A Cautionary Tale


A short time ago I received some unexpected news: my uncle had passed away at the age of 75.  The surprise wasn’t so much in his passing, but rather in the timing.  Eldon was no stranger to health issues and his body seemed to battle several things on a daily basis, including diabetes.  He had been battling fairly well for so many years, it didn’t seem that now would be the time.

Knowing that my aunt would be inundated with calls and messages, I gave it a couple of days and then made the call.  When I found her, she was driving home from a granddaughter’s softball game – a much-needed break from the patterns of thought plaguing her at home.

As I strolled a sidewalk in the fading evening light, she related to me the events of the past several weeks.  She told me how one of his sons had come to Arizona to watch Spring Training baseball. How Eldon had gone to the games with him.  Not just a game here or there, but 14 games in close succession.  And in some very warm Arizona temperatures. 

A nurse herself, my aunt explained that fatigue combined with dehydration had created a dangerous complication with his diabetes, how once he had overcome that another situation arose, and then, ultimately, how pneumonia eventually took his life.  I heard the agony in her voice as she described the decision to remove him from life support.

Eldon was gone.  My aunt was heartbroken.  Children and grandchildren were grieving deeply.  As she laid out the memorial service arrangements, a question triggered in my mind: what story would be told in light of Eldon’s passing?  Clearly his demise had been avoidable if only he had used better judgment.  A whole lot of grief could have been spared if only some moderation had been employed. 

Knowing what I knew of Eldon – including his well-known stubbornness to heed the warnings of his doctors, his wife, or just about anyone else for that matter; his knack for eating the things that were explicitly laid out on the “No, you have diabetes” List; his penchant for doing what he wanted to do rather than what he should do, I arrived at what appeared to be a foregone conclusion.  Eldon’s story, told properly, would be, should be, a cautionary tale.

I was pretty sure I was right.  After all, there really wasn’t anything to challenge my thinking.  He had set the course of his own demise and it was something we could all learn from.

A few days later, I sat three pews from my aunt in a traditional Methodist church.  The memorial service was going just as I had envisioned.  A song, a welcome from the pastor, the funeral liturgy, another song.  And then it happened.  People – the people who knew Eldon best and loved him most – began to talk.  They told stories and shared memories.  Together they told a tale, but it was no cautionary tale of tragedy.  It was a tale of love.

Eldon was remembered – not reformulated or recreated, but remembered – as a man who consistently gave himself to others.  With his time, his talents, his joy, his humor, his smile, his touch, and, yes, his love of baseball, he had consistently given away what he had to share.  The more they spoke, the more I realized how right they were.

The pastor knew Eldon well through his involvement in the church choir and the singing of solos for special events, like weddings and funerals.  He spoke of Eldon’s dedication to the church and the ministry there.  How Eldon always took his calls.  How he could not remember a single instance of Eldon turning down a request to use his musical gifts at someone's special event.  How, despite his declining health through the years, Eldon always came.  First he came more slowly, then he came with a cane, then he had to sit during the singing, but still he came.

Over and over Eldon was remembered for what he routinely gave away – his time, his presence, his gifts, his love, a smile, an encouraging word, a piece of candy.  From what I gleaned, Eldon was never about guarding what he could keep to himself or for himself, but always about how he could bless someone else.

It was in those moments that I realized how well Eldon had actually lived.  Had he lived another way, he may have lived longer.  But while he lived, he had lived well.  And it became undeniably clear that he had also loved well.

It made me wonder… Are we too focused on our own life’s longevity?  And not enough on life’s brevity?  Could it be that we are ignoring Jesus’ advice rather than heeding it?  After all, it was Jesus who said that whoever tries to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life will save it. 

Eldon’s life was a cautionary tale all right.  It just wasn’t the caution I was expecting.  As near as I can tell, Eldon hadn’t spent much of his life trying to save it, but he had spent much of his life and he had spent it well.  

“It’s what you sow that multiplies, not what you keep in the barn.”
--Adrian Rogers