Sunday, December 8, 2024

Words to Ponder Over: Andrew Garfield

Yesterday marked the three year anniversary of my mom's passing ("anniversary" sounds like such an inappropriate word for such an event, doesn't it?)  My dad and I went out to lunch together and visited the lakes here in Ohio where we had scattered my mom's ashes.  It was a bittersweet day -- a time for reflection and remembrance.  It also gave me an opportunity to reflect on everything that I had experienced in my life over these past three years -- times of both personal growth and stagnation, times of agonizing grief and times of awe and wonder, times of seeing my world dramatically collapse and times of having my horizons greatly expanded.  

As I sit here thinking about what it all means, I think back to words I heard back this past October from actor Andrew Garfield, when we was being interviewed by journalist Anderson Cooper on Cooper's podcast "All There Is".  Garfield had lost his mother to pancreatic cancer in 2019, and his own reflections while walking on the beach after his own mom's passing really struck a chord with me:

"My interpretation of that moment was that it was the wisdom of nature, the wisdom of the earth, the wisdom of the ocean, letting me know, hey, yeah, it's hard. It's horrible. I'm not taking away this unique pain you're feeling. But just so you know. Us out here, us water molecules, we've been seeing this for millennia. And actually, this is the best case scenario for you to lose her rather than for her to lose you.
This is a much better situation. And again, my ego was holding on. My ego thought I knew better. My ego said, no, this doesn't make sense. No, no, no. It should be this way. It should be that way. But actually, it took the ocean, the greater opponent, to just hold me under and say, it's really horrible. 
And sons have been losing their mothers for thousands and thousands of years, and they will continue to. And you've just been initiated into that awareness and into that reality. Some illusion has been lifted. You're in a realer version of the world now, and it's painful."

The whole episode is well worth hearing in its entirety.  You can listen to it here.

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