Soul Strong, Heart Ready,
I honestly have no great catchy title for this, but I hope you'll read it anyway
When my friend Charlene died, I had a hard time with it. This has happened a lot with my friends: Don, Grady, others. They died and I have a hard time with it.
In Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury wrote, “Everyone must leave something behind when he dies, my grandfather said. A child or a book or a painting or a house or a wall built or a pair of shoes made. Or a garden planted. Something your hand touches some way so your soul has somewhere to go when you die, and when people look at that tree or that flower you planted, you’re there.”
There are a lot of things that keep Charlene here.
A retired librarian, Charlene worked at the campground we were staying at while we rented our house. Charlene made my introverted self feel safe and happy even when surrounded by camping extroverts. Whenever I saw her, I would smile. Charlene was like that. She calmed me.
One day we whispered over the counter in the campground office about my new neighbor’s shenanigans of the porn-rated kind, which weren’t a big deal except the noise. I wasn’t super excited about having to explain to the ten-year-old what the noises coming from the next tent over were about.
“They’re gone tomorrow,” Charlene assured me. “I promise. You can make it one more day, right?”
One more day.
“Whenever I’m having a hard time,” she added, “I tell myself, ‘Look at this beautiful sunrise. Look at this person I get to talk to. I’m lucky. I can do anything for one more day.”
When Charlene told me about her diagnosis, the summer was over and we were all out of the campground and I wasn’t getting my almost daily dose of Charlene. All my internal organs seemed to drop six inches as I read her message. There was this hole inside of me that was sudden and huge and real.
It was October and she wrote,
Thanks for your faith in me but I’m afraid I’ve been handed one that may be too tough for me. I have been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and the tumor seems to be growing quickly. I think I’m not beating this one. That’s ok too. Trying to stay ahead of the pain is hard.
I told her that she was amazing and strong and brilliant and how much I love her and she wrote:
I sure don’t feel strong right now.
And I thought, “Crap. Neither do I.”
But I wrote, “You are soul strong.”
That was true. No matter what happened, Charlene was always soul strong.
This past summer at the campground, Charlene wanted me to share a story I wrote about death and a camper’s wife, and how the campground is this beautiful place that inspires community no matter what, how it endures even as ownership, staff and campers change, about how the connections we create matter. I didn’t want to share the story too widely because I didn’t want to exploit the woman’s pain. Charlene respected that. Charlene respected a lot of things.
Charlene was special because she understood that the needs of individual people are greater than the needs of a company or of marketing. She was special because she believed in empathy, in story, and in the power of goodness.
She knew all about the power of goodness because my detail-oriented friend spent her life devoted to doing good.
Charlene was part of Rotary International and was constantly giving back to her community (local and international) by volunteering. Charlene was a champion of books and writers. She made me feel special even as I started to write. I believed in myself partly because Charlene believed in me. I started being a writer when Charlene was the director of the Ellsworth Public Library. She took this scared, socially anxious writer under her wing and held me close, celebrating every thing I did like she was the mom I never had.
My dog Sparty was a great judge of character and he would get so excited if Charlene drove by in the campground golf cart. He’d hop into the cart and try to ride around with her. He looked proud to know her.
I know how that felt.
Two years ago, I saw someone at our town’s village tree lighting, someone cool and lovely with a giant heart. Santa was coming to town to stand in the gazebo and take the microphone and read a Christmas poem. Kids were scurrying about, frolicking, climbing trees. People were hanging out together, gossiping and catching up.
It was pretty beautiful.
I was trying to take some photos during the event and it was so dark, but it was a challenge, you know? Challenges make you better. And soon there would be light—the Christmas tree would turn on and the light would touch all those kids’ faces, illuminating them.
This person had heard about Shaun, who had some cancer, and they said, “How are you happy? You’re still smiling.”
And it felt like a bit of a condemnation, right? Like the way I am isn’t the right way to be. I know they didn’t mean it that way. They meant to be supportive, which is another lovely thing to be.
I told them, quickly because I was trying to get photos, that I’d been sad all week and stressed out and worried, but I couldn’t live there in only those emotions. That’s no good for me or the people and animals that I love.
There is so much beauty everywhere and it breaks through the darkness, lights it up, makes the world better. I don’t want to ignore the goodness of children laughing or the smiles when Santa strides onto the Village Green or the fun of petting a cool, giant dog. And I don’t want to ignore how amazing it is to still be alive, to still breathe air, to still have a husband trying to help me take photos, to be committed to living.
Maya Angelou said, “A great soul serves everyone all the time. A great soul never dies. It brings us together again and again.”
Those souls? They are everything.
That last summer with Charlene, we talked about how neither of us (Charlene and me, not Sparty Dog) have any depth perception because we don’t see out of our left eyes. We had no idea that we shared this issue and laughed about parking cars, driving, bumping into door frames, being miserable at any sport where things fly at you (tennis, softball, volleyball), not noticing people when they’re on your left side.
“This must be one of the zillion reasons I love you,” I said as we stood under a blue-blue sky beneath the boughs of pines as squirrels chittered away above us, talking too.
“That’s a reason why you love me?” She laughed. “I hope the other reasons are better.”
They were.
Charlene told me about a long-lost love that she reconnected with. She went completely out of her comfort zone to do that, to even tell me about it, but she looked so proud of being vulnerable and being brave.
“Life is too short to be afraid. I’m done being afraid,” she said.
“I am so in awe of you,” I told her.
“Ha!” She laughed. “I’m in awe of you.”
Campground lady friends picked her up. They all wore white slacks and nice shirts and were heading out on one of their weekly adventures, which was usually to shop or to go to a restaurant for lunch.
They looked so happy, so in-the-moment, so alive.
And I vowed that next summer at the campground that I would make a massive effort to visit with Charlene every single day she worked and I’d bring my dogs that she loved so much and learn as much as I could about this woman, this magnificent Rotarian, librarian, human, and white-slacks-wearing friend.
She died five months later. It was right before Christmas. That next summer never happened for her. But other summers have and I am so lucky. We are all so lucky.
She was a great soul. She didn’t make newspaper headlines, but she made lives better: soul strong, heart ready.
I am in awe of Charlene, but I am also in awe of you—all my friends who read this, who I get to connect to, and I am in awe of all you do and how hard you try and how much you hope and work for good. Let’s lift each other up and do this together, okay? In honor of Charlene and all we’ve lost and all we still get to do.
LINKS ABOUT GRIEF
How your brain deals with grief via NPR
Carrie, I’m so glad I found you here too. A heartfelt story, beautifully written, and like other comments here, exactly what I needed. Thank you for sharing your work with us.
Your writing always touches my heart ~ this one especially. ❤️ Thank you.