That old saying about death and taxes can take on new meaning the older you get.
Well, the death part does anyway. Taxes are taxes. You may choose to complain about them (which is pretty useless), but you either pay them or go to prison. I choose to pay them.
Just recently Terry and I filed our federal, state, and local/regional tax forms, as we do most years in early to mid-February. We like to get it done early, and for a long time I've used TurboTax to make the job easier. I'm a big fan and recommend it to almost anyone.
As for death, well...it's about as preventable as taxes, and even more useless to rail against.
I don't mean to be Davey Downer here (NOTE: Davey is Debbie's younger brother), but it's coming for all of us. First it gets those you know and love. Then it comes for you.
That's just the way it is.
Have a great day, everyone!
Seriously, though, death doesn't worry me so much. Whenever it's my time, it will be my time. In the overarching scheme of things, the length of my life on this earth doesn't really matter all that much.
But that doesn't mean I don't get a little sad over the reality of it sometimes.
I know people who have experienced far greater loss than me, but I've now lost my mom, my dad, my mother-in-law, and one of my sisters.
That sister, Judi, would have turned 68 years old today.
She seemed so youthful that a 68-year-old Judi is a little hard for me to comprehend. I'm sure she would have made 68 look good, though.
She also would have continued to love and spoil my kids in that way only the best aunts manage to do. My sister Debbie has more than picked up the slack, but I do miss Judi whenever my kids experience any sort of milestone.
Graduations, marriage, first jobs, etc. As our children have experienced these life events over the last 11 1/2 years, they have done so without Aunt Judi there to celebrate with them.
That's the part that hurts the most, I think.
Same for my dad, and more recently, my mom and mom-in-law. I wish they were all still here for so much of this stuff.
Something happens and you think, "Oh, I need to call and tell Mom." And then there's the dull, painful realization that Mom isn't there to take the call anymore.
Part of me gets sad over that, and part of me simply sighs and moves on.
What else can we do? It's either accept it or allow ourselves to be paralyzed by sadness and grief.
Mom wouldn't have wanted that. Nor would Dad, Judi, or mom-in-law Judy.
I'm getting old, I guess.
But for the time being, at least I'm still here. And so are my brother Mark and my sister Debbie.
And that should count for something.
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