Gabriel: Are you trying to destroy this family? Simon: I didn't realize it would be so easy.

'Safe'


ita's thread

A place where we can talk about ita, miss ita, and share information about memorials. The hugging started over here in Natter.


Ginger - Jan 19, 2015 6:11:26 am PST #897 of 3157
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I think it would be okay if it was in the context that ita was all about family: first and foremost, her beloved parents and sister and her wide-ranging relatives. That love of family extended to the families she built online....


beekaytee - Jan 19, 2015 6:16:22 am PST #898 of 3157
Compassionately intolerant

I love both JZ and Ginger's words.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 19, 2015 6:19:02 am PST #899 of 3157
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

With regard to the reading- do we know who will be reading? ALlyson? Because I definately support whatever is easiest and feels right for that person, whether it be an excerpt from Safe Harbor from Ann Arbor to something they write themselves to a statement we prepare as a group.

I think it would be safest to stay away from the word family if it even has any potential to hurt her blood family. In addition to family here, ita created and was at the center of a community, in which people near to the center and far from the center feel her loss.


askye - Jan 19, 2015 6:23:42 am PST #900 of 3157
Thrive to spite them

I would not want to hurt ita's family or seem like we are taking away from their grief but I'm at a loss for any other way to describe what she helped build for us.

She was part of our daily lives for many years and she will continue to be a part of our lives. ita was She meant so much to so many people. People who feel honored to have known her and be able to call her a friend


Steph L. - Jan 19, 2015 6:26:22 am PST #901 of 3157
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

I'm at a loss for any other way to describe what she helped build for us.

Actually, I think you describe it really well here, without using the word "family":

She was part of our daily lives for many years and she will continue to be a part of our lives. ita was She meant so much to so many people. People who feel honored to have known her and be able to call her a friend


Atropa - Jan 19, 2015 6:49:48 am PST #902 of 3157
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

Allyson and Burrell, hand off duties to the people who volunteered. Speaking from previous experience in this sort of situation, there are good people who can help, who want to help, and want to make sure you're coping as ... not well, but as adequately as you're able to.

THERE IS NO BLAME OR SHAME ABOUT NOT COPING. There really, really isn't.


DavidS - Jan 19, 2015 7:03:08 am PST #903 of 3157
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Dana, insent. Assistance please.


Cass - Jan 19, 2015 7:42:32 am PST #904 of 3157
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

THERE IS NO BLAME OR SHAME ABOUT NOT COPING. There really, really isn't.

I've been on both sides, there really isn't. People who helped me get through a day or week or month were my most cherished thing. Because I could. And getting through an hour or day or whatever felt impossible without them some days.


Burrell - Jan 19, 2015 8:37:15 am PST #905 of 3157
Why did Darth Vader cross the road? To get to the Dark Side!

Obit is, for the most part, written, with the help of Kat and Ginger along with Allyson and myself. But thank you to everyone for being so supportive and making suggestions. Other writings can percolate for now, and I'm sure we as a group will put together a piece or several pieces that speak to our love for her.

I have thoughts about the family thing, the main one being that, for me, there's no way that my grief could compare to her family's. Every loss creates it's own ache, but from what I've seen the loss of a child must be almost unbearable. But as for our use of the term "family" to describe ita, well, that's more complicated. I felt like my sister's friends in many ways got to see and share the best parts of her, and so had a clearer and more satisfying grief than I did as her actual family, because she pushed us away. But I felt no anger or resentment towards her friends who described her as family; they meant it. I lost a sister, but they lost a friend, a confidant, a nurturer, a guide, a hostess, a gourmand, an expert.

Which I guess boils down to saying there's more than one kind of family, and respecting their loss is what's key, not what we call ours.


WindSparrow - Jan 19, 2015 8:41:42 am PST #906 of 3157
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

I wonder if the word neighborhood can sufficiently convey our community here. Where I grew up, you treated your neighbors like family because they were the ones who were there when your blood family were across town or across the country, helping you hold on until your family could get there for you. Or if your family couldn't get there. ita did so much to build our neighborhood. And it is our honor and pleasure to be the best neighbors we can to her family.