I KNEW OF COURSE that it was a mistake to attend my sister's funeral, but when you have done so many mistakes already, does another one on top of the pile make any difference? Besides, the dreaded truth was doomed to be unraveled sooner or later. If it was any consolation for everyone involved, it happened on a day that was already expected to end in disaster. In a way, funerals are meant to be like that—the sheer awkwardness after the last shovel of earth sealed the dead, the ominous goodbyes among the bereaved as they return to their own empty homes.
Ann, my sister, had thought of everything. The coffin, in all its environmentalist glory, was the last of her cruel jokes. Pre-ordered one month after she gave birth to the baby and two weeks before she willfully drove her car off a cliff and into a ravine, it was made entirely of wood and devoid of even iron nails. It was her way of saying to me—her only brother—that she was determined to rot under the ground and disappear entirely, now that her revenge was beautifully done.
the persistence of being earnest
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Sometimes I swear it is easy to just give up whenever the universe is
sending me signals that it doesn’t care about what I’m trying my best to
accomplish—m...