The End of a Grand Adventure
by Arianna Huffington
My mother died three and a half months to the day after my father's death.
She had a massive stroke in my home, which has always been her home, too. In
the two weeks since her death, I've realized that she and I had an unspoken
deal: hers would be the rhythm of a timeless world, a child's rhythm; mine
was the rhythm of the modern world. While I had the sense every time I
looked at my watch that it was later than I thought, she lived in a world
where there were no impersonal encounters, where a trip to the farmer's
market happily filled half a day, where there was always enough time for
wonder at how lovely the rosemary looked next to the lavender. In fact,
going through the market with her was like walking through the Louvre with
an art connoisseur--except that you could touch and smell these still
lifes.
She left no will and no prized possessions. Which is not surprising,
considering her habit of giving such things away. For instance, there was
the time we tried to give her a second watch--and within 48 hours she had
given it to someone else. So what she's left us with is the treasure house
of her spirit. It's as though certain gifts can be bequeathed only at one's
death, that while she was alive she so embodied the qualities of nurturing,
simplicity, unconditional loving, and a connection with the sacred that it
felt as if those dimensions of life were taken care of for all those blessed
to be in her orbit. Why learn how to cook when you live with the Iron Chef?
And now that she's gone, I know that however difficult, inconvenient, even
unnatural it may be for a while, there is only one way to honor her--by
living differently, living more like she lived.
The last time my mother was upset with me was when she saw me talking with
my children and
opening my mail at the same time. She despised multi-tasking. She believed
it was a way to miss life, to miss the gifts that come only when you give
100 percent of yourself to a task, a relationship, a moment.
The night before she died, we were having dinner at the home of some good
friends. Near the end of the evening, our host asked everyone to talk about
an important experience from their lives. When my mother's turn came, she
talked about a moment that not only defined her but how she believed life
should be lived. It was the moment when she had been captured by the Germans
in the Greek mountains where she had gone to join the resistance to the Nazi
occupation of Greece. "Put your guns down,'' she told them in flawless
German. Miraculously, the soldiers complied--perhaps dumbfounded by the
23-year-old's audacity.
Because she was fluent in German, she quickly became the translator between
the prisoners and their captors. When the soldiers asked her if there were
any Jews among them, she unhesitatingly replied, "No.'' They were, in fact,
hiding two Jewish teenage girls. When she had told this story to my children
once, I remember one of them asking "So, Yaya--you lied?''
"To save two
lives? You bet I did!'' she replied, giving them an important lesson in
ethics and in courage.
That story--which ended up being the last one she told in her life--
really captured her: her
indomitable spirit, her defiance of authority, her trust in life, her
fearlessness (she liked to quote
Pericles, saying that "courage is the knowledge of what is not to be
feared'').
There was a magnificence in the way she approached everything in her life.
Especially her role as mother. She brought me up to believe that there was
nothing I should be afraid to try while at the same time making it clear
that she would love me not one iota less if I failed.
She said once that she operated like the government--she first decided
what it was that her children needed, and then she set out to find the
money. My mother was one of the original deficit financers. She made ends
meet by borrowing or by selling her possessions--from a carpet brought by
her parents from Russia to her last pair of gold earrings. She radiated
abundance even in the middle of lack.
As I scan our lives together, I realize that there isn't a single corner of
my life that isn't filled with her. She is, without question, the foundation
of my existence. So much of what I believe in and think is important was
formed around the kitchen table in our little apartment in Athens. Hours
spent talking about everything, while she kept producing more and more food.
And then a little bit more food. I'm convinced that she absolutely believed
that something terrible would happen to her children--and her
grandchildren and her friends-- if they went 20 minutes without eating.
Food was the most obvious--but the least important--way she sustained
those around her. She used to say that the goal of life is not to see what
we can make of it, but what it can make of us. Well, she made of life a
grand adventure--and it made of her a magnificent tour guide.
Lincoln once said that "everyone is born an original, but most die
copies.'' She was an original from beginning to end.
Arianna Huffington
This column is reprinted from www.overthrowthegov.com