I have two things to talk about: My Mom, and men.
Mom
The way I miss her isn't the way I thought I'd miss her. I went to visit her grave tonight for the first time since her memorial............. has it only been three weeks? Damn. It feels... longer. Much longer. And that's the thing. It's like I've entered a new life since her death. Rather than living a singular life in which there is now this gaping, unfilled hole left left behind in the mortal absence of my mother, another lifetime began in which she simply isn't physically present.
It's a little like moving away from home. The memories of home are still with you when you move away, you still love it, it's still the root of everything you do and everything you are and ever will be; but you are in another place now, and in effect, another time. You have another purpose, and while you will always and forever love your home, this new space you're in is the right space to be. There's a feeling of being homesick, of thinking back on the life that was, but being present in the life that is.
I think that's why I haven't been feeling as devastated as I had anticipated. As a family, we released Mom, because it was the right thing to do and the right time for her to go. We told her it was okay. There's no sense of unfinished business: nothing left unsaid, nothing left undone, no injustice in her passing. She completed her purpose on this Earth, and it was okay.
Granted, I am loudly sobbing and crying my eyes out as I'm typing this, but I'm also laughing at myself a little because I am typing while I'm wailing loud enough to make me glad my nearest neighbors are a few hundred yards away. It's just release. I'm super practical when it comes to letting it out, and even though I likely sound to the world like I'm an emotional mess, it's mostly physical. Inside, I'm pretty peaceful. And now I'm done crying. It just needed to get out.
(Tangent: Mom's buried next to a guy that was in my class in high school who died in a car accident between our Junior and Senior years. Always wear your seat belts. Just saying.)
Men
A large part of my reason for being a feminist is a strong belief and hope for equality. When I find this running up against the strong cultural dogma of male superiority in Mormonism (however benevolent its stewardship may supposed to be) it puts me in some dismay about the eternal order of things as we're presented with them.
I have a really big, freaking problem thinking that two equally worthy, covenant-making-and-keeping people, bound together for eternity would be bound to being anything but equivalent to each other for eternity. If it's not so, I have to look forward to eternity as Second in Command, instead of Co-Captain. Eternity. Forever. Without end. Never, ever, ever ending second citizenship.
How is that just? How is that good? How can that be acceptable and justifiable based upon the relative femininity or masculinity of an individual if all are alike unto God and God is no respecter of persons? How can being (a beloved and cherished) Second for the rest of all out-of-time be okay? It cannot. It cannot be okay. A man wouldn't stand for that being his lot, yet it's an implied expectation from the women. Such a concept deeply, deeply disturbs me, to think that I could bust my butt through this super critical mortal probation we're all in, perhaps even out-righteous my Hypothetical Husband, and still end up as the Silent Partner, the Heavenly Mother that never talks to Her children and whom Her children are discouraged from addressing. I find that idea incredibly unappealing, and it puts me in a position to wonder whether the effort is worthwhile if I have no guarantee of autonomy and personal worth outside the man I'm married to, forever. This a big scary question for a woman who has been pretty dang invested in aiming for goddesshood her entire life. So I have to think that we really just don't have the whole picture yet, that there's more, that the equality of the sexes will be seen as a central point of eternal doctrine at some time in the future, may Heaven make it soon.
But what if... what if I'm wrong. What if God moves in (to me) truly mind-boggling and seemingly hypocritical, unjust, mysterious ways and eternity is sexist? What if being more feminine than masculine lands you a spot just behind the shoulder of your more masculine eternal companion, to be protected and shielded and effectively silenced because you're somehow more sacred than anything else? It's an idea that sickens me to my stomach, and the only way I can conceive of it being a tolerable system is if I could find a man who would not treat me as anything but an equal. Where any "head"ship would be in token only, and irrelevant in practice. If he must have the title, he can have the title, but that's all I could tolerate. If I had to. If that's really the eternal order of things.
I don't think it is, though. It just doesn't make sense.
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Thank you for wanting to leave me a message. I hope you've found something I've said edifying, and you'll extend the same to me. Please be positive, I'm not here to argue, but rather to just have a place to write things that I find spiritually uplifting, or share my own ponderings on matters of faith. Thank you.