Reminded what really makes up our forever family
Published 10:53 pm Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Editor’s note: Sharon Randall is a syndicated columnist from Las Vegas, Nev. who grew up in Columbus. Randall shared this and a number of other columns related to her experiences while visiting Polk County to write.
What’s the shelf life for a family? How long does it last?
Some people spend years tracing their lineage all the way back to Adam and Eve’s second cousin twice removed on their mama’s side.
I am not one of those people. It’s not that I don’t care about my roots. I’d love to know more about my family. It would probably explain a lot.
But the truth is, I can barely keep up with the latest generation. They keep growing and changing and moving at speeds that make me dizzy just trying to keep track of little things like names and birthdays and food allergies.
Not that I’m complaining. I’m just saying. Keeping up with the present doesn’t leave much time for digging into my past.
Yet whenever I come “home” to the mountains where I grew up, I think of all the generations of my family who lived and laughed and loved and died, long before I was born.
As a child, I was told that my great-grandfather, James Case, was a forest ranger in the late 19th and early 20th centuries for the vast Biltmore Estate, and was also part of the first school of forestry in the United States.
Imagine my surprise to learn that the house where he lived with his family a century ago has been restored by the U.S. Forest Service and is open for viewing in the Cradle of Forestry in Pisgah National Forest.
I visited that house last week. I walked through its rooms, ran my hand along its walls and had my picture taken on its porch.
I tried to imagine them, my great-grandparents and their children. I tried to listen for echoes of their laughter.
What were their lives like? What did they eat? What did they talk about by the fire in winter or in summer on the porch?
Did they ever imagine that someday, 100 years later, I’d show up looking for them?
The next day, 40 miles away, in Columbus, N.C., I sat on a bench, waiting for a turn at an ATM, and thinking about my ever-changing family.
My mother’s parents lived in Columbus. I started first grade at the school across the street. Back then, Columbus was my whole world. I thought it always would be.
I thought my family would gather at my grandparents’ house every Sunday, all my aunts and uncles and dozens of cousins. I thought we’d be together forever.
That didn’t happen, of course. Families are made of people. And people don’t live forever.
My grandparents and all their children are gone now. My cousins and I live far apart. We try to connect, but you know how it is. Everybody’s … busy.
I was still sitting there thinking about it when a woman sat down beside me to wait for the ATM. She was holding a little boy who was ridiculously cute. They had that mother-and-child look, a kind of happiness that makes you think God picked them out just for each other.
His name was Malachi, he said, and he was 4 years old. Then he smiled at his mom and said something I didn’t catch.
She laughed and hugged him and told me what he’d said: “This is my forever family.”
Then she added, “Malachi was adopted this week, so he’s been telling everyone that now he’s with his ‘forever family.’ ”
It was my turn at the ATM. People were waiting. So I said something lame like, “Good for you, buddy!” But his smile told me he knew what I meant.
Kids don’t worry about words. They listen with their hearts.
Afterward, in the car, mopping mascara off my face, I realized I’d been wrong:
A family is not made of people. A forever family is made of love.
Things change, years go by, generations pass, lives move in different directions.
Everybody’s busy.
But love never ends.
Malachi has a forever family.
And so do I.