El Dorado News-Times

Are You Suffering From Funeral Fatigue?

- DANNY TYREE Danny welcomes email responses at tyreetyrad­es@aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page "Tyree's Tyrades." Danny's weekly column is distribute­d exclusivel­y by Cagle Cartoons Inc. newspaper syndicate.

"Tell me something GOOD."

My mother sometimes answers the phone that way, when she has reached her limit of political bickering, Hollywood scandals, televised terrorist acts and heard-it-through-the-grapevine rumors about the terminal illnesses of acquaintan­ces.

I know the feeling.

After a long stretch when all the obituaries I read were for total strangers, I've been hit by a string of Deaths That

Demand A Response: a former neighbor (whose son-in-law had passed away only weeks before she did), a co-worker's father, a lady I'd attended church with since I was six days old...

Death notices make me self-conscious and force my rusty mental engines to lurch into motion. I beat myself up when illness, overcommit­ment or ignorance causes me to treat different losses so differentl­y. Sometimes I get dressed up, drive to the funeral home, watch the slideshow, hug multiple survivors and absorb the eulogy. Other times I run into a single member of the family three weeks later, offer a perfunctor­y message of encouragem­ent and babble some sort of excuses.

Alas, it's part of the Human Condition as we must juggle, prioritize and ration our resources when dealing with the loved ones of the deceased. We have to make hard decisions about who gets our presence at evening-before visitation, who merits our appearance at the funeral, who gets our comfort at the graveside service, who gets a wreath of flowers, who gets a sympathy card, who gets a signing of the online register, who gets an outburst of "So he was THAT Herkimer Aloysius Grindelbau­m from the Class of '65! If I had known for sure, I would have been there for you," etc.

People grieve differentl­y, and people comfort the grieving differentl­y. Some of us would get off our own deathbeds to console the widow of our childhood milkman, while others become adept at rationaliz­ing their "no show" status. ("I wish I could have been there for you, but I had to look at the crowd's welfare. My internet was down, so I couldn't check WebMD to make SURE my tennis elbow wasn't contagious...")

Yes, we all have our own way of honoring the dearly departed. ("I was inspired by the deceased. I never heard him say a cuss word. I never heard him criticize another person. I never heard him complain about his own ailments. And, come to think of it, I never heard him SPECIFICAL­LY tell me to miss the big game on Sunday just to attend his memorial service...")

Even some of us who make the effort of paying our respects can have mixed motives. We pay our respects but EXPECT A RECEIPT. We crave recognitio­n for our effort. ("Lydia, that dress is gorgeous â€' even prettier than the one you were wearing six months ago when I drove through the blizzard to see you after your husband got squashed by the garbage truck!")

It can be physically and emotionall­y exhausting to offer face-to-face condolence­s, but I'll keep on trying my scattersho­t attempts at offering a shoulder to cry on.

As the apostle Paul told the Galatian church, "Be not weary in well doing."

Of course, Paul could have expanded the advice to include "...especially if there are free calendars and nail files! And you haven't SEEN persecutio­n until you read the epistle by the widow who names names of everyone who didn't bring a casserole!"

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