Archive for July, 2012

Evergreen Washelli Summer Blood Drive

Monday, July 30th, 2012

Donate blood this summer!

Evergreen Washelli, in conjunction with the Puget Sound Blood Center, is excited to be hosting our second blood drive on August 30th.

We recognize that blood is vital for children and adults battling cancer, surgery patients, accident victims and other ill and injured people. Nearly 900 people must donate blood through Puget Sound Blood Center every day to meet the needs of local patients. Since volunteer donors are the only source of blood for our community supply, it is important to donate blood year-round.

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Surviving Summer

Saturday, July 28th, 2012

Dealing with loss during the summertime

Thank you to Hello Grief and Alan Silberberg for this article.

Third grade will always be the year that changed it all. School was winding down and like all kids intent on finally making it to the end of another year my eye was on the prize: Summer vacation!

Third grade had been my favorite. We made puppets out of light bulbs and had pen pals from Iceland. But in May my mother was diagnosed with a brain tumor and by the beginning of June, after the operation didn’t work – she died. It was sudden and over before I even really knew what was going on. My nine-year old world changed from one thing to something else and instead of spending the summer in a rental cottage on Cape Cod we stayed nestled in our silent house feeling the loss that lingered in every corner.

Overnight our family was sent into the eye of the storm where my father had no clue what to do or how to be and my two sisters were just as lost as me. The summer became something uncomfortable and clung to our bodies, dragging us down in the heat.

What I remember isn’t always what happened. But that doesn’t really matter. What matters is that I was a little boy who’d lost the person whose love would never be felt again. The summer, which had been my favorite time of year, was now forever colored by the huge loss that left our house lopsided and empty of the mother who made lemonade popsicles and drove us to Thompson’s Pond where the water was always clear and filled with tadpoles. Suddenly all the adults in the neighborhood were whispering around me and even at nine, I knew it was always about us. Poor, sad us.

The death of a parent shatters you and stamps down hard on memory leaving behind an annual residue that can be impossible to bear. Summer would never be a free, fun timeless stretch again. It would always be laden with the tattoo that summer is when my mother died. Without my mom I knew no one would rush to cover my summer bruises, make pink lemonade from a can, or lean in close for a good night peck on the cheek, the smell of OFF not repellant, but reassuring that nothing could sting you. Nothing but death.

That first summer was strange. I was pretty much in shock and the months slipped by as aunts and grandmothers took turns trying to take care of my sisters and I and my father shuffled through his own grief, doing his best to be present for us even as his eyes stayed hollow and wet. There were still cook-outs and trips to the pool but something was missing and it was so huge that nothing about summer’s fun could seep down and make me feel okay. Her absence was everywhere because not only was she gone – but the other mothers of summer were an ever-present swarm who lathered their kids with sunscreen, and packed lunches to snack on by the pool, and knew what to do for a bee sting. Motherless, we were cast adrift in our own solo ship and could only watch as all the mothers of summer waved as we floated by.

The one thing that got me through that summer was also something I hated. My dad had to enroll us kids in a new school so that we would all be in one place instead of three different schools. I remember learning this in early August after July had melted away in the fog of my numbness. This new school had a required summer reading list, which at first I looked at feeling angry at another awful thing my mom’s death had caused. But then something happened. I had a few weeks to read three books and though I can’t recall them all I remember one was “Robinson Crusoe” and I can still picture myself laying out on the living room couch totally wrapped up in the story of a man lost alone on an island, finding his way and surviving. Of course, now I can look back and see the metaphor of how Crusoe’s survival mirrored my own desperate need to be okay. But at nine all I needed was escape and that book and the others I had to read gave me a survival tool that I desperately needed. Reading.

Though every summer began with the memory of my loss the summers that followed got slightly easier. There was a summer camp I liked. And one that I didn’t. As my teenage years bloomed I didn’t notice as much that my mother wasn’t there to protect me from too much sun or keep me from swimming after I’d eaten lunch. But I knew she was missing and I knew that I was missing her. Now summers are okay again. I am a father and our own family has summer rituals that fill me with a solid footing in the month of June. Usually I remember when my mom died as the weather gets warmer. And sometimes I don’t. And both are okay as I live my life with her love deep inside me.

Books are still my comfort zone and to this day there is something about summer that forces me to always be lost in a good book, to set the world down while I escape into the fictional places that first made me feel safer, less alone and for a short time, okay to be me.

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Dig That Jazz!

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

A BENEFIT CONCERT IN THE PARK

Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park is hosting a concert performed by the world renowned jazz talents of J-Town’s recording artist Deems Tsutakawa and The New Seattle Groove.

The concert is Saturday, August 11th, 2012 from 6:00pm until 9:00pm. A wine garden, poured by WineStyles®, opens at 5:00pm. Wine accompanied by a light fare will be available for purchase. If you would like to attend, please call our office at 206.362.5200 for tickets. All proceeds will benefit The Snowman Foundation.

The Snowman Foundation has been “giving the gift of music” since its inception in September of 1999. Its purpose is to promote the performing arts and to make them accessible to all youthful and “at risk” members of the community. Inspired by the vision of composer/pianist Michael Allen Harrison, The Snowman Foundation, Inc. (501) © (3) provides instruments, scholarships and musical programs to underserved students in the State of Washington. The Snowman Foundation has raised more than $2 million in the past ten years including both Oregon and now Washington. All funding has gone directly to helping serve the youth in our communities through music.

Check out these videos of the extremely talented jazz musician Deems Tsutakawa. Make sure not to miss this year’s Dig That Jazz; it is going to be one cool concert!

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Find Your Rock

Saturday, July 7th, 2012

Find your Rock

Thank you to Hello Grief and author Audrey Wauchope for this article.

When you are grieving, or going through any life challenge, it’s important to find your rock. I realize that “find your rock” sounds a lot like “find someone who is emotionally a rock for you.” My rock is quite literally a rock…in the middle of Central Park.

A year after my dad died I took one of those “don’t know where I’m going but I have to get outside” walks. I was home because it was the summer and I wanted to see my family. I was actually home because the thought of spending the week alone in LA sounded miserable and depressing. I walked and walked until I was super sweaty and looking completely like a tourist, and I found myself sitting on a rock in Central Park. Because I pretty much always carry something to write in, I started scrawling in my trusty journal. It’s one of my favorite journal entries – yes, I have favorite journal entries. My piles of journals are starting to look like an episode of Hoarders.

Almost nine years later I found myself on the same rock. Same kind of day – visiting NYC, hot, needed to get out … so I walked and walked and then … there it was. My rock! Years later, same rock, same topic of journal scrawling, same sense of belonging.

I like this rock. It reminds me of that time – how hard it was to just force myself to sit in the middle of a park and write. How much I wanted to keep walking and not think about anything. But most importantly, the rock reminded me to sit down, shut up and make myself take the time to remember my dad, and what I had been through.

For me, that’s writing. For me, it took a six hour plane ride and then an expensive cab fare from my apartment to end up sitting on a rock. It was worth it though … I’m happy on my little rock. I feel safe there.

Not everyone needs to be as literal as I seem to need … if you’re not a writer/sitter/nostalgia nut, find a place that makes you okay with the quiet. (And if you want directions to my rock, let me know!)

Here are some other ideas for places that could be your rock:

- Gardens

- Book stores or museums

- A backyard fort

- Where your loved one is buried, or a place they loved to visit

- A bubble bath

-The yoga mat

You might need to experiment a little, or a lot, before you find a place that lets you feel what you need to feel. The important thing is allowing yourself the time and patience to find that place, and to feel those things. Maybe you have some other ideas for places that could work….I’d love to hear them in the comments section below!

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July is Park and Recreation Month

Sunday, July 1st, 2012

Enjoy Park and Recreation Month at Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park

July is Park and Recreation Month

Since 1985, America has celebrated July as the nation’s official Park and Recreation Month. In honor of this, we invite you to visit the largest cemetery in Seattle, Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park. The Memorial Park is an excellent place to walk, run, or bike.  Click here for a walking map of the grounds that includes mileage. Evergreen Washelli is a final resting place for many historical and notable persons. It is most easily recognized by the rows of towering trees lining both sides of Aurora. Drop by to pick up a self-guided tour guide at the Evergreen Washelli office, 11111 Aurora Avenue North, or click here: Self-Guided Walking Tour. Also featured this year is the Summer Historical Cemetery Tour, with several dates in July and August.

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