A Grandmother Buried Her Grandson, Then Found Him on Her Porch-xurixuri

Coming home from my eight-year-old grandson’s funeral, I found him standing on my porch in torn clothes.

For most of that afternoon, I had moved like a woman underwater.

People touched my shoulder.

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People said my name.

People pressed casseroles into my hands and told me to call if I needed anything, though nobody ever knows what a person needs when a child has just been lowered into the ground.

I had stood at Maplewood Cemetery in black shoes that sank into the wet Ohio grass.

The rain did not pour.

It simply kept falling, steady and cold, collecting on umbrellas and flower petals and the small white casket that looked too clean for what it was supposed to hold.

My son Brian stood near the grave with his arm around Michelle.

He shook so hard people noticed.

Michelle kept one tissue pressed under her nose and another crushed in her fist, and every few minutes she whispered something against his shoulder as if grief needed witnesses to be real.

I did not judge them then.

A mother should not have to watch her grown son bury his child.

A grandmother should not have to hold a white rose and wonder why her hand feels older than the rest of her body.

The funeral program stayed folded in my purse.

Tyler James Porter.

Age eight.

Maplewood First Methodist.

Service time, 3:00 p.m.

I remember staring at the printed letters because letters were safer than the casket.

Letters did not breathe.

Letters did not ask why.

By 4:28 p.m., Brian had signed the burial receipt with a pen borrowed from the funeral director.

I remember that too because grief makes strange things sharp.

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