Nameless Range
Well-known member
...Of their knowledge and stories. This is not a lamentation, just a thought.
Over the last 20 years, my wife’s grandmother became one of my favorite people on earth. She was hard and ornery, and was married to a man from Wolf Creek, and they called Lincoln, MT home for most of their lives. She had so many wonderful stories of Montana when it was a different place. Of Lincoln, before there was such a thing as The Scapegoat or The Bob Marshall. Of fun that would land you in prison today. Of the power of old rural community when all they had were one another and the world was raw and lacking safety nets. She lived and loved in a different Montana. No matter what the family gathering, I am well known as my wife’s antisocial husband, who just pulls up a chair next to Great Grandma and spends the evening talking to her. She was legally blind and mostly deaf but still had a whole lot to say.
Yesterday, on the last day of her life, she had her favorite breakfast of biscuits and gravy at our house, played with her great grandkids, and a half hour after leaving her 85 year old heart stopped beating.
This is not a statement of sadness. More a reminder - that the world has changed so fast, that those who lived in it only 80 years ago lived in a very different one. Today’s world is so full of voices that the demographic that doesn’t participate in the way voices are shared nowadays is often left silent. They are often the voices of souls worth seeking out.
Over the last 20 years, my wife’s grandmother became one of my favorite people on earth. She was hard and ornery, and was married to a man from Wolf Creek, and they called Lincoln, MT home for most of their lives. She had so many wonderful stories of Montana when it was a different place. Of Lincoln, before there was such a thing as The Scapegoat or The Bob Marshall. Of fun that would land you in prison today. Of the power of old rural community when all they had were one another and the world was raw and lacking safety nets. She lived and loved in a different Montana. No matter what the family gathering, I am well known as my wife’s antisocial husband, who just pulls up a chair next to Great Grandma and spends the evening talking to her. She was legally blind and mostly deaf but still had a whole lot to say.
Yesterday, on the last day of her life, she had her favorite breakfast of biscuits and gravy at our house, played with her great grandkids, and a half hour after leaving her 85 year old heart stopped beating.
This is not a statement of sadness. More a reminder - that the world has changed so fast, that those who lived in it only 80 years ago lived in a very different one. Today’s world is so full of voices that the demographic that doesn’t participate in the way voices are shared nowadays is often left silent. They are often the voices of souls worth seeking out.