red rose and my camera. As I walked closer to him I debated which to
do first – give him the rose or walk past him, snap a photo, then come back. But as I neared, it became clear what I was meant
to do.
“This rain won’t stop us!”
he said to me. “No sir, it won’t. In fact, I think the rain has paused for a
moment,” I replied. He peeked his head
out from under the umbrella and confirmed the sky was no longer weeping.
“Who are you visiting?” I asked
him. “My parents,” explained the grown
man. I placed a red rose on their tombstone,
and he smiled. He was very eager to talk,
so I settled in for a conversation. He
grabbed his phone and pulled up a photo of an old woman, “This is my mom!!” he
showed me. “Oh, she is beautiful,” I
cooed. He flipped through the phone,
showing me more photos and explaining how old his mom would be if she were
still alive. Looking at the pictures
made him teary eyed.
I noticed that the headstone
had both parents’ names on it, but there was still a temporary marker from the
cemetery as well. I asked why that small
marker hadn’t been taken down, and that is when he began to share more of his
story.
His mom was the last
surviving parent. When his father died,
he went with his mom to buy the beautiful gray headstone. ANC gives veterans free white headstones, but
families can purchase larger ones if they would like. Both parents’ names were on the stone, but he
showed me that his mother’s birth and death dates had not been added yet. “My sister is the executor of the estate, and
she is messing things up. The engraver
wants money to come and add the dates and she won’t pay it. Until the dates are added, the temporary
marker stays,” he explained.
He told me how he had lost
his house recently. “Where are you staying??”
I asked. “In a garage,” he replied. “I hope you have a BED in the garage, and a
heater!” I said. That’s when he told me
that he has his brother’s bed, because his brother died of Covid.
This poor man. His mother died. His brother died. It sounds like his sister and he are
fighting. He lost his job. And now he lost his house.
He cried as he told me his
story. Tears welled up in my eyes,
too. Eventually I asked if he would like
me to use his phone to take a photo of him with his parents’ stone. He happily said yes, and when he looked at the
photos I took said the rose was beautiful and reminded him of the roses his
parents grew in their yard.
I started to make my leave
and he put out his hand. “I am Tommy,”
he said. I glanced at the grave and
added his last name, the one engraved on the stone. “Yes ma’am, that is my name,” he said
proudly. I told him my name, we shook
hands, and I left him there.
I am thankful to have met
Tommy. To bear witness to his
story. To shake his hand.
These moments happen often
to me – the feeling of being in the exact right place at the exact right
time. Today – being in the rainy
cemetery and being drawn to an image.
And being willing to stop.
I left without the photo
that I had imagined taking. Instead of
the photo I got the honor of being given a story.
I would’ve called that luck
years ago. But is it luck? Is it privilege?
Whatever it is, I am
thankful for it.
Happy Veterans Day.
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