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V.4 N.1, March 1997

Seams to Me: STO(stories)RIES of Death

by Margot Rosenberg

Center for the Study of Curriculum and Instruction
University of British Columbia

  1. This paper addresses the current development of my Master's of Education thesis around death. It tells of sharing, grieving, and writing. Within these tightly intertwined strands of struggle are the voices of preschool children, my mother, and myself. I invite you to travel this sometimes arduous path as we follow narrative zigging and zagging as pedagogical thread through a fabric of death and life.

    Children and Death Stories

  2. One strand of my research was conducted at the University Child School, a preschool located in an urban area of British Columbia, where I am employed part-time. A children's story with a death theme was read by either a colleague of mine or myself to four groups of children aged three to five. I read the book The Very Best of Friends by Margaret Wild to two groups of children, and my colleague read Badger's Parting Gifts by Susan Varley to one group, and The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico to another group. These story sessions are a part of the children's weekly routine, and relationships between these children and their respective storytellers were previously established. I am striving to portray how these particular children and storytellers/teachers interacted with death through the medium of children’s literature, rather than hypothesize how children in general respond to the notion of death.

  3. I also interviewed this storyteller/colleague and a preschool teacher, asking them to share their thoughts regarding both how to discuss death in preschool classrooms and how they had been affected by their own personal experiences with death. I kept a journal of my own thoughts and feelings, believing it important to document the ways in which the biases and experiences of the researcher impact the research. For the purpose of this paper, however, I focus on my interactions with the children, and how these interactions affect my experience of grief.

  4. During the story sessions, the children displayed a wide range of verbal and behavioral reactions. Emotions such as sadness, fear, anxiety, and denial were apparent. Some consistently tried to change the subject or began to fidget and bother their neighbours, while others showed disbelief, misunderstanding, or apparent indifference. Questions such as "How did he die?" "Where do you go when you die?" and "He didn't really die, did he?" were often asked and, at times, pursued with fierce persistence. However, most often children shared experiences, memories, and stories of death. For example:

    Bradley: And my grandpa died, because he started with too, too um, too brave, he was too brave, and he just did some, actually, he was too too too smart, and he, and he did something, but he wasn't smart enough, and it didn't work, and you know what he was doing? He was trying, like to climb, like to be, like, jump to a building to building, but he fell off.
    Stacey: Um, my mom died in, and, and, when uh, and one, and one morning, um, for Christmas, I got a um, um...
    Me: Stacey, your mom didn't really die, did she?
    Stacey: No.
    Me: No. She's still alive.
    Stacey: My mom didn't die, and, and, for Christmas I got a um, um, a puppy.

  5. Although my goal was to foster an open environment in which the children would share their stories about death, I had not planned to share my feelings on the subject. How could I bother with such emotional issues when I had stories to read, sessions to tape, and interviews to conduct? But the children pulled me in. When I did share a personal experience of loss, when I did relinquish pedagogical control and allow the children to guide the flow of conversation, our relationship became reciprocal; we all learned from each other, and common experiences were acknowledged.

    Bradley: You know what? My grand, my grand, my other grandpa didn't die, only one of my grandpas.
    Me: Yeah. Sometimes our grandparents are alive and sometimes they've died. My grandparents died too. A long time ago.
    Bradley: How?
    Me: Well one of them actually, she was very old, and so she died.
    Bradley: Just of, just of old age?
    Me: Yeah, she died of old age. And you know also why she died? Because a long, throughout her life, she had smoked cigarettes, and so sometimes when you do that, your heart, your lungs get very sick, and that's what she had done for a very long time in her life.
    Deborah: She didn't quit?
    Me: No.
    Sarah: My grandma Lilly did it, but she quitted, so she didn't die....
    Bradley: Well, my nana kept on smoking, but I got her to quit. Maxine: My mom, um, she smokes cigarettes too much, but she stops sometimes.
    Sarah: Um. Somebody else smokes cigarettes, and she smoked for 55 years. She will die.

  6. What happens when we risk disseminating ourselves in the public space of a classroom? We witness the blurring of the traditional separations between teacher-student, student-student, and knower-learner. I found that much sharing occurs around stories, be they read from books or, particularly, be they lived stories pulled from memory in bits and pieces. These shards of the past, inscribed with beliefs, ideas, and common experience serve to burst isolated bubbles of self; they expose and make vulnerable, but they also create connections essential to learning and growth in the preschool classroom.

    Struggles with Grief

  7. My mother died of colon cancer on 4 December, 1994. After I returned to Vancouver from the leave I had taken to spend those final months with her, I could not conceive of isolating the two areas of my life that demanded the vast majority of my time and energy: my grief over my mother's death and my thesis. The autobiographical elements of my thesis were an unavoidable outcome of my life experience. I couldn't discuss sharing stories about death with children and their teachers without sharing my story. Some fragments:

  8. It is my birthday and something is missing. A card, a present, a phone call, flowers-from my mother. Every phone call from other reminds me that she does not call. My family consciously and unconsciously attempts to fill her role, but we all know it is impossible. I am lonely and miss her. Today, her death is most poignant. It hurts.

  9. It occurs to me that while one's birth is celebrated, a mother's pain and anguish preceding it remains unappreciated and forgotten. Twenty-eight years ago today my mother lay in a hospital bed screaming, giving birth to the next generation. And now that she is dead, the weight of next generation pushes heavily on my shoulders. Unbearable weight; mine alone.

  10. I write and delete, write and delete. The words are not flowing today. I cannot express what I am thinking, cannot think what I am feeling, cannot feel. I don't have time to feel my mother's death because I have to write my mother's death. Strange. I realize these concepts cannot be compartmentalized; my procrastination is evidence that I cannot ignore my grief while simultaneously writing about it, organizing it, editing it, and handing it in. The writing must be of me and from me. If I do not allow this process to unfold, no words will be placed on this page. I only wish that my words could drip and spread on this paper as easily as my tears. Then I would have pages and pages and pages and ...

  11. I take time away from my mother to be with my mother on my birthday. I light a candle, we talk. Twenty minutes is all it takes for me to touch her, exchange ideas and feelings, reminisce. It makes such a difference. It (en)lightens me, it helps me write. Tension dissipates. Relief radiates. Happy birth day, Mom.

  12. I am angry a lot. I was angry a lot before my mother died, and often at her, so in some ways it's not such a big change. The reasons are different, or, rather, there's just one more reason added to the long list: she died. Now that there is no hope of ever letting her know how angry I was and still am, the anger stews inside me. I can't even be rude to her on the phone anymore. When I'm really mad I tell myself that this whole thesis thing is a waste of time-she's not here, she doesn't care, there's no blurring of boundaries, she's just dead and I have to deal with it. In a lot of ways my thesis puts her on a pedestal, the perfect mother, Saint Sandra-far from it. My mother bought herself a Lucite key chain with the word "bitch" on it and used it even after the end broke off and she was just a "bit".

  13. It's very difficult to be angry now that I am writing about her day in and day out. I feel I have to squelch this rage because I know that if I let it bubble to the surface I won't ever finish my thesis; I won't be willing to put in the necessary time and effort. So I suppress it and literally beg myself to let it simmer for a few more months. Although this process of writing and reflecting about her positive attributes helps me grieve, and I realize, most of the time, it is something that I need to experience and integrate into my images of her, it also prolongs my grief, as I know that I need to deal with my anger-understudy wishing for catastrophe.

  14. This public space of thesis is not where I want to talk about the deep-seated reasons for my anger. I just want you to know that they're there. I just want you to know what's not in this thesis.

  15. My mother is dead but she is in this thesis. Alive in this thesis? Living in this thesis? Do I live in my thesis? Does my thesis live? It works, it grows, it teaches, it annoys me, it scares me-like life, life-like. Most grief literature touts letting go as the final stage in the grief process. I don't want to let go. I won't do it; my mother's stubbornness pervades me. So we talk, we negotiate, we reminisce. I am forced to dwell with my mother in new ways. It's tiring keeping up these new forms of communication, but I am becoming accustomed to them. She is a captive audience, and they're cheaper than long-distance phone calls.

    Struggles with Writing

  16. Although I believe that including these fragments of myself in my thesis was inevitable, as it would have been impossible and undesirable to decontextualize my experiences with death in the classroom from those outside the classroom, doing so has been a continuous struggle. However, moulding these struggles into text initially enabled me to begin, and now allows me to continue.

  17. I constantly vacillate between thinking that there is too much and not enough of myself in this thesis. What am I supposed to write in here anyway? How much do I want to share? Yet, isn't this all me? The quotations I choose to include as well as those I choose to omit are me. The connections I see and those I do not see are me. Every thesis is autobiographical, from the topic that we choose to the font we use. Why am I only figuring this out now? Objectivity doesn't exist.

  18. I don't know if I can write this way, think this way. I am told to locate myself, contextualize myself. What is myself? Who is myself? Where am I? If I use their language, it is not me. I want to find my own voice buried beneath the rubble of my experience. My own words, my own language, my own priorities and values. I cannot pretend to know what I do not, to have read what I have not. I know I must be true to myself even if I am still unearthing what that self actually is, and whether there is such a thing.

  19. The production of this thesis is quite a production. I write, and I read, and I attempt to subjugate this explosion of ideas into this str(u/i)cture of thesis. At times this task seems impossible; flattening experiences, corralling thoughts into paragraphs, under headings, onto lists. It is so dispersed, so unmanageable. My mind is a revolving door of ideas. On a bad day, it seems as if everything worth including is out and nothing worth including is in. I reread my words. Does this make any sense? Self doubts abound and I recall the self doubting I experienced during my research at the University Child School. Every part of this process has been a struggle.

  20. I realize I spend a lot of time trying to figure out just what, in this process, is so difficult for me. Maybe if I spent half as much time just doing it, I'd be done by now. But maybe these ponderings are the doing of it. I've lost track of what doing it is. Maybe I never knew.

  21. I'm depressed. I'm procrastinating. I grow increasingly anxious throughout the day. I finally lace up my boots and go for a walk in the rain. Sometimes a walk on the beach will turn my mood around, but today it doesn't seem to be working. I become even more anxious. I keep saying to myself, over and over, "the only way out is through, the only way out is through." For a moment I am confused. Out of what? Through what? Grief over my mother or writing this thesis? And suddenly it dawns on me-both.

  22. The emotional and intellectual processes that surround me are difficult, at times agonizing. Waves of grief and productivity wash over me. The only way out is through. Avoiding either process increases my anxiety and decreases my ability to cope. Although the journey of my grief and of the writing of this thesis are similar, I know that the latter will end and that the former will not. My grief continues, although it becomes less innocuous, more subtle.

  23. I continue walking. I don't know how long I've been standing here or how many people have passed me on this path. A few moments later a bald eagle flies low, directly over my head. Thanks, Mom.

    Concluding Thoughts

  24. Part of me died when my mother died, yet through me part of her lives. I dwell in this space between life and death, as I dwell in the space between public pedagogical moments in the classroom and private pedagogical moments of reflection and life-writing. As I linger in these seams, watching narrative zig and zag between multiple parts of my self, I see stories being worn, stretched, washed, pressed, and then worn again. David Jardine (1992) says that learning is concerned with life and hope. My mother gave life to me at my birth, and, as I write these death words and learn from them, she gives life to me once again. She whispers patience, strength, and guidance-I can hear her. With this legacy, I will return to the classroom and I will speak about death. I will tell my stories and listen to the stories of my students; and from this sharing of stories, we will all learn and grow. My mother will be with me in the classroom. As I teach, she is also teacher. In the words of William Pinar (1992, p. 100):

    Cries and whispers of the dead who live; cries and whispers of she who dies, who is resurrected, whose death testifies to life. A phenomenology of death might trace these moods and metaphors of death and life, enabling us to affirm those who have gone before us, those who, like us, are dying now, and those children born and unborn who bring life to our dyings, all of us, past, present, future, blessed by death, blessed by life.

References

  • Jardine, D. (1992). Reflections on education, hermeneutics, and ambiguity: Hermeneutics as a restoring of life to its original difficulty. In W. Pinar & W. Reynolds (Eds.), Understanding curriculum as phenomenological and deconstructed text (pp. 116-130). New York: Teachers College.
  • Pinar, W. (1992). Cries and whispers. In W. Pinar & W. Reynolds (Eds.), Understanding curriculum as phenomenological and deconstructed text (pp. 92-102). New York: Teachers College.
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Posted March 1997
   
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