Every time an old relative dies, so do snippets of your past .
It’s as though a string connecting you to the past has been cut by a pair of scissors, and like a tethered balloon , the memory bounces in your psychi for a moment before flitting away.
My sister messaged me a few days ago to let me know that our Auntie Joyce had died at the age of 97 .
I hasn’t seen her for forty six years, so upset wasn’t on the agenda, but I was transported to a time my parents were party people and relatives ways looked older than they actually were.
Aunty Joyce was in fact a second cousin. She was a short, pear shaped and overly vivacious woman , with red lipstick and strangely surprised looking drawn on eyebrows. She laughed long and hard and looked as though she had just walked out of a 1940s drama movie.
She always wore a full length fur coat
Even when I was a young man, I was always fascinated by Auntie Joyce’s eyebrows, or more importantly the lack of them. She drew her brows with an obvious flourish, giving herself an exotic,and permanently shocked look.
Remembering Joyce brought back vignettes of house parties when the men all wore ties and drank whiskey and the woman sported lumpy dresses and drank martini and lemonade. The house stank of cigarettes and cigars, perfumes and old spice.
And as a child the extended family visits reinforced my father’s status as patriarch
Joyce and her famous eyebrows have now gone
And another sliver of my past has dissolved into nothing

Good on her for getting to 97! I'm from a {mostly} long-lived family, and know the feeling of remembering people as though they stepped out of black and white movies.
ReplyDeleteI know exactly what you mean. I lost a friend recently. He was 92 and we had not been in touch for 40+ years. The memories do flood in.
ReplyDeleteJoyce sounds like a real character. One-of-a-kind and never to be forgotten person. RIP Joyce.
Very nicely put John. The trouble is that when family members die you can no longer ask them anything. There are many questions I would like to put to my deceased family members but I guess I will have wait until I am on the other side. R.I.P. Aunty Joyce.
ReplyDeleteMy parents were party people as well, this brought back many memories of those times. Thank you for this. RIP Auntie Joyce.
ReplyDeleteMy sympathy, John. Tho the dynamic Joyce is now gone, your memories of her and family gatherings are still yours.
ReplyDelete97! Hope she enjoyed every one of her years.
Hugs!
Thank you for sharing your memories of Aunty Joyce. With your inimitable descriptive writing, I know we can all see her in our mind's eye, and I bet many of us are now thinking of various characters in our own lives! xx
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